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SUITS8 YEARS OLD HEARD HERE TODAY Ex-Governor Holcomb Sitting as Stperior Gourt Committee ~Two civil actions which had their beginning almost eight years ago were heard today in the city court room before State Referee Marcus Holcomb, acting as a committee of the superinor court to hear the evi- dence in the cases. The $10,000 ac- tion of Albert M. Rutherford, Inc., mason contractor against Abraham Gorback et al, and the $2,000 ae- tion of Albert M. Rutherford against Abraham Gorback were the cases occupying the court. The first suit was claim for money alleged due company ,from Gorback, for work done on several houses in 1919. The section action was brought by Ruth- erford who seeks title to a house on property in Belvidere developed by Gorback, or damages for money ex- pended on the house. In the first action B. Stein, build- er, Frank Ginsburg and E. O. Kil- bourne were cited in, but attorneys for Stein and Ginsburg filed peti- tions opposing that move. The ref- eree stated that he could act only on the facts submitted since he was merely hearing the evidence. The plaintiffs were represented by M. AL xton, while Gorback had William F. Mangan as his counse Alfred LeWitt represented Ginsburg and Donald Gaffney, Stein. The case was originally brought through Klett & Alling, but it never came to trlal in superior court. L May an extension until September was granted by the superior court, shortly after Mr. Sexton came into the case. It was provided that the case would be thrown out if it were not disposed of before September 1. 1t will be the duty of Referee Hol- comb to hear the evidenee and sub- mit a report to the superior court which will eithag accept said re- port or throw out the case. OFFICERS FIGHT DUEL FOR LIVES ‘Two Killed as Result of Police Feud Willlameon, W. Va., Ang. 19 (UP) | “Two patrolmen were shot and killed today in a fight with two oth- Totioe: Siss Ginais o fficers ave been serving B Gulige S A letier from Miss Doran, written | or 4 regime for | “m‘crh;“““”’:m"'“'I 2 a few hours before the plane rogred | ce | from Oakland airport ith g and Harvey D aDaetncld) a1 I high hopes in the hearts of the erew ire, 40, were shotidowRtin i oe ISl Eal e el : i a their courage passengC with Julius Lawson and!! X v nger C i by Charles . | Kirkpatrick, nes officers under | ¥ ““’\j\'! ‘0.(] ¥ < a rival political city administration. "l' “‘y“‘“g“H‘y"‘]”‘fyi_"\"\[m?:":"[f \'}‘fn;i’,‘-',\' The shooting affray was the cli- | Pany oxned by William 1% Mallask, max of an attempt by Deerfield and ‘._‘\)”r i Nl el McGuire to arrest the driver of a| b L Gl o milk truck for improper traffic| % Dorah wrote, | We are sure g lights, GRS The truck belonged to the Hutch- | "’“"‘V"’”:v"".“:“?0\_‘]‘] pog ket inson Milk company, whose owner H h‘ e e ‘w““"di”;n‘\('"l:‘.‘\lV’:ft- “‘voted to oust Deerfield and MLGIII‘N‘ e % bt S as 2long with the other members of the |[WG2KT el police department three montiN ago. i rli;:‘“ ‘VO'(': A honm;l \I” b T}x\n. Lawson and Kirkpatrick were mem- | HNCISC0 @ fow : e the bers of the department appointed to | Dole race started. | replace them. = As Deerficld and McGuire snmd’ to tag the truck, Lawson and K patrick are alleged (o have opened fire on them. Deefield fell with a bullet through his heart. McGuire was shot si times through the body. As he lay in the street dying, M Guire managed to reach his revol- | ver and while stnking, fired one bul- | let which wounded Kirkpatrick in|weather hureau expert here. the leg. | However, the Miss Doran would Kirkpatrick and Lawson surren- } not last many hours in the most dered to county officials after Xll(',“'!l\'()rahlf‘ weather, aviation experts shooting. sald. The construction of the planc SISTER OF VANZETTI gasoline tanks, but it could not ride (Continued from First Page) based on a the NO CLUE T0 LOST DOLE PRIZE FLIERS (Continued from First Page) | a one from Cali-| nds, along the | followed by the | San Francisco, a fornia for the great circle course fliers. A pessimistic view some, who held the wells of the Pacific, and the low ibility of the submarines and de- it prevent the ps on rubber lifc from being discerned by the search- | eis. They pointed out that the B Commander John Rodgers, on the PN-9 flight, actually sighted search- | ing planes iled his flying boat toward i. The plane, | however, did ot see him, and he | jand his crew drifted cight days he- | Ifore they reached a spot nearly 300 | miles from where they had been | forced down Dby lack of gasoline. was taken by | 10 to 12 foot the las 45, | | ! Weather Favorable, The one bright spot in the wiole 1 situation was the weather. For two | { days weather conditions in the Pa- | cific have been ideal for the lost flicrs, There was an absence of wind | d this would assure a smooth rid- | ing surface for an airplane forced down, or a rubber life hoat, accord- ing to T. R. Reed, United States the w many hours, after the The Mi race on Tuesday forced back fro cause of engin an, smiling and place heside Navigator went up despite the ! Lient. Ben Wryatt, nav tor of the Dole flight changing of the planc's Doran put out into the after it had been fivst start be- trouble, Miss Dor- unafraid, took her Knope and rning of demned men. V1\0r 'hl“f‘ At the Monday night meeting Nor- | * man Thamas, former socialist candi- date for governor, Professor Robert Pl i cago, and Municipal Court Justice | (R0 (R0 00" Jacob Panken, are scheduled to““rrth 70 PL R speak. A number of protest meet-| oo Bl pirrorm was ings against the decision will also | 5 0T, W5 B0 8 0 diong it | be held in various parts of the clty | \oypeo potore the engine trouble re- tonight, it was announced. RN b Ao aa fonaadlth a quick comedown, landing in the sea with more than a ton of gaso- e in the tanks. Dropping an airplane into the sea under the most | favorable circumstances is consider- ed a precarious job for an expert pilot, but landing there with a heavy load of gasoline would scem | certain to invite disaster. May Have Passed Goal Against this opinion was a no- tion that the plane might have cruised until it went off its cour: and passed the islands, cither to the north or south. coming down with exhausted gasoline tanks. Bul this was only a_most remote possibility. The Golden Lagle, carrying a crew of {wo, Frost and Scott, pre- cnted a different situation. With a cork hottomed fuselage, inflated wing tips and rear end, it could be converted into going craft by the turning of a valve and the clos ing of its doors. Gordon Scott, tor, Is at home on the sailed the Pacific for yenrs Licutenant Wyatt considered unlikely that Scott would make a serious error in navigation, mt the owners of the craft, the San Francis- Examiner, believed that Scott have passed the Hawiian | islands during the first night of the cruise and eame down exhausted somewhere between Honolulu and the Far Tast. No Plane On Island. San Francisco, Aug. 19 (#- ! crroncous report that the | flight plane Miss Doran had found a few miles off Keanca, on Doran’s deep those who BRIDGEPORT FLAG-DECKED. Bridgeport, Aug. 19 (P—Ilags and bunting, banners and pennants, acclaimed this city's welcome to the 10,000 delegates who will arrive thi ternoon for the eighth annnal con- vention and field day of the New Fngland Inter-Grotto association. The convention strts with a tour of the city during the late afternoon. Registration of delegates will fol- low. This evening the visitors will | parade from the convention head- rters to the Pyramid mosque, | ‘Where the full ceremonial of the or- | ganization will be held. The con vention meeting will be held at 10 | o'clock tomorrow. Then will follow a ! parade through the city streets to Pleasure Beach, where field day events will be conducted. o a sea TRE \III-R ASKS LOAN Halirax, N. Aug. 19 Premier 1 N. Rhodes of Seotin has gone to New York to confer with American financiers concerning 0,000 government refunding loan, for which will be received September P | e you avign- Nova the young naviga water, having it up to ome time ago the government |0 idcd that instead of making a s of small loans for refunding poses it would be to float s large loan. Accordingly nego- tsations were entered into with New York banlkers i Dol heen TREASURY BALAYC Jalance, $84,702,807. | by irresponsible corr by | i ond person in two months to retur [ing for alleged murder on the high ! seas, | Louis Fisher, third refrigerating en- | gineer charging Ispired by the devil and L waited | former lof New Yo s jon the sc | nis cen "with a firm step, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 19, 1827, Telephoto picture, rushed from Island of Oahu shows the lr(‘fphqn to the victorious flyers. MAY ASK COOLIDGE ' SUCCESSOR'S NAME " Hint Pinencia Delegate Seeking' s: President’s Selection Rapid Cit . Aug. 19 (UP)— Political and financial problems of the republican party were brought %y | before. President Coolidge today | {with the scheduled arrival of | { Dwight Morrow, influential repr sentative of New York financial di ct and member of the firm of J. Mor and Co. Morrow, who is credited by repub- lican politicizns with some of the : suc of the 1924 campaign, u: Haw n group, the lack of com- yally visits Mr. Coolidge at his sum- munications and the remote position | home, but especial in mid-Pacific al combined to make | was foresoen this year difficult the running down of each [Mr. Coolidge's an mmor that caused hope to spring | cently that he does not choose to be {hroughout the world. & candidate in 19 {he Tsland of Maui, followed a day | of rumars of sighting of planes m| | ohjects resembling planes that caus- ed joy to spring in the hearts of friends of the plane's crew her | Each succeeding rumor proved un- founded. The Honolulu correspondent the Associated Press told of the ru- | mors but cast doubt on their au- thenticity. He refused to send the statements flashed to the mainland | ondents that the missing plane Aiiss been found. Instead, he procce airplane to the island of Maui where investigation showed no plane had heen found and that the fate of the Miss Doran and its three pas- remained as much of a mystery as ever, the sparsely settled islands of the of t e; sengers becouse of Dbring from the east concerning Mr. Coolidg statement s eagerly awaited political observers fol- lowing president. Morrow has s by the pre [1 | visited Mr. Coolidge as much as any jman outside of congress since the b ident assumed oftice. i were is a suggestion that Mor- | row might desire to converse with the president regarding who might possibly publican throne. The name of Charles E. Hughes, republican can. didate in 1916 is prominently men- tioned but it is known that he would not accept the post even if offerc | because he does not desire to en- couftter the strain of a heavy cam- paign and the presidency for four years. It is thought here that Secretary Comm Hoover would be an 1 choice with Hughes in the Second Back From Sea Under| Threat of Noose New York, Aug. 19 (P—The sce- to the United States facing possible ng in the old post office build- as the result/of a love affair, arived today on the liner President Roogevelt She w ardess on the American ler, of the American merchant line, for whom a federal warrant has been issued, accusing her of the death of | of No immediate announce- "h nt as to the future intentions of Coolidge or republican that she was “in- without the | The war- killed Morrow’s visit, however. tI s ex pected here that affairs as they ey [now may be permitted to work ! themselves ouit. CHAPLIN MARITAL CASE of Giod in her eye nt said that Mrs. Pisher “with a deadl sher died at s after actd was poured down his throat as he slept, Assistant United | States Attorney George 8. Leisure was informed. Leisure met the President Itoosevelt in “venue | tier | ari ¥ Waits poison.” | a few days| a Comedian Willing to Submit to Negro cook of the 15 the other | a of murder on the | as. He is on trial charged | th killing his wife on Fe A deputy Unitta States at the barge oifice Waits, who i 1itic Cruelty Charges—But Will Fight accus Bringing in Seven Actresses Los Angeles, Aug. 19 (UP)—Ru- mors and gossip characterized the Chaplins' marital difliculties today. Not until Monday, when the cas of Lita Gray Chaplin asking a d vorce from her comedian husband, rles Chaplin, is called in court, uld the facts be known, it ap- peared Chaplin's attorneys h notice in court that he is fully pre- d to fight the divorce suit of his wife but that, i xplained, was a formal log Chaplin, it was said, is willing to give his wife a divorce on grounds of cruelty. Tt appeared certain, however, he wotld fight the separa- tion procecdings should Mrs. Chap- lin bring in names of prominent Hollywood moving picture actresses as co-respondents as has threat- ened. 1t was reported that a property settlement had been arrangel out of court and the divorce would murely be a formal legal procedure with- out scnsational developmeh: rrest of strain. She was Dritish pollce after 7 i in London had held that Fisher did not die from the carbolic acid hut from a syncope after a sudden fright and sudden esertion American Trader, bearing the FIVE MILLION FOR WIDOW. Aug. 10 (®—Virtually te was left widow by Ralph Van Vechten, president of the State Bank whose will has heen filed here, The Chicago Symphony orchestra which recently has been in difficulties because of the de- mands of its union musicians, ¥ left $10,000. Mrs. Fania ) Van Vechten, wife of Carl V Vechten, wife of Carl Van Vechten novelist brother ot the was left 100 shares of stock. A sister, Mre. Emma Van Vechten Shaffer, of New York, was left 135 | ehares of hank stock. of Chicago, she hanker, Cases of Dynamite Seized in Mass. Barn New Bedford, Mass., Aug. -9 (UP) -—Iiftecn cases of dynamite, con- 750 sticks, were geized v > troopers today at a barn on the Achushnet estate of Roger Fay, confracto The seizure occurred following a report from a state fire that there was a litrg suuply of dy- 1mite in the barn. According to the authoriti as no guard over the dynamite and v had no permit to keep explo- | y told the troopers he had [planned to use the dynamite in con- I nection with work at Blue Stone Quarry, Acusanet. MURDERER HANGED Quebee, Aug. 19 (@ gaouctte, murderer of his mother | in the fall of 1925, paid the per ffold this morning. to the gallows he walked The condemned man was inform- 1 last night that the appeal made 1o the go n-council in his be- | half had Deen refused. | ABANDON WING ¢ ‘ Norfolk, Va. Aug. wreh for the white wing of a plane reported ighted 155 miles capes vesterday Gulf Point was Bobbing of school when he coast | favorably failed to find any | thoriti ) hair cor camer abandoned today guard boat Shaw trace of it. girls' hair s regarded by medical au- who wish boys wore their pondingly short. gnificance | announcement re- | be his successor to the re- | Hoover has the confidence of | business men throughout the | expected as a result of | IS TALK OF HOLLYWO0D| inspector ! there | Wall Street Briefs —_— The United States produced 5,- 067,000 ounces of fine silver in July, ugainst 4,931,000 in June. Canada's output was 1,752,000 against 1,614,- 000. The last monthly figures avail- able from Mexico were for May, T7,- 791,000 ounces, against 7,737,000 in April. Peru put out 1,513,000 jounces in July, against 1,806,000 in June, and Australia 939,000 against 1347,000. Increased activity in new business in the lumber industry for the week ended August 13 was shown in re- Iports from 480 of the leading mills of the country to the National Lumber Manufacturers Association, compared with the week before. | Soft-wood mills showed increases in ishipments and new business, the heavier in new business, and a nominal decrease ni production. Compared with a year ago, new bus- liness was larger, production the game and a slight gain in shipments. Hardwood operations were smaller in production and shipments, but over the orvders the week Dbefore. Unfilled orders of 223 southern pine and west coast mills were 625,024, 864 feet against 626,370,924 feet the s week. > railroad has ordered 25 passenger coaches from Car, and the New 50 stcel underframes, from American {suburban i Pressed Steel York Central passenger coaches r & Foundry i ew York, Aug. melting steel scrap is 23 lower in the Chicago d ing from §12 to $12.50. | | Production cents a ton trict, rang- of mg firon in the United States in the first half of 1927 is placed at 19,202,070 gross tons by the American Tron and Steel Institute compared with 19,679,737 tons in the first half of 1926. The Mahoning Coal Rallroad Company earned $15.04 a share on | the common stock in the second | quarter, against $11.70 in the second quarter of 1926. And $27.35 a share in the first half of 1927, against lsm 13 a share in the first half of 26. Indications of consumer uneasi- over the bituminous market sit- tion in the United States have been multiplying the past week. prices continue to move up, partie- upon those coals which find readiest access to the middle west- ern markets cut oft from mnormal | sources of supply Coal Age News re- ports. Possibly the most significant JN\"ION“PHY has been the news that | western railroads have been golng south of the Ohio river for addi- tional fuel supplies. On top of this lake shippers' are trying to round out their requirements. ular | Ajax Rubber Company reports net loss og $861,158 for the first half of 1927 in contrats to the net | profit of $74,279 in the first half of 1926, : City Items TY W. . Hatch Co.. today sold 2 house at the corner of Van and Hart streets to Patrick A. angd Kath- lerine C. King. The house formerly was owned by Thomas I n. Myron Young, of 21 C iff C w leave tomorrow for Indian { Neck, where he has accepted a po- sition with a local orchestra playing | there for the summer. With the be- I ginning of the vaudeville season, he “Ill go on the road again with Clin- \on and Rooney, popular headliners. Personals Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Walsh and gon, of 61 Columbia street, are spending the week-end at Oak Bluffs. Deaths Mrs. August Johnson Betty Helen Johnson, {years old, wife of August Johnson of 208 Bassett street, died {morning at 10 o'clock at the home. Mrs. Johnson was born fn Sweden {the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. An- {drew Modihin, and had been a resi- dent of this city for 21 years. She was a_member of the First Lutheran Mrs. church of which her husband was a | |trustee and was a_charter member | (of Victorla lodge, O. of A., of Mid- {dletown. | surviving besides her husband ar |two daughters, Miss Ruth and Miss a son, Klmer John- a sister, Mrs. Lu- thenen, and a brother, Sven Mod Ihin of Hartford Funeral arrangements, in chargs jof Erickson & Carlson, are incom- —_— I Funerals | e CARD OF THANKS {pathy shown us during our recent loved husband and father and also for the beautiful floral offerings received. (Rigned), Mrs. Michael Regalis and Family. Joseph A. Haffey UNDERTAKER Phone 1425-2, Opposite St. Mury’s Church. Renldence 13 Summer §t.—1625-3. by i BOLLERER’S POSY SHOP ISay “Bon Voyage” to Kriends who Sail iwith Flowers by Wire. Visit Our Greenhouses on Johnsom St., Maple Hill. 83 West Main 8t., Prof. Bldg. Tel. 886 “The Telegraph Florist of New Britaln” ’T'abouc three polnts, 19 (P—Heavy | street, | 49 | this | We wish to thank our friends and | i neighbors for the kindness and sym- | bereavement in the death of our be- POOLS AGTIVE ON NEW YORK MARKET Many New High Records Made During Day New York, Aug. 19 (P—Stock | prices continued to move upward to- day under the leadership of the high grade industrials. Weck-end realiz- ing sales and occasional “bear” sell- | ing slowed up the advance now and then, but offerings generally were well absorbed and a flock of new high records established. Easy eredit conditions, the antici- pated increase in farm wealth and expectations of a normal upturn in Members New York & Hartford Stock Exchanges 31 WEST MAIN ST. NEW BRITAIN TEL. 2040 HARTFORD OFFICé. 6 CENTRAL ROW TELEPHONE 2-1141 We Offer: The Arrow Electric Co. 612% Cumulative Preferred Price on Application. business after the Labor day holi- day, were the chief factors stressed by those working for higher prices. | Pools were again active in a num- ber of specialties in which favorable dividend or merger developments are believed to be pending. | U. §. Steel common, which sold as | low @s 129 1-4 in last week's break, was in brisk demand above 137. General Motors, selling ex-dividend, | ouched 227, equivalent to a gain of | while the new stock ran up from 113 3-8 to 11 General Electric was in brisk de- mand, moving up more than four points to 128 by carly afternoon. There was a good demand for stock of companies likely to benefit | by the reported agricultural pros- | {perity, such as Allled Chemical. | Davis Chemical, Case Threshing | Machine, Mathieson Alkali and Woolworth, all of which sold three | or more points above yesterday's final quotations. Rails quieted down somewhat, al- though a good inquiry was noted for {the Saint Paul, Saint Louis South- | | western, Southern Rallway and Te- | high Valley issues. Coal stocks also developed strength. A firm tone characterized |opening of today's stock marl which was featured by the sale of a |block of 4,500 shares of Interna- tional Nickel at 67 1-S, an overnight {gain of one point. Allicd Chemical |opened a point higher, but other standard industrials showed little change. Shubert Theaters showed |an initial gain of three points. ‘ Renewed sclling of a few | that figured sensationally | week's break, Manhattan Electrical Supply and Houston Oil falling 3 | points passed unnoticed. General Motors at 226 1-4 more than made up the $2 dividend deducted from | | the price today. Case Threshing Ma- |'ehine spurted to 2653 in anticipa- tion of a stock split up and Inter- | national Harvester, National Lead, | Woolworsh, Pittsburgh Coal, Davi- son Chemical and Warren Brothers |also made spirited advances, the las | mentioned crossing par. The re- newal rate for call loans which {carry over until next week was | maintained at 314 per cent. Some surprise was expressed at the unexpectedly small decrease in brokers’ loans, in view of the dras tic decline in prices last week, but | no fears were entertained over the credit situation in view of the ample supply of funds available on call all week at 31-2 per cent. Farly buying again centered in the motor shares, with gains or a point lor so in Gene Hudson, Mack Trucks and White. General | Motors new%stock was admitted to trading, opening at 113 3-8 and | quickly advancing to 114, Amuse- | ment shares were bought in expec- | tation of a substantial increase in earnings this fall, with special atten- tion directed to operating economies effected by some of the large motion pleture producers during the sum- ymer months. Abitibl Power as- Isumed the leadership of the public | |utility group, which has contributed ! | half a dozen or so new high records | dally for the last weck or more. Abraham and Strauss advanced 2 points and was followed into new | high ground by Baldwin and Reid |Tce Cream. Montana Power was | heavy. Net income of Electric Power & Ix. ght Corporation for the year end- | ed June 30 rose to $7,256,217, equal | to $1.91 a share on the common | {after preferred dividends, from $3,- 063,381 or cents a share in ”U“ preceding 12 months. | the | | stoc Buying of finished steel I3 spotty | but fmprovement is shown at some | centers, savs Daily Metal Trade. In | Chicago, heavy lots of reinforcing | hars have been placed. Strip steel sales are heavy at Pittsburgh com- | posed of accumulation of small lots. | Structural awards in the east con- | tinue heavy, with New York lettings | treaking all records. in last | § Thomson, fenn & QIn Burritt Hotel Bldg.. New Britatn MEMBERS NEW YORK AND HARTFORD mcx BLW Douald R. Bart, Mgr. ‘We Offer— AMERICAN HARDWARE Price on Application We Do Not Accept Margin Accounts. EDDYBROTHERS&@ HARTFORD artford Conn. Trust Bldg. Tel.2-7186 We Offer: 100 Shares of Stanley Works Shaw & Company INVESTMENT SECURITIES New Britain Office City Hall Tel. 5200 Hartford Office 75 Pearl St. Tel. 4655 We Own and Offer: Importers & Exporters Co. We Offer and Recommend: Aetna Life Insurance Co. Fuller, Richter, Aldrich & Co. 81 WEST MAIN STREET NEW BRITAIN MEMBERS HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGE Joseph M. Halloran Tel. 1253 Harold O. Mott LOCAL STOCKS (Furnished by Putnam & Co); Insurance Stocks. Genl Asphalt Genl Elec Genl Motors . Gt North Iron T03% 128 2241 | Prices on the Salmon Fish Pack quoted by the Alaska Packers Ass ciation, controlled by the California | | Packing Corporation are substan- ! tially higher than last year due to the unusually small galmon catch | William ‘Timson, president of the | | Alaska Packers. savs the 1927 pack ‘pmmh\v ill be under 5,000,000 | compared with 6,61 s “ (Furnished by Putn High 1553 «1(\7'. 12 1671 20% 169 Al Che & Dye American Can {Am Car & Fd Am Loco .... Am 8m & Re Am Sugar .. |Am Tel & Tel Am Tobacco . {Am Woolen | Anaconda Cop Atchison Baldwin Lo . 154 5 6014 6014 1121 1667 89% 110 16514 89 168% 1981 Beth Steel .. Can Pac .. Cerro De Pasco | Ches & Ohio |Chi M & Bt P. 33% |Chi R1 & P .110 Chrysler Corp . Colo Fuel Cons Gas .. Corn Prod Cru Steel Dodge Bros Du Pont De Nem Erie RR ..... Fam Plavers .101% Iisk Rubber . 16% 4 1103 | 561, 55 56 113% 3% A 18% !1nt Nickel { Union | Penn » 0 5 Balt & Ohio . 213 ‘ | Mo Kan Mo Pac Ore Ctfs Gt North pfd Gulf Sta Steel Hudson Motors md 0 & G . 214 o 40a —_ 678 610 280 640 870 670 1425 1740 Aetna Casualty vee.910 Aetna Life Ins Co ....670 Aetna Fire teeee 800 | Automobile Ins Co . .+.270 Hartford Fire ........630 National Fire .. .860 Phoenix Fire .660 ML‘ : Travelers Ins Co . 1410 23% | Conn, General 1720 1001 Manufacturing Stocks. 100 u\m Hardware . . 81% Am Hosiery ...... 20 Beaton & Cadwell i— Bige-Hfd Cpt Co com , 92 Billings & Spencer com Billings & Spencer pfd Sristol Drass Colt's Arms . Eagle Lock . afnir Bearing Co’ Hart & Cooley . 06% |Lanedsr I .. 115% Int Paper Ken Cop Kelly Spring . Lehigh Val Mack Truck Marland Oil U S Ind Al S Rubber U S Steel ... & Pac . acco Prod 83 25 90 994 13714 881 100 Pac 188 % U S Ct Ir Pipe 2 Tierce Ar M C dio Corp ading Sears Roebuck Sinclair 01l Southern Pac {Southern Ry rd Oil .. t Warner \mdolnlw as Co ... 6614 116 88 N B Machine .. 19 7% N B Machine pfd .....103 17% | Niles-Be-Pond com | North & Juda 11484 | Peck. Stowe & Wil Russell Mfg Co Scoville Mfg Co Standard Screw | Stanley Works ... . anley Works pfd Torringino Co com | Union Mfg Co .... Public Uttlitles Stocks. ; | Conn Elce Service .... 16 ¢ | Conn Lt & &ow pfd ex 116 » | Hfd Elec Light |N B Gas .. Vsmnhem N E Tel (6% 231 | The largest pagoda in all Burma 8414 |is gold-plated from top to bottom 407 (and is said to have cost $5,000,000, 175 |It is a temple where all Burmess oAt 171% 'go to worphip. g Mont Ward Nt Lead NG NY. NH & 1[ Nor Am Nor Pac Pack Mot Car Am Pet B Wabash Ry Ward Bak B 4 (8‘5 ....164 White Motor .. Willys Over ‘Woolworth 4k