New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 18, 1928, Page 15

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HREBS PRESCRIBES FOR PESSIMISTI Tolls Business Men They Are! to Blame for Gloom The success or failure of an in- dividual, business, city, state or na- tion depends entirely upon the state ©of optimism dispiayed, according to Dr. Stanley L. Krebs, president of the Institute of Mercantile Art of New York. Dr. Krebs spoke today at a Kiwanis luncheon to which members of other clubs and promi- nent business and professional men had been invited Vice President Harry C. Billings presided in the absence of President Elmer W. Pape, who is out of the city. The trouble with most cities and erganizations as well as most indi- viduals, according to Dr. Krebs, is that they are afflicted with “para- Personals Mrs. Charles Rehm and daughter, Mrs. R. Giannotta, and children have returned home from Boston spending two weeks there. Mrs. Elizabeth Atkinson has turned to West Hartford after jweek’s visit with her niece, 1Belle Tves of Lincoln street. re. a Mrs. where she is a student at the Colum- | bia School of Journalism, is spend- | g the summer vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Reed of 340 Washington street. Thomas Myers of New York city, |where he attends Fordham Law school, is passing his vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Myers of 173 Washington street. | Mra. Henry Bower of New Haven |is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Al- |bert Slaney of Winthrop street. Mrs. Charles Bonol and Mrs. F. Meskill have returned home after a month's vacation at Lake Focoto- | paue. after Miss Helen Reed of New York city | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 1928 TIGADA VANISHES WITHOUT VICTORY (Visit of 17 Year Locust Proves 10 Be Complete Washout The cicada is gonc. Bag and baggage or bagless and baggageless, however he travels, the cicada, who | masquerades under the more coni- {mon name of 17-year-locust, has dis- |appeared. The cicada proved much of a false alarm this trip departing leaves behind a few hun- dred thousand empty and dried car- |casses and a few thousand small and !dying twigs on trees, but there has been no great devastation and the predicted desolate forests and or- chards have not materialized. This condition, contrary to tears jand forecasts is not by any means |due to the fact that Mr. Cicada was | misjudged and misrep ted. Give him a normal epportunity and fruit to be pretty, His | City Items John Zyla, 18, of Poland, son of Andrew High street, ar- rived n New York on the liner He will make his home with his parent. A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. jJohn Lyack of 19 Pulaski street New Britain General hospital toda | _Hugh Cross, son of Fireman and | Mrs. Thomas Cross of 50 Osgood |avenue, underwent an operation for #ppendicitie at New Britain General hospital yesterday afternoon. The police were notified today of ithe return of the operator's licenses |of Frank Wold of 1541 Corbin aven- jue and John Gleba of 242 Kelsey street, Augusta R. Feifer has brought a foreclosure suit against Antonia and fania Bialkowski, claiming non- payment of a note for $4,250, | Which sum the defendants mortgag- ed their property located at the cor- {her of Fast #nd Rhodes street. The :;\Lqimm. through Attorney Cyril | Gaffney, secks forcclosure of the |mortgage and the appointment of a 1receiver for rents. Papers were serv. for | 1 Wall Street Briefs | National Cash Register Co. earn- ed $242 a share on the combined . first halt lof 1925, aga in the #ame | | period of 1 Net profit moved up | llo $3.338.345 from $3,302.166. i i i l:ukerl(’s‘ s ended July | | | Net income of Purity Corporation for 25 wee! |14 advanced (o $1.530.557 from | 131,504,409 in the previous corres- ! ponding period, cqual to £2.90 & {share on the common, against $2.02 | a share a year ago, ! American Chicle Co. earned $4.03 @ share on the common in the tirst {half of 1928 3 in the i same period of tainst i Comumon stock of American In- inee Company was placed on an or ed annual dividend basis of :ET{ a share, formerly £2, with a quar- | terly payment of 75 conts on August 15 to holders of record August 1 'su | vorahle WALL STREET HAS BRISK UPTURN NOW Week of Floundering About Seems to Have Ended (Ry Stauley W. Prenosil Press Financial Editor) w York, July 18 (®—The stock market, which has been floundering around within a narrow trading area for the last week, turned brisk- Associated Iy upward today on a resumption of | | broad scale operations. Prices of ac- tive issues rallied 1 to 5 while a number of specialties were marked up 6 to nearly 15 poin per cent the opti- mistic tenor of the weekly steel trade reviews, publication of several earnings statements dividend declarations fa- and spacial all PUTNAM & CO, | i Members New York & Hertford Stack Echanges i 31 WEST MAIN ST., NEW BRITAIN We Offer: New Britain Gas Light Co. Price on Application. Thomson, Tfenn & To. | ty v | helped to revive bullish enthusiasm. Iysis of waiting.” He sald they want trees and other foliage which semgtd by Constable Frank Clynes. | The advance in prices was stimulat- ot into the way of the 1 car-old | § | = l to wait until next week or next year, er until Germany pays her bills or France settles up or congress acts or something else takes place. They just keep on waiting, he explained. Man to Blame for’ Citles He said man has no right to blame Providence for his misfortune. “Man made the cities,” he sald. “God Al- mighty gave him the material and let him bufld.them. If God Almighty had made New York he would have done a better jo he declared. “To be a constructive optimist we must believe that if there is any- thing wrong with the world, we our- selves are to blame. There is a rumor that there is a depression economically. Who is going to lift this loop back to normal? “I meet two reacticns when 1 sug- gest that we look at things from an optimistic viewpoint. One man says ‘What can I do? I'm only a little fellow. I can't do anything’ That man doesn’t realize what a tremn- dous force personality is. He has an inferior personality “The other man is afflicted with paralysis of waiting. He doesn't want to do anything until some force outside of himself comes along and takes him by the nap of the dent of Connecticut agricultural col- cating or laving eggs for fully neck and trails him along like a bab: Luck means something that hap- pens without cause. Science sees no phénomena without a caus No More Panics “8mitz the pessimist when you hear him croak. We draw in our horns and produce the very depres- sion we complain about. I hear men say ‘There is going to be a cras ‘Will that kind of talk feed your bu- bies? Is that the way you send your salesmen out? Since the adoption of the federal reserve system there can never be a financial panic in the United States, such as there was in the old days. “There was a time when six or eight men cculd sit around a table | in New York and by resolution stop the wheels of industry in the whole United States. They cannot do it now. The old Wall Street is no more. Of course the street is there and the banks are there. But there ¢an be no more panic. *One of the econocmical reforms the future needs is that of long term ioan We need more optimism in business. “One businessman meets another on the street, He says, “We are not selling as much as we did.’ The other man says, ‘Neither am I, there must be something wrong.” There is, that's it. That expression ‘There must be something wrong.' Each man scares the other to death and they go back and fight their business down. “An optimist is a bald headed man buying hair restorer from a bald headed barber. Pessimism at Home “I've seen many happy familics damned by a pessimistic father or mother. ve seen many boards of directors damned by one pessimist on the board. I've seen towns where if just one man got out of the bank. the whole town would be blessed.” As an antidote for pessimism, which he says he has used with great effect, Dr. Krebs offercd the following formula: “I don’t know anything about the facts or figures you are quoting, but I'm an Ameri- can just tike you and all the prob- lems Amcrica has in the past have been satisfactorily settled, and the present problems will be settled satisfactorily also.” The attendance prize was awarded to Harry Hazen, a gues INSTALLATION BY OF P. 8t. Elmo lodge, Knights of Py [thias, will hold an op-n installation or officers this evening at the Castle fhall on Main street. The ceremonies will be conducted by Deputy Grand IChancellor Louis Bogen and staff of Hartford. Among the grand lodgze Alfred and Frank Schleicher of Andrew street are at Pocono Pines, | Penn. F. F. Hickok of Stanley strect at Saybrook. um of Winthrop street has as her house guest, Miss Elfie Stroh. | Miss K. Hallfelder is spending | week at Sound View, DR, BEAGH RETIRES AT STATE COLLEGE {Is Temporarily Succeeded by Dr. Gentry | Storrs. July 18 (®—At his own re- quest Dr. Charles L. Beach, presi- 1908, was relieved of his duties and named president emer- {itus of the college at a mecting of ithe board of trustecs in Hartford to- |day. Dr. Charles B. Gentry, dean fot the division of teacher training and head of the department of edu- cation wis named acting president. | The appointment of a new presi- will not be made from the . according to the opinion ex- today. Dr. Beach has been ill for several {months and only recently was dis- charged from Hartford hospital. It was on the advice of his physician [that he asked to be relieved. Dr. {Beach was born in White Water, |Wis., in 1856, He graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1886 nd, after ten s spent in the milling indust came 1o Storrs where, with the exception of two |vears spent on the faculty of the | Untversity of Vermont, he has been ever since. The acting president graduated |from Central Missouri Teachers’ col- |1ege in 1908 and the University of Chicago in 1912, He was on the faculty of Mis- souri state college from 1914 to 1918 and Rutgers college from 1919 to 11920 when he came to Storrs. He was given an M. A. in agriculture at Cornell in 1919 |CONFERENGE AT C. OF C. ON POLICE ADVERTISING Dispute To Be Ironed Out At Meet- lege sinee |lege sin | ing of Tomorrow At Noon. The conference hetween Chamber jof Commerce directors and repre- |sentatives of the police department lin connection with Secretary Ben- | son’s attempt to enforce Chamber of Commerce by-laws against adve ‘lirmg in the police state field day souvenir, will take place tomorrow Inoon. The meeting will be a closed !session, President E. W. Attwood of the Chamber of Commerce having declined to open the doors to the press or public. Rumors of the attitude of the Chamber directors are rite among ’Chamln\r of Commerce eircles today. Although the directors decline to |speak for publication, it is believed [that they are supporting Mr. Ben- Ison. Mr. Attwood i« said to oppose | the secretary’s acHvitics. IN sUIT BRISTOL % Pomnick J. Ales of Bristol {brought suit today for $500 against | Engenla Pictromonico of the gams > [town through the firm of Nair & |4t the committee headquarters has returned from a two weeks stay | iocust sometinies are loft like a forest after a fire. | "But the 17-year locust only tives That is he lives only six For the remaining 17 years he lives in the ground, | acvelops, grows, changes form two lor three times and final way through five to scven ground to the surfac Once out in the daylight, the lo- |cust goes to work. The mule sings and the female lays cggs in the trecs to the wusic. The music is not ob- jectionable to listen to, but amounts 1o & low steady droning like the faint whir of distant airplanes When the eggs are laid, the twig in which they repose, dics and fails to the ground. Here the cggs hatch linto grubs and hurrow bencath the surface for another 17 years, |six weeks, | Cold Rain Repulscd Them i [ six weeks. weeks outdoor. fect of But for at lcast four of the six ks of the 1928 visit of the cicadas lthe weather was cold, wet, rainy |and disagrecable. The locust emerg- led from the ground, kicked off we his protecting outer coat, received a | chill and hung numb ana inactive in comatose stat:, neither singing, two A six weeks of weather became R and th developed, but it was too late. Thousands and hundreds of thousands of them fook 'wing in the vicinity of Shuttle Meadow, west of the Barnesdale sce- |tion and along the old canal. But their time was too short to do much damage. One week they were at sir Dest, and a few smail twigs on a few trees suffered Then the lo- cust began to disappear. week from the time the ai le was thick with the flying in- sects, most of them had gone. To- not one remains, The droning opped. Frees and gardens are afe and the footprints or finger prints or egg prints on the tree tops of time, record but faintly the visit. | The same situation is believed by naturalists to have sa retarded the laying of eggs and hatehing of grubs that in 1945 when they return again, [their number will be fewer and the | danger le: thirds of his al I'he inscet ong the REPUBLICANS TO " INK UP RADIOS Wil Broadoast Hoover's Ae- | ceptance Talk ! Washington, July 18 (P —Plans for inauguration of the radio pr gram of the republican campaign with broadcasting of the Hoover notification eeremonies from the stadium of Leland Stanford univer- sity at Palo Alto, California, on August 11 were announced today at the republican national committee { headquarters. With 38 stations already signed up, it was said that the hook-up will extend from coast to coa: nd from border to horder. More stations are arranging to put the cercmonies on the air, and committee officers here expected the total number at least to cqual the national convention's |record hook-up of 60 stations. | The air waves will first carry th voice of fenator Moses of New Hampshire as chairman of the noti- fication committee .The notification address is now being prepared by him at his Concord, N. H., home. Listeners-in next will hear Mr. Hoover, who has asserted that his acceptance speech will he his first | enunciation of the issues of the cam- paign. imates by broadcasting stations heir radio audiences were said to lof representatives will he Grand Chan- | Nair, claiming remuneration for 8er- indicate that some 30 million per- eellor King, Grand Drelate lauard, Grand Keeper of Records and Fcals Aspinall and Grand Trustce [Dolan. Tke following are to be sworn in- o office: Chancellor commander, ohn Kiasz: vice chancellor, Samuel [Kirshuit: prelate, Nathan Sandals Imaster at arms, Benjanmin Levine; inner guard, Nathan Roscn: outer [guard, Martin Shontz and master of- cchequer, A. E. Siderowf. The ceremonies will start at lo’clock and will continue until 12 [p. m. Dancing will follow the in- tallation exercises and refreshments will be served. All knights and their riends are urged to be oresent. PEDDLES WITHOUT LICE! ‘Edward M. Beiser, aged 25, of 78 ainfield strect, Hartford, was ar- ested this noon by Officer Thomas . Dolan on the charge of peddling vithout a license. He was released on his own recognizance and will be rraigned in police court tomorrow. Beizer was driving a load of wa- ermelons through Main street and s said to have admitted that he had imade a few sales, although it had been his intention to merely pass through the city on the way from [Bristol to Hartford. He saild he would not take out a local license [because he did not do any business (here. 2 While the population of England and Wales has more than doubled since 1838, the general death rate (has been reduced one-half. certain piece of property. The writ states that the plaintif? and defendant agreed on March 1 of this year whereby the plaintiff was to act as agent of the defendant !in the sale of a tract of land located at 60 James street. Tt is claimed by the plaintiff that he was to obtain |a customer for the purpose of mak- |ing the sale, which he did, securing | New Departure Mfg. Co. The 1 plointiff later received information |that the defendant and the proposed customer made an agreement for {the sale of the property, which he {claims is to take place within the next few days. The complaint further states that the defendant refused to pay him |the nominal charge for the sale and {alleged that the sum of $225 which represents 3 per cent of the purchase ! price, $7,500, is due him. Papers | were served today by Deputy Sher- |iff Martin Horwitz. i ARRESTED ON SUSPICION Ellison Dixon, colored, claiming the Y. M. C. A. of New York as his home, was locked up by Officers Peter Cabelus and W. P. Hayes this afternoon on suspicion. He was on Farmington avenue earlier in the day and appeared to be acting sus. piciously. 1t is said he made inquiry may be necessary to examine him as to his mentality. it was said at po- lice headquarters. as to the direction to “the forest.” It | Mar- | vices renderd in the disposal of & |sons would hear Hoover formally ac- | cept the nomination. | Lasting about an hour, every | phase of the notification program will be sent through the air. The program is slated to start at 5 p. | m., Pacific coast time; which is 6 p. !m., mountain time, 7 p. m, central standard time, § p. m. central day- light time, § p. m. eastern standard itime and 9 p. m., eastarn daylight [ time. Radio Dealers O. K. Association By-Laws At a meeting last night of the 14 {local radio dealers held at the | Junior 0. U. A. M. hall, the mem- ! bers unanimously accepted the con- stitution and by-laws as prepared by |the constitution committee. The as- |sociation also agreed to the condi- ltions submitted, designed to elim- |inate troubles now existing in the (radio husiness. The meeting was | presided over by Fred Judd. presi- {dent of the assoclation. The Cozy Corner restaurant served dinner. {Plans Round World Trip After Life of Hard Work New Bedford, Mass., July 18 (Pr— The two masted schooner Carma is (titting out here for what her owners ay will be a round the world cruise hat may last two or three years. e worked hard all my life and row I am going to play.” explained Dr. 8. P. Carleton who with Captain J. M. Masury is owner of the craft. Lucy Manol of 15 Dwight | digs his | less | Within a | ‘ourt reported to Captain Kelly at | | police headquarters today that a ! | bankbook in which deposits totalling | | $60 were credited and a small purse | | g e o moran | Mekican Issues Seem to Lead. in Tumbling ; | Main street storc. New York, July 15 (I'—Mexican |issies led the decline in a generally heavy bond market today, their | weakness being due fo selling influ- | enced by the assassination of Pres. ! t Obregon, Despite asser- [tions of Americ, sponsors that the | jstatus of the Mexican government | s would not be altered, fears nally were aroused in some Camp site nd bungalow site, Lake Pocotopaug, Salesman fternoon and . Proprictor. Warranty Deeds Marcielic Pitkevicious to Anthony | Pitevicious, South and Green streets. | Loute & Jones to James A. ang |9UArters and iquidation set in Mary A. Walsh, Pendleton road. | Mortgage Deeds | Michael Kroll to the Fidelity In- The biggest decline was registered | by National Railways of 1 4 1-25 assented of 1 ch at | dustrial Bank $750, Ledgecrest noon were down more than 5 points. | A 1Alnog the Mexican government Wil s sments honds the 6s large assented of 1933 | Bealn "'F'."'ml""’“h estate to James W. fshowed the maximum loss of 4| Ao BN place. ipoints. The 4s of 1904-54 declined | ite of William M., Krech to !, ) % . fed i e lmear {more than a point under the heavi- | C. Emil Carls & -~ |est liquidation in the group. The 4s . il Carlson to the New Brit- |of 1910-45 sagged more than two |din Trust Co., Lincoln street. Ipoints and other issues werc down Releases about a point each, Touis Y. Gabermen ‘N)- zwiecki, S | samuel 1 2k, Stanley to nley Terrace Aron to Michael Star Rozalia | {in the list. The few strong spots in- cluded Detroit and Mackina 1, and Penn | = — {1sland 4 | ——————————— fand Otis Steel, s | | U. 8. government obligations were ! | heavy. CURB MARKET GOES - UP WITH OTHER (Easing Money Rates Encourages | Deaths | Mrs. William M. Earle Mrs. William M. Earle of 48 Bea- vor street died early Just night at {her home at th of 67 years. She was a resident of this city for the past 4 Oyears and a member of the St. Mary's parish. | Besides her husband she four sons. William I'. Earle of New Haven, John rle of the local | water department and Thomas and Dealing Daniel 'l of this ity two | o . Mrs. Jobn L. Fagan ang| N°W York, July 18 (P—Fasing artin Burke, both of {his city, | MONeY rates cncouraged buying and ¢ lifted prices generally on the curb market today, while individual de- velopments produced wide gains in al specialties. Dancitaly was one of the features in the advance, gaining 5 points on buying evidently inspired by expect- ations of a favorable earnings re- {port duc Friday. Warner Brothers | | Pictures advanced a point to a new jtop at 37 5-S on the strength of its _ |ambitious program for the develop- iment of talking motion pictures. Re- ports of pending contracts sent Zenith Radio up nearly b points to new high at 21%. Spanish & General again established a new [Nigh, this time at & 5-8 Eastern | nship, on a small turnover, ched a new peak at 97%, up |nearly 10 points. | Borg Warner, which soared more |than 8 points to a new high at 901, 10 the advance of automotive fs- | | sucs. Mining shares also were strong, | (with Newmont and Noranda showing | zains of about 2 points each. Oils and utilitics were firm, | gains were limited. uson, { leaves jof 1 a sister, w Haven, The funeral will be held morning at 9 o'clock at St. M; church and interment will be in S, | Mary's cemetery. Mrs, John Cobey of | Michael N Michael Nyhalo, 35, dicd after 8 o'clock last night home, 84 Lawlor street. He member of the A. R. S ciety and of the gles 3 sides his wife he leaves two sons and a daughter. Funeral services Will be held at 9 o'clock tomorrow morning at the Holy Trinity Greek Catholic chiureh. Arrangements for burial are incomplete and are in charge of I'rank Brodzik & Son. yhalo shortly at his club. [ —_—1 Funerals John Magnuson The funeral of John M 172, who died suddenly Sunday morn. (ing, was leld this morning at 9:30 | lat Erwin Chapel. Services were conducted by Rev. Dr. Abel A. Ahl- | ! qu Buriul was in Fairview ceme- [ Prisoner Tcaps 22 Feet Into Street | tery. Anderson |of Y. and a son of | Py arrived last but | SENSATIONAL ESCAPE to Make FUis Getaway From Prison | LA in Worcester This Morning. | — Worcester, Mass., July 18 (P | Mrs. Margaret ('Bricn Adelard Bonneville, 23, of this city. The of Mrs. Margarct who was serving an indeterminate | McDonell O'Brien of 54 Tremont | sentence in the Worcester house of jstreet will be held Thursday morn- | correction for larceny of automo- ing at 10 o'clock at St. Mary's | piles, made a tional escape | |church and burial will be in 8t |from the jall today by working his Mary's cemetery. ¥ to the top of a workshop wall {and jumping 22 feet into Prospect |strect. He had been transterred to the house of correction here from the Concord reformatory in 1926 after beinz sentenced in superior court. With a party of other pris- oners, Bonneville was detailed to [clean up the fail yard this morning. !White the guard was not looking in | his direction, Bonneville swung him- | self to a window of the worship, reached to a line of steam pipes vhich run from this shop to the boiler house, pulled himself to the 100f and ran 70 feet across the roof | to the wall and leaped into the Mrs. Delia T. Parsell The funeral of Mre. Delia T. Par- | scll of 179 Monroe street will be held Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Stanley Memorial church. | |Rev. R, N. Gilman will officiate and | burial will be in Fairview cemetery. | The funeral of David Wicander |17, son of David Wicander and Mrs Elizabeth Wicander of 728 Stanlev |street, was held this afternoon at oclock at the Stanley Memorial church, Rev. R. N. Gilman officiat- {ing. Burial was in Fairview ceme- | | tery. bl The caure of the boy's sudden |UTE2 Within a fow minutes atter death was attributed to the dilation | 113 €5cape. the jail guards and etty of the heart, according to an autop- | PO1ic® officers were seeking him but sk {he had made good h Joceph A. Haffey {Nolle Is Granted in ! Case of Two Doctors UNUDERTAKER Phone 1625-2 Bridgeport. July 18 (® — Dr. Opposite 8t Mary’s Charch | Woodburne R. Avis, 62, of 701 Win- |chester avenue, New Haven and Dr. | Residence 17 Summer 86.—1628-3 | Morris T. Horwitz, 37, who are now |serving a sentence in state prison. were granfed nolles in city court to- |1egat operation. ' The charges have been pending Say “Bun Voyage™ fe thuse whe safl, |5INCe August 1927 and were brought with Semins SelcpRotod foo {In_connection _with the death of | Dorothy May Reynolds. Softness was general throughout | | Am Sumatra !day on charges of performing an il- | ) Bnlkrerls Posy mn | The nolles were entered on the ‘elegraph Flori: recommendation of the prosccuting ot New Britain' - T 3 03 WEST MAIN ST. PROF. BLDG. TELEPHONE 88 OR 181 Greenheuses Maple !attorney READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS ed by heavy short covering on the part of traders, who had sold stocks on the theory that a further tight- ening of money rates was in pros. pect. Burrough Adding Machine, direc- tors of which declared a stock divi- dend of 5 per cent, ran up 14 Points 1o a new high record at 175, Texas & Pacific soared 10 points to a new record top at 170. McCrory stores A, American Express, Midland Steel preducts preferred, R. H. Macy Radio and National Tea sold 5 to 12 pointa higher. General Motors was again in de- mand on buying influenced by expec- tations of extra dividend at the Au- Eust meecting of directors, running | 'p more than 3 points to around 190, Chrysler also advanced 3 points in reflection of the stockholders’ ap- proval of a stock in © paving the way for the merger with Dodge Bros.. Wright, Curtiss, Montgomery- Ward, Houston Oil, Greens Cananes Copper, Jolns Manville, Allied Chemical and a number of other industrial favorites climbed or more. 3 THE MARKET AT 0 P. M. (Furnished by Putnam & Co.) High Low Close 1713, 168% 171 Al Che & Dye g Che pd Ameriean Can Am Loco . 843, 60% 60 Am Sm & Re 1587 Am Sy r 6y Am Tobacco . 137 Am oWoien . - Anaconda Cop 667, Atchison 1861 Bult & Ohio ..1051, Beth Steel .....537% Cerro De Pasco 74 Ches & Ohio . .17815 Chic R 1 & Pucl13 i, Chrysler Corp Colo Fuel ... ‘onso Gas .. Corn Prod Day Chem .. Erie RR m Players Fleischmann ., Freeport Tex , Genl Asphalt . Genl Flec ... Genl Motors .. Hudson Moto! Hersheys Int Comb, Eng 5815 Int Cement ... 64 Int Nickel .... 93 Int Harves ... 264 Int Paper Ken Cop . Mack Truck Marland Oil .. Mo Kan & Tex Mont Ward N Y Central . 14715 1903 821 53 North Amer. North Pacif Pack Mot Car 7314 Pan Am Pet B 421 Phillips Pet. Pierce Arrow Radio Corp . Remington Rd Reading Sears Roebuck 1 Sinclair Oil Southern P Std Oil N J Sd OB NY . Stewart Warner Studebaker Texas Co ..... 50% Tex Gulf Sulph 687 Tim Kol Bear 119 Underwood 6514 Tnion Pac . 43% 341y 84 { I'nion United Fruit . 136 1S Ind Al .. U S Rubber U S Steel sh Ry West Elee Willys Over Wright Aern . 3 Am Tel & Tel 1745 LOCAL STOCKS {Furnished by Putnam & Co.) Insurance Stocks. Bid Azked Actna Casnalty . Aetna Life Ins Co . Aetna Fire Automodile Tns Hartford Fire National Fire .. Phoenix Tire . Travelers Ins Co . Conn. General Trav. Rights .. cee. 232 Mauufacturing Stocks. Am Hardware « 08 Am Hosjery G s wa 22 Beaton & Cadwell . Bige-Hfd Cpt Co com Billings & Spencer com Billings & Spencer ptd Bristol Brass ... Colt's Arms 835 16 34 afnir Bearing Co 138 Hart & Cooley . Landers, F .. B Machine .. B Machine pfd les-Be-Pond com North & Judd . Peck, Stowe & Wil .. Russell Mfg Co . Scovill Mfg Co Rftandard Screw Stanley Works Torrington Co com . Union Mfg Co . 14 Public Utilities Stocks. Conn. Elec Service wp = 55 West Main Street New Britain Phone 2380 points | 5815 | Stuart G. Segar, Manager We Ofter: Greenwich Water and Gas Preferred To Yield 67. EDDY BROTHERS & & Members Hartford Stock Exchange 25 . W DA HARTFORD neaoEN BurritHotel 8idj, Hartford Com.Trust Bid3, Colony Bidg, We Offer: 50 Shares of American Hardware $65 per Unit Central National Corporation This is different. This is where a bank has the investing of your money. Same as Chase Securities, National City Co., and Guaranty Co. The money may be on call when stocks are high. It may be invested in bank stocks and other high grade securities when they are low. Your money may be turned over several times in course of a year, thereby earning large dividends for stockholders. |l The supply of this security is limited. No more when this stock is placed with the investor. | | .- | Fuller, Richter, Aldrich & Co. COMMERCIAL TRUST BUILDING NEW BRITAIN MEMBERS HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGE Josepb M. Halloran Tel. 1858 llnl: C. Mfett Prince & Whitely Established 1878, Members New York, Chicago and Cleveland Stock Exchanges. Burritt Bldg.—69 West Main St.—Tel. 5405 Donald R. Hart, Mgr. Congress Cigar Stores, Inc. Analysis Copy will be mailed on request “The Future of the Small Loan Business’ A booklet that should be read by all investors. We will be pleased to send you a copy together with information concerning an investment in our company. Write for circular “S.” The Phoenix Finance Corp. 34 State Street 308 Main St. Hartford, Conn. New Britain, Conn. Conn Lt & Pow pfd 1011 103% Htd Elec Light . .. 128 N B Gas . 75 Southern N E Tel 165 Conn Power . 133 |Conn do frac . 1.1% PLANES ARE AT PORTLAND National Reliability Aviators Rest- ing Today, Preparatory to Start- ing Off Tomorrow. Portland, Ore., July 15 (UP)— The 23 airplanes taking part in the national rellability air tour left here today for Tacoma, where they will remain tonight. A Waco number 10, flown by M. Gould Beard, was the first machine to take off from the Bwan Island airport. He rose from the ground and headed north at 9 a. m. The other planes left at one minute in- tervala TREASURY BALANCE Treasury Balance, $170,841,300. | 1 | | Two Mass. Boys Arrested With Stolen Auto Truck Ivoryton, July 18 (M—Andrew Burnast, 17, of North Adams, Mass. ;and Joseph Meroda, 16, of Chicopee Falls, Mass., were picked up here today for the police of Bridgeport, after the light truck in which they were riding had overturned. The vouths are alleged to have stolen the truck in Bridgeport after abandon- 1Ng 2 passenger automobile stolen in New York. The fliers will leave tomorrow fer Spokane.

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