New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 22, 1929, Page 21

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TEACHERS SUPPORT LIBRARY REQUEST Endorse Movement to Get Larger - Gity Alowanoe By tmanimous vote of 300 teach- ers & resolution supporting the New Britain Libarry in its "3" Jor funds to supply books in thé achools of this city were adopted -at s con- ‘There will be & rehearsal of the initiatory degre at the regular meet- ing of Andree Lodge, I O. O. F., ‘Wednesday evening. Miss Edith Wilcox of 19 Bradley street ia ill with an attack of the grippe. Fred Beach. Ted Monier, Jess Tomlin and A. G. Hawker are at- tending the sportsmen’s show in Boston, August Hultin, August Christen- sen and Frank and Mary Charamut have sold property in Rocky Hill to the Rocky Hill Land Co. The sales were made .through the office of 'SV, DEPARTENT ENCAMPMENT HERE State Body and Auriliary Con- vention April 34-35 For the first time in 15 or 16 years the Connecticut department, Deaths John Mulligan John Mulligan, 73 years old, | former resident of this city, died yes- terday at Bristol hospital, where he had been ill a short time. He was born in Cheshire and came to New Britain with his parents when he was about 13 years cld. Mr. Mulligan completed his tdu- | cation in the New Britain schools and lived here until he was about 23 years of age when he removed to Dristol. He was a carpenter by trade War, and the state. department of Sons of Veterans' auxiliary will hold Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil ' proplematical, but the fact remains | [ || Wall Street Briefs The plethora of funds which has brought call money to the 6 per cent level, with 5 per cent quoted outside, | has enabled banks which have bor- rowed heavily from the Federal Re- serve bank, to reduce thei. indebted- ness appreciably, bankers say. Whether such conditions will obtain until the close of business Wednes- day and consequently affect the Thursday brokers' loan report is that at the opening of business to- day the credit situation was decid- MARKET RESPONIS | T0 EASY NONEY ‘Shows Yigorous Upturn in Motor | Shares Today | New York, Jan. 22 UP—The stock | market responded to slightly casier ! today with a vigorous upturn, particularly in the metal and motor ares and specialties More than 1| | mone:; PUTNAM & CO, \‘ Neaw Yok & Hertford Stoch Bnshangss \ MAIN §T., NEW BRITAIN TEL. 2040 MARTFORD OFFICE, 6 CENTRAL \ 31 WE! We Offer: ore of issues were lifted to new zh ground, the old Du Pont stock cording a maximum gain of G0 | points. | Wall strect understands the chicf | Call money was in supply at an | reason for the firmness of time official rate of 6 per cent, which | money is the disinclination to lend | was shaded to in the outside for long periods at prevailing rates, | market, and banlk; expressed the 7 per cent or above, because of fear |opinion that higher rates would be of conflict with usury laws. Although [improbable until the end of the the laws seldom are invoked, bank-|month. The inflow of gold from ers and brokers apaprently realize | England was resumed for the first the possibilities of the situation and | time since November with a ship- accordingly are playing safe. ment of $2,500,000, which in: d | considerable bullish enthusiasm, though the Bank of England is ex-|§ Members of New York and Hartford Stock Exchanges pected to raise its rediscount rate be- |l 55 West Main Street New Britain I'hone 3380 fore permitting the loss of any con- Stuart G. Sogar, M siderable amount of gold. b SRR The attitude toward the credit situation in banking circles remain- ed rather gloomy, however, as time money held at 7 3-4 per cent for the shorter maturities, and bankers acceptance rates in some cases were | higher than the rediscount rate. Al rise in the rediscount rate of one | of the interior Rescrve bunks is re- | garded as likely at any time; paving the way for an increase at New Yor . The day's news was largely fav- orable, including the second increase in the dividend rate of Chile Cop- per in three months, placing it on | : 0 annual basis. It was re-| ported that Anaconda had offered to exchange 73 sharcs of its stock for every 100 sha of Chile which it | does not already hold. M. A. Hanna Co., resumed dividends on the first preferred stock after a lapse of four years. An unfavorable devclopment was further reductions in gasoline e he stock market opened with the main price trend upward today, | although there was some irregular- | ity. Accumulation of the coppers continued, with Anaconda, Kenne- cutt, Columet and Hecla and others | mounting 1 to 2 points, | i Stecl, Packard, Consolidated | Gas and New Haven opened a point | and more higher. Wright Aero was a soft spot, losing 3 points, Other initial losses were fractional. The market strengthened as U. §. Stee ter losing more than 5 points vesterday, again went for- | ward, extending its gain in the first |l 8 Rubber halt hour {o % 1-2 points. Banks|U S Steel ..., 1901 were reported to be paying oft more | Wabash Ry . of their indebtedness at the federal | WVest Elec . reserve, and credit conditions were | \Willys Over temporarily more comfortable. | Woolworth .. The buying of coppers continued | Wright Aero . lat a fast pace as a 17 cent domestic | AM Tel & Tel four cents above the low of regarded as assured. | their annual encampment in New Britain. The convention will be held in the Jr. 0. U. A. M. hall April 24 and Earl Atwater of Southington, de- | partment commander of the Sons of Veterans, will -be ope of the pre- | siding officers. Plans for the convention will be | discussed at a district gathering of | each of these organizations in con- | nection with a supper at the Jr. Q.| U. A. M. hall tomorrow evening at 6:30 o'cloc HAINES' FUNERAL EXTREMELY SIMPLE! (Continued from First Page) Aetna Life Insurance Co. Price on Application. H. E. Christensen and Aaron Dan- ielson. Miss Rose Kirshnit of Linwood street, president of the Junior Ha- dassah, attended the conference of Connecticut presidents of Junior Ha- dassah at the home of Miss Eva Kaplan, Howard avenue, New Haven. Officers will be elected, motion pictures shown and reports of com- mittees heard at the meeting of the New Britain Electrical club at the state trade school Friday evening. Refreshments will be served. Martha Chapter, Order of Eastern Star, will hold a regular meeting Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock. Hibert V. Jones of Bristol will ad- dress the Rotary club Thursday. Members and officers of Charter Oak chapter, Order of DeMolay, of Hartford, will work the DeMolay de- taxation. FAE SR Sl S““WING PR"HT gree at a meeting of Nathan Hale |chapter of this city tonight. . 0! c..swmm Nakes De- Iwa- eallod o e Vers strat Guras partment Support ltsell | at 2:22 o'clock this afternoon. Officer William P. Hayes will re- sume duty tomorrow after a brief illness. The credit .bureau of the Cham. bér of Commerce has: not-only been self supporting .during the year just ¢losed but has made a small profit, Officer Louis E. Harper under- went an eperation:at New Britain according to Becretary Ralph L Benson, who.reported to the mery General hospital for appendicitis to- cantile bureau directors todsy that day. He was. reported resting com- fortably this afternoon. the bureau has a surplus of $230.39 for the year. KEdward Ragan. lecal truckman, The directors heard a report on was arrested in Portchester, N. Y., today om the charge of driving an automobije with improper brakes. Clifton C. McKenna, former sales manager of the Russell & win Ce the small claims court which now {and-former Maple Hill resident, is 15 before the common council for conslderation, while a bill is being prepared for -presentation.to the legislature, The following committee on uni renewing acquaintances in this city. MrZ McKenna is in charge of the form hcurs was reappointed: A. J. Leventhal, chairman; Clifford Odin, New York office of the P. & F. Cor- bin' plant and resides at New John Erickson, Parker Abbe, G. K. Bpring and Lou hael. Rochelle, Deputy Hh.t‘rif[ Martin H. Horwitz, John Waterman Wise Speaks Here in March ference of elementary school in- structors held at the Wamut Hill school -yesterday atternoon. The resolution .pgmed by the teachers is as follows: - - “That a committee in the interest of education, and-in-support of the library = committee's request:_for funds, appear before the board of finan’e and taxation and respectfully call attention to. this existing need. It is the plan of the United Par- ents & Teachers’ asociation to also support the library committee in it requests of the board of finance and edly more comfortable, although and was employed by the Bristol admittedly only temporarily so. Brass Co. Surviving him are three sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth Keough of this city, Mrs. Margaret ‘SBhea of Bridgeport, and Mrs. Catherine White of Hart- ford, and a brother, Bernard Mulli- gan of this city, The funeral will be held tomor- row morning from the funeral par- lors of Joseph A. Haffey Co. on Main street at $:45 o'clock and at 9 o'clock at St. Mary's churc Burial will be in St. Mary's ceme- | tery. | hi; | Independent steel producers in the Youngstown district are reported to be on a better basis than in the last quarter of 1928, the best period of that year, as a result of price firm- ness and strong demand for steel. no signs for a let up are seen. Republic Iron and Steel is reported improving its Youngstown plants. Anna Micczkowski Anna Mieczkowski, five years old, daughter of Mrs. Victoria Mieczkow- ski of 150 Broad street, died at Hart- ford Isolation hospital last night of encephalitis, Sh® was a pupil of the third grade at the Sacred Heart school. Sur- | viving her are two hrothers, John | and Stanley Mieczkowskl. The funeral will be held tomor- row mcrning at 7:30 o'clock at fun- cral parlors of K. Blogoslowski Co. on Orange street. Bural will be in Sacred Heart cemetery. The funeral will be private. We Offer: The American Steel & Wire com- pany is closing its plant at Salem, 0., permanently on March 1. HARTFORD FIRE Price on Application. standing international services. “I feel very keenly the loss to the Army and find no word to express the sympathy I feel for Mrs. Haines A and their children at this moment| Crude oil prices in the week of the trazic sudden loss of their|ended Jan. 19, averaged in 10 prin- loved one.” said the statement, | cipal fields $1.74 & barrel, unchanged One of the most touching moments from the previous week, compared of the funcral services came When a | With $1.457 in the corr | elim girl in a Salvation Army uni-| Week of 1928, the Oil, Plant and form walked to the rostrum and in|Drug reporter state: at a sweet low voice told of the refineries was fractionally e missioner’s life a - his famil averaging conts a gallon row. She was late comm against 8.96 the previous week and or's daughter, gn Winifred | 6.57 cents last year, Haines, who had come from Ger- — many to attend the funeral ., Not one in the thousands that fill- ed the hall stirred as she told of her love for one who was “more than a father—a pal.” *x lute my father,” she said as | she gestured toward the coffin at the end and then slowly walked away. John Gerardi John, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. alvatore Gerardi of 195 High street, died last night at the home. The funeral was held this after- noon at 2 o'clock at the funeral par- lors of JLaraia & Sagarino on Spring street. Burial was in St Mary's cemetery, EDDY BROTHERS & & Members Hartford Stock Exchange # NEW BATTAIN HARTFORD 4% remgen Buriktotelbdg. Hartford Com. Trust Bidg, * Colony Bidg, the E. E. Porterfield. Jr.. president of the American Eagle Aircraft Cor- poration. Kansas City, has r that trading in the compan: on the New York produce be halted. Mrs. Donald W. Gregory Mrs. Eva Virginia Gregory, wife | of Donald W, died at her home, 1904 Main street, East Hart- ford, last night. She was born in January 11, 1897. She lcaves be- | sides her husband, four brothers, | Charles, Raymond., Daniel ang ][;HI[;A[iu P[]I‘IEE George Cook; her mother, Mrs, Lucy Cook, and a sister, Miss Theresa Cook. Funeral services will be held at Erwin Memorial chapel tomorrow (Continued from Virst Page) burean hefore detectives and vietims of recent holdups and robberies, in afternoon at 3 o'clock. Rev. L., N. Denniston, reader of the Christian the hope that identifications migat be made. We Offer: 10 Shares Hartford Fire Ins. 10 Shares Aetna Fire Ins. 10 Shares Aetna Life Ins. Standard Oil company of Jersey has reduced the pri gasoline one cent a gallon, making the new tank wagon price 14 cents throughout its territory except Delaware. New Britaln, | ‘Machine tool sales throughout the country are steady and indications are that buying will remain active, the American Machinist repor volume of unfilled orders is be large. | Science church of Hartford, will of- ficiate. Burial will be in Fairview cemetery., The remains will be at the funvrll} home of B. C. Porter Sons until noon Wednesday. 190 139% 3% 212 200% BOYS JUST WON'T BELITTLELAMBS | Will Be Tigers or Wolves, But 1393% 311 218 200% AR 3 1625 New Cases of Influenza Reported | Hartford, Jan. 22 (UP)—The state | | health department received report of | 625 new cases of Influenza in Con- necticut todesy. Bridgeport reported 375 cases. Others included: Danbury Accept Bonds Following the show-up police be- gan accepting bonds for those pris- oners who had not been identified. Beveral men wanted in connection | | with specific crimes were found ta {have been caught in the cleanup. — | TREAS Treasury B: lance, $144,107,212 Da ident pro tem. of Attorney Albert A. Greenberg, and Willlam Raphael are !sojourning in Cuba. They will return after February 1. ) a ¢ ] Three Grass Fires An executive meeting of the Junior t V Hadassah was held last cvening at .In Middle of Winter the home of. Miss Evelyn Zucker of | The fire department was called Linwood street, Miss 1da Epstein of {0 three grass fires today, the first Hartford, cultural chairman of the | /00§ on property of Rodman W. yegionul hoard, and Mrs, Simons of |Chamberlain, 338 Lincoln street at Springfield, president of the regional | 11:55 o'clock, Co. No. 4 responding, board, attended the meeting. PI:mH‘""’ the second at 11:58 o'clock, an o being made to recetve John|2larm from Box 426 bringing ap- Waterman Wise, son of Rabbi Stes Paratus to property of E. 0. Ki phen 8. Wise, at 4 meeting to be held | Pourne on Wells strect. At 1:23 this in March. - This will be the first op-&fternoan, Co. No. ¢ went to 75 Cur- portunity for the public of New Brit- |tis street ,the property being owned n to hear Mr. Wise, by the Stanley Works. Miss Rowe Kirshnit, prosident, ap- pointed the following committees: | Crude Oil at New Chairman of the ticket committee, Miss Julia Levine; chairman of pro- gram' committee, Miss Anna Kal- manowitz; chairman of . publicity Miss Mollic Light; chairnan of hal committce, Miss Esther 8tein: chair- man of poster committee, Miss Jean- ette Light, Peak in. Oklahoma Tulsa, Okla., Jan. 22 U — Crude il production reached a new high | peak in the week ended January 19, d the Oil'and Gas Journal today, | with daily ‘average output from the [nation's_flelds of 2,649,530 barrels. | Five aliens were arrcsted and turn. led over to immigration authorities for deportation. Alens have been blamed by police for many of the crimes of violence within the past few months, More cleanup drives, as sudden and as thorough as that which had Mrs, Margaret Crowley Five sons and a son-in-law of Mrs. Margaret Crowley of 267 Chapman street were pall bearers at her fu- neral which was held this morning. | The sons were James, Charles, | Frank, John 132; Newtown, 7; Jewett City, 18 | Griswold, 15; Waterbury, 4; Some New Britain, 4; New Haven, 31 Winsted, 21; Groton, 1 Hartford, 24; Hamden, 7 and Tolland, | HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGE (Furnisted by Eddy Bros. & Co.) Railrond Ntocks keep up with demands. Anaconda touched its previous high at 127 1-2 nd Kennecott mounted 3 points. A block of 10,000 shares of Chile |changed hands at 90, a new high, in anticipation of favorable action by the directors meeting later in the CURB PRICES IN Not Baby Sheep There are too many “don’ts® be- ing offered to boys and giris today, acording to Gunnar H. Berg, assist- ant director of the educational de- - partment of the national Boy Bcout council, who spoke to the members STRONG ADVANCE R — and Joseph and the SENIOR H. S. NOTES | son-in-law Charles Solomon. Three This marked the third consecutive | gu\‘:} ng‘d“"‘ today, are to follow, | ;14 & conn West B R guar .. M) | Studebaker was again heavily of the Lions' club today. ‘The members of the Senior High #chool were dismissedsthis noon from further study for thg day because of the teachers’ meeting being held at the Walnut Hill schoel. The students did their this morning in their respective honie rooms. . banking | week that ‘production has set a new mark. As in previous weeks, the in- ‘crcag(‘d flow was due to deep test |production in the Santa Fe Springs fields of California. The Seminole area of Oklahoma showed an aver- age daily increase of approximately 19,000 barrels. Assocmted Gas and Electric System Table of Exchanges of Preferred Stocks and Bonds ‘TO BE DEPOSITED = Wastern N. Y. Gas & Elec. Corp. §: (Depow & Lanc. L., P. & Cond: JONDS AND DEBENTURES it i 1 ‘ertificates will not price. Interest and ive Convertible 3 Pid. be_issual but dividends be A Stock will not be delivered at exchange bul J ible Debenture Cfl\'ifica!fi ln‘l'hoh 2 t for Optiea | Valuein 53% Investment Certificates at 100 Fi~r Stock Pref. Ce.) ion 1 above. be available in denominations of $1.000 in Coupon Registered Fractional o eaa e itors ma; o adjusted 0 as ‘a’t‘-’: continueus but mot amount of §1 ‘rincipal . previous ones and are subject to withdrawal ot ASSOCIATED GAS AND ELECTRIC SECURITIES CO., Tne. Jeauary 15, 1929, 61 Brosdway, New York City. grandsons, Franc! William and Charles Crowley were flower bear- ers. | Rev. Thomas Laden was the cele- |brant of a solemn high mass of requiem at the Church of St. John |the Evangelist at 10 o'clock. Rev. | Thomas Tiernan was deacon, Rev. |John J. Keane was sub-deacon and | | Rev. Edward Gradeck was master | of ceremonies. | As the casket entered the church | Grieg's funeral march was played. | The Kyrie from Mozart's Twelfth Mass was played and at the offer- | tory Mrs. Mary T. Crean sang Mil- | lard's “Ave Maria.” The 8anctus, Benedictus and Agnus Dei were from Millard’s mass in G. At the conclusion Mrs. Crean sang “Beau- tiful Land on High” and as the re- : mains were being taken from the [0'dled tops on Japanese ships. church Chopins’ funcral march was | “nce Japanese sailors will pay at. Sy [tention to the fishy nceds during St. Mary's church quartet consist. YOYage and American sailors will ing of Mrs. Crean, soprano; Mrs. J, 1Ot Wo are always in difficulty in C. Connelly, contralto; James D. getting hearings and attention be- Donohue, bass, and John J. Crean, |Cause cverybody laughs when we tenor, assisted by Mrs. Walter Kovel, | mention our industry and we find coniralbe, saig dnmng the i |that even the growing import ship- Rev. Father Tiernan assisted b ments are lumped by the official the other three priests conducted the | figures into the collection with salt committal services. Burial was in St. | herring, pickled ~codfish and Rus- | Mary's cemetery. sian caviar.” g GOLDFISH INDUSTRY SEENS PROTECTION (Continued from Iirst Page) mand. That sort of a rate can be applied, since goldfish have a regu- lar market price status, running from two and one-half cents apiece up to much higher figures for larger and fancier individuals. “All this oriental goldfish compe- tition is foreign. The fish can be shipped only in tin cans with per- Jacob Baumgacrtner Funeral services for Jacob Baum- gacrtner of 293 Myrtle street will be | held tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock | at St. Peter's church. A solemn high mass of requiem will he celebrated. | Burial will be in St. Mary's ceme- | 5 from her father, Tom Mix, tery. ! cowboy film star .today. The remains will be at the home | “Your Honor, this girl should be of Frank Zimmerman of 71 Vine|dcclared incompetent as a common street until the funeral. | spendthrift,” R. D. Knickerbocker. | attorney for Mix, told the gourt yes- | Mrs. Grace E. Hurlbut | terday.” “I've been trying to get her Funeral services for Mrs. Grace |check to her, but creditors keep at- E. Hurlbut of 28 Murray street will | taching it. It séems she spent $550 be held tomorrow afternoon at 2 on hose and dresses alone.” o'clock at the home. Rev. Theodore! .\, can't have this sort of thing 8 Dunn, assistant pastor of the |y i ciice caid Judge Ellas V. South Congregational church, Will | poconkranz. Tom Mix’s Daughter | Spends Too Much Money | Los Angeles, Jan. 22 (P—Credit- | ors again stood between Ruth Janc | Mix and her monthly allowance of | momctery. | tlement of the claims aguinst her. 1t was the second successive month that her allowance had been attach- ed. MISS MARY HOAR DIES Worcester, Mass,, Jan. 22 P— Miss Mary Hoar, daughter of the| late United States Scnator George A. | Hoar, died today in her home here. | She was born in this city 75 years ago today. Illuminating Gas New York, Jan. 22 (P—Illuminat- | ing gas ecscaping from a defective heater today caused the deaths of three children in a Brooklyn family | and the serious illness of their par- | ents. Those killed were Rose, Ralph and Harry Alpern. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Alpern, the parents, who slept in an adjoining room, tricd to rescue the | children, but were overcome by the | fumes. A passing milkman, hearing the commotion, saved the parents, | and dragged the children into the open air, but it was too late. —e A. Haffey UNDERTARESR Phone 1633-3 Merys Chareh ".—10t3-3 33% Reductions on all Bird Cages 1t has recently been found that | hailstones often contain bacteria, probably because the water vapor condensed on particles of organic dust, Banks and Trust Companiex Bankers Trust (o .. 310 | bought, as result of the reports of Upward Trend Takes Place Capitol Natl Bauk & Trust City Bank and Trust Co . Commercial Trust Co of Conn River Banking Co irst National Bank Hfa Natl Bank & Trust Co . Hfd-Conn Trust Co Morris_Plan Bank of lifd N B Trust Co . | Park Street Trust Co ‘l'noemx State Bank & Trust Co Riverside Trust Co West Hfd Trust Co Finance First Bond & Mtg ]H(d Aetna Realty Co . | Land Mtge & Title Co . .. il'ndarwr\t!rl Finance Corp, com | Underwrite vid Fire Insurance Companies Aetna (Fire) Ins Co . Automobile Ins Co | 1fa Fire Ins Co Natl Fire Ins Co .... | Pheenix (Fire) Ins Co | Rossia Ins Co .. | Life, Indemnity and Other Compunies | Aetna Casualty & suret | Aetna Lite Ins Co . | Conn Gen Life Ins Co ifd Steam Boil Insp & | Lincoin Nati Lite Ins Co | Travelers Ins co . 5 | Public” Utilities | Conn Light & Tower Co. pfd ... | Conn Light & Power Co, prd | Conn Power Co, com . Co . 150] 116] 19| 150 1010 | 255 18901915 120 | 123 154 |a stock dividend. A block of 10,500 |shares was taken at 93 1-8. up nearly a point. Motor Products | iumped nearly 5 points, Adolf Gobel nearly 3, National Biscuit and Adams Express each 2. Warner Brothers preferred touch- ed a new high at 59 1-4, whil2 Johns Manville, Montgomery Ward, American Safety Razor, Chicago Great Western preferred and 00 | preferred mounted 1 to 1 3-4 points. THE MARKET AT 2:30 P. (Furnished by Putnam & Co.) Money 6 Per Cent High low Close 275 5 Under Utility Leadership New York, Jan. 22 M—Curb mar- ket' prices continued to advance to- ay under the leadership of utilities. lsewhere in the list gains were moderate, but there was a steady up ward movement which gave evidence of strong buying support. FElectric Bond & Share and Amer- ican Light & Traction were features of the utility group, both moving to new high levels, the first up 12 points to 211 and the other soaring 17 points to 238. Electric Investors |edvanced 5 points and American | Superpower A and B 3 and 7 points | respectively, all establishing new peaks. Charis corporation improved on buying encouraged by expectations of a more liberal dividend policy as the result of improved earnings. Marconi International was acquired on announcement the company has closed a contract with the Peninsu- lar & Oriental Navigation company to furnish equipment for the 100 P, /Al Che & Dye Am Ag Che pd American Can Am Toco Am Sumatra Am Sm & Re Am Sugar ... Am Tobacco . Am Woolen Anaconda Cop Atchison ... Balt & Ohio. Beth Steel Speaking of the individualism of a boy - who takes his knife and whittles & piece out of the mahog- any library table, he sald: “If that's all he has to do, that's what he'll do.” He advised giving the boy some activity to keep him from doing damage. The woodshed session is not approved by the scout officlal, who says “It is more effective te let the boy split the boards thaa to split the boards on the boy”. “A boy is brutally frank because he hasn’t learned to lie like his el ders,” the visitors stated. | Mr. Berg described as “The great- ' est nincompoop and ignoramus in the history of child psychology, the inventor of the phrase ‘a ehild should be seen but not heard".” He severely flayed the peeple “who go around the world saying ‘you must not do that or you mist do this’ and said they are just re- pressing people. You don't want your boy to grow up to be a melly- coddle. Some people never sy ‘well done’' except when they are; ordering beefsteak in & restauraat.{ “Too many programs for boys and girls are drawn in sheltered cloisters | Htd Elee - : He ordered the allow- | & officiate. Burlal will be in Fairview .pce jmpounded pending final set- | Is Cause of Deaths|: 11 95 90, 651 140 134] 675| 95| 185 Conn Power C: 5 Greenwich Water & Gas, pfd .. Hid sas Light Co, com HEd City Gas Light Co, pid . Light Co, com Mid Elec Light Co V T C Holyoke Water Power Co Northern Conn Power C 8 N E Telephone . Manufacturing Compai Acme Wire Co, com Acme Wire Co, pfd American Hardware Corp American Hosiery Co American Silver Co . American Thread Co, pfd Automatic Refrigerating Co Balf, (The Edward) Co Beaton & Cadwell Mg Co . Bigelow-H(d Carpet Co, Bigelow-Hfd Carpet « Billings & Spencer Co, pid Bristol Brass Corp Bristol Brass Corp, pfd Cuse. Lockwood & Brainard Co Colling Co ... s Patent Fire Arms Co ptd .. tnir Bearing Co lier Brush com ¢ ller Brush com Cla: Hart & Cooley Co .... Hartman Tobaccs, com Hartman Tobacco, International Silver C. Internationnl Silver Tacobs Mfg Co ... - Landers, Irary & Clark s Manning Bewman & Co, Class A Manning Bowman & to, Class B t1 Marine Lamp Co . B Machiny Co. com B Mach Co, Class A New Departure Mfg Co, pfd New Haven Clock, com New Haven Clock, pfd Niles-Bement-Pond (o, Nites-Bement-Pond Co, North & Judd Mfg Co Peck, Stow & Wilcox Plimpton Mfg o Ruesell Mfg Co . 2 Seth Thomas Clock Co, com . Seth Thomas Clock Co, pfd .. Smyth Mfg Co . Standard Serew ( standard Stanley Se Stanley W com ptd v Steam Turbine Co . Union Mfg Co U 8 Envelope € U § Envelope ( Veeder-Root, Ine . Whitlock Coil Pipe Wiley-Bickford-Sweet Co, Winsted Howlery Co . Bryaat & Chapmea .. 101 0] . 145] Athlun Brook Man {Cer De Pasco |Ches & Ohio CRI& Pac IChrysler Corp Colo Fuel Congoleum 3 | Consol Gas |Corn Prod 87ty | Davison Chem. 643 {Erie R R ... Tl |¥am Players .. 60% | Fleischmann .. $0% ecport Tex.. i 5 |Genl Asphalt .. 781, |Genl Elec 231 |Genl Motors .. 82 | Hudson Motors & | Hersheys ..... 671 1, % % TTHHTHT HT nt Comb, Eng 83 nt Cement 92 HT THTHH 801, 82 903 647 961y 138 Mack True 0615 | Marland Oil .. Mo Kan & Tex b | Mont Ward | National Lead 150 N Y Central ..196 NYNHG&H ST %/ North Amer... 96 North Pacific ~09% Pack Mot Car 143% [Pan Am Pet B 48 Phillips Pet i | Pullman 2 tadio Corp ... | Remington Rd 51% | Reading ......107 Sears Roebuck 173% Sinclair Oil .. % Southern Pac . Ista oil N J . NY .44 *|stewart Warn 141 Studebaker 953 Texas Co .. Tex Gulf Sulph rim Rol Bear . Underwood Union Pac . Union Carbide U8lind Al .. 109% i 4Ty 41 $61% 311 107 172% 41y s 44N 141 2 5 15 2197 20014 136% & Q. ships operating in the east,| | 4| The suit but the gain was small. De Forest was a strong spot in the radio group, gaining about 2 points. Mining shares continued to advance, with Noranda moving up nearly 4 points. Automotive shares made some recov- ery, although Ford Limited eased off. Oils generally were strong. Stan- dard of Indiana regained some lost ground. Humble and Vacuum :ud- vanced & point each and Illinois Tipe Line 4 poi $5,000 FOR CRAWFORD | Damage Suit of Newington Man Against Max Tresky of This City Settled Before Court. of Whitrey Crawford cwington against Max Tresky of v was settled for $5,000 this morning before the superior court on in Hartford. Young Craw- ford was injured on February 6, 11928, as he stepped from his fath- | er's car in front of his home. As he went around behind the machine he | was hit by Tresky's auto, receiving injuries to his left arm which re- sulted in paralysis of that member. Crawford and his father, M. Ozra | Crawford. brought suit and the case | was scheduled for trial today. The Crawfords were reprosented by At- torney . Polk Weskowitz and Tres- ky by Day, Berry & Reynolds of | Hartford. of POLISH BAKERY OFFICERS Roman Szymanski _was elected | president of the New Britain Polish | Business Company, a bakery con- | cern on Broad street, at a meeting of the stockholders held last night fu the offices of the company. The other officers arc: Joseph Miynar- ski, vice president; Wiadyslaw My- |sliwice, treasurer, and Miss Bertha | Kulesik, secretary. The treasuref’s cport showed a favorable increase the plaintit and Atterney in business for the year 1928. Y R of learning and handed to them on & silver platter. No wonder they won't accept them. They don’t want you to build their characters. : “When a woman says to her boy ‘don’t you want to be mother’s little lamb?" she is desecrating the psych- ' ology of childhood. There isn't any: boy who want to be mother’s little' |lamb. He'll be mother's little tiger,, jor wolf, or elephant. or maybe Lindbergh, but he won't be any- body’s little lamb. “One boy who says ‘come ea let's do this,’ can do more good thaa ten thousands who say ‘no dom’t do | tha | Mr. Berg will speak at the meet- ing of the scout council tonight. CHURCH SOCIETY ELECTS Same Slate Chossm By 5t. Jaseph's Society—St.. Patrick’s Program %o Be Given March 18. At the annual meeting of St. Jo- seph’s parish eociety last night, officers were re-elected as follows: President, Edward B. Moore; vice president, Mrs. Edward X. Callahan; secretary, Mrs. J. Kane; treasurer, Rev. John F. Donohue. Plans were discussed for the an« nual St. Patrick’s night program which will be given on March 18, Rev. Father Hubert of the Passien< ist seminary in West Springficld will be the speaker. 96,000 SUIT SCHEDULED The action of John G. Ress va Frank Barboza, for $6.000, iq scheduled for trial to a jury in sue perior court Thursday. Ress was passenger in Barbom’'s car whea overturned in Andover Decemtbesl 24, 1927, and the suit follewed. Ate torney 8. Gerard Cuasale M David By - ‘Woodhouse the defendast. i | |

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