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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1929. Wind and Hail Storms Cut Swath Of Damage Through Three States; Vermont Summer Colony Battered Lake Bomoseen-Middlebury Dist'rict Suffers Heavily— Fire and Flood Add to Destruction in New York and Pennsylvania. New York, Aug. 14 (P—Wing, rain, hail and lightning, sweeping through three eastern states left a trail of destruction, marked today by damaged buildings, blocked highways, and ruined crops. Regions in Pennsylvania, New York state, and Vermont were visii- ed by a series of storms yesterday in which damage by fire and flood was added to the havoc wrought by wind and hail, A wind of hurricane force cut a swath 25 miles wide through Ver- mont from Lake Bomoseen to Mid- .dlebury, overturning cottages and damaging other buildings. The main highway between Rut- land and Middlebury was blocked by fallen trees and communication be- tween Rutland and Lake Bomoseen was cut off. Several boating parties on the lake reached shore with dif- ficulty, but there -vas no loss of life. Farmers in the path of the storm lost sheep and other stock and ruf- fered severe damage to barns :nd other farm structures. In the vicinity of Reading, Pa., 1 es of electrical storms fired three barns and the torrents which aceoun- | panied the wind and lightning pour ed streams over their banks, floode 1 property, and made bridges imvass- able. At Glen Falls, N. vicinity of Lake George hail stones punctured the tops of automobile broke windows, and stripped foiiage from trees. Garden erops were beaten to the ground. Vermont Damage Heavy Rutland, Vt. Aug. 14 (P—A de- vastated strip of rural couniry stretching from a summer resort Y., and ;n the| * i path of the storm we on Lake Bromoseen, 10 miles from here, to Brandon, 15 miles north, marked today the path of a wind and hail storm which at times as sumed the proportions of a tornado. No loss of life was reported. Cottages and barns were over, livestock killed in the field crops ruined. telephone communi- cation disrupted, * and highwa blacked by fallen trees by the con bined effect of the gale and hail- stones as large as silver dollar Damage was estimated at many tens of thousands of dollars. The summer colony at Lake Bomoseen was hit hardest by the storm. A dozen cottages were blown over by the wind, while hail smashed windows of hotels and cut through automobile tops and windshields. Several boating parties were in |great danger. One boat overturned and its two occupants swam to sho: |but were badly cut and bruised by |Fail. Two other parties managed to reach shore without upsetting, but they 00 were cut and bruised. Storm in Prankish As the storm moved northward | dipped and vose, striking some farm- land more severely than other parts A large barn on the Brandon-Lei- | zoster 1 was overturned and |shecp Xillaa at a Brandon fari. Hundreds of acres of corn and other crops were ruined. but other points nearby reported only @n unusuzliy |high wind. Greenhouses in the re 1>ft tangled iss and sp'int- blown masses of shattered g »d wood The Ttutland-Midd | was among the roals |lines of ra'len tre Tepair crews were o the way for traffic » overturned cottages lehury highway blocked by Ali availalle @ out to clear ! to salvage the Senate Committee Approves Tariff On Hides, Shoes, Removes Levy On Diamonds, Takes Up Sugar Rough Gems List Check Smuggling—20 Per Cent Free to Tax on Shoes. Washington, Aug. 14 (A —Having completed their revision of house rates on hides, leathers shoes, the tariff drafting republicans of the senate finance committee hoped today to complete work speedily on the sundries schedule o: the bill and clear the way for ac- tion on the highly controversial su- gar schedule After obtaining the desired tional information on organized producers, the committee- men have decided o support the house action in placing a duty of 10 per cent on imported hides and per cent on shoes, both of which are now admitted without imposts. They agreed, however, on a num- ber of changes in the houserates on various types of leather, ald on the free list at present, raising some and reducing others. The upward revi- sions included proposals to place a the rate of 14 per cent on leather to be | used for harness or saddlery, and 15 per cent on sole and belting leather, instead of 121 per cent as voted by the house, together with stead of 15 per cent on side, upper, patent and calf or kip skin leathers | for footwear. The hou leather obtained from of the bovine species, on the other hand, would be reduced to 1714 per cent, and that of 30 per cent on or- namental leather fo 20 per cent. Another reduction voted men’s leacher gloves, making rate $5.50 a dozen instead The $5.50 rate approved animals not was on the by the house on women’s leather gloves was | retained, and so was its 20 per cent rate on leather for upholstery, col- lars, bags, cases, gloves, garments and straps. With that problem out of the way, | the committeemen took cognizance of the smuggling problem and de- cided to transfer rough and uncut Placed on| and | addi- | the views of | 20| in- | rate of 25 per cent on | f $6.50. diamonds from the dutiable to the free list. The house voted a duty of 10 per cent on such stones, and of 20 per cent on cut diamonds and pearls, which the senators reduced by half. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE FINANCIAL STATISTICS Operating Income $785 More Than Expense in Nine Month Period. of for nine The operating income Chamber ‘of Commerce months from November 3 to July 31 was $785.04 more than the expenses for the same period, according to a report made by Sec Benson at a meeting of the di at the New Britain club today. The secretary still to reduce a large deficit on hooks and reported that there are unpaid dues cnough out- standing to finance the Chamber for the balance of the year if they can be collected. The directors voted to adopt the recommendation of the executive ommittee and approve the progress exposition to be conducted by the American Legion in October. The application of the Sears-Roe- buck Co. for membership was ac- cepted. There was a general discu sion of a proposed trip to New York next week by a group of merchants, and of the status of the drive for a municipal gold fund ctors Stors on Main Street Leased for Five Years pers were filed today by which Mag, Jennie Berkowitz | Louis R. Raphael leased a store 320 Main street to the Clearweave | Hosiery stores for a term years. The |to be $15,000. The building will be |erected in a passway between the | United and Leonard buildings. The lease was made by the Rabinow & Raschkow Real Estate agency. End yopr search by using a Her- | ald Classified Ad. P, a ANNOUNCEMENT THE M. J. KENNEY FUNERAL HOME 31 HIGH IS0 STREET PEN FOR INSPECTION.ALL THIS WEEK FROM ZANPEN RO OV The Public of New Britain and surrounding towns invited to visit this up-to-the-minute Funeral Home. the | etary Ralph H. | is attempting | the | home | and | at | of five | aggregate rental is said | Wall Street Briefs (Birts Record ) CURB IRREGULAR; | cmmmmmre v SOIESHOW GAIN = Mrs. Gottfried Schmidt, 35 Newfield avenue, at New Britain General hos- vital today. 1\rc August 10 000 net tons, sociation mined in the the week end amounted to 9,500, the National Coal as- reports. Selling Encountered on Up- | Turns—Crocker Wheeler Rises its weekly summary in the steel industry | states that seasonal curtailment is making itself felt, but thus far the chief effects have been a decline in backlogs and a shortening of ds- liveries. Production has shown |little reduction and the downward trend is not marked. Among new outlets for steel the most outstand- ing in its stabilizing influence is the manufacture of pipe for gas and oil | lines. Personals Iron Age in of conditions Mr. and Mrs. James Mancarella and family of 91 Rockwell avenue spent the past week at Walnut Beach, Milford. (P—Price York, Aug. 14 movements on the curb exchange today were highly irregular, with considerable selling encountered on the upturns. Although the main trend was forward, several of the |1eaders in the utility group met per | sistent selling and worked lower. Call money was easy for a sessior mid-month settlement | rewed at T elopments 5 bullish. Crocker Wheeler Rises Crocker Wheeler again established |a new high. adding 13 points to iis 80-point rise of yesterday with only a small floating supply of stock on | the market. Crocker Wheeler re- sponds easily to favorable news de- velopments, Miss Dorothy Denton of 65 South | | High street is visiting relatives at | Worcester, Mass. Dr. John Purney and Mrs. Pur-| ney have returned from Nova Sco- [P tia where they spent an enjoyable |2t 1 vacation. [ per cent | The Iron Age composite price for finished steel declined to 2.398 °nts a pound from 2.412 cents, th ‘xmnn at which it has held since March. e pig irorr price remains unchanged for the second week at $18.42 a gross ton. The Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co., has received au order from the Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co., for three 30-ton locomotives, which will be used in connection with the new | Locust Summit central breaker. tion of steel in lots is at about 93 per cent of rated capacity According to the deed filed in the | 45 against more than 94 per cent in town clerk's office Carolina Nor. |the preceding week and about | man has scld to Helen J. Namnoun | Per cent two weeks ago, Dow. | proverty at 37 Chapman street. The |Jones & Co. reports. Operations property was sold through the | of the United States Steel Corpora- Fr R b e tion is at 97 per cent as against 98 per cent in the two preceding weeks. | Independents operators are under 90 | per cent, compared with 91 pe last we and above 92 per cent two weeks ago. Mrs. Helen McKenna of 4 street is spending a week’s vacation |at Sound View. ‘BOY OF MOUNTAINS PALS WITH HOOVER Ray McKinley, 11, Hears of Lindbergh and Meets Him (®—The unspoiled City Items John Maguire, graduate of Moody retarial school has taken a posi- |tion as bookkeeper in the National | Biscuit Co.—advt ! § Washington, 14 of Ray McKinley, Aug. story 11-year-old has lowed President Hoover out of the mountain boy, fol- Deaths wild region around the headwaters of the Rapidan river in Virginia. He had never heard of Lindbergh, but he did know a little Hoover and a lot about of the Blue Ridge mount the president has and his pappy and their home. And he knew about 'possums. That,' in ow he camé to meet the president, nd to learn about Lindbergh and other notables who were the presi- | dent’s guests over the last week-end A week or so earlier, after Ray had caught a baby 'pos- | sum, he met Mrs. Hoover while on a horseback ride with some of the guests. He talked with the Lady for some time and renewed her acquaintances when he ap peared at the camp Sunday to pr sent his fattened to the president and hands with him. about that part | ns where | Aug. 14 (P—London aid that 900,000 pounds sterling (about $4,500,000) in gold had been taken from the Bank of England for shipment to York. The Isle de France will 500,000 pounds and the new rman liner Bremen the re mainder. Both steamers leave today. New " York, Genevie advices today Genevieve Sowa ter of Mr. and Mr of 29 Tremont stre afternoon at the ents after a we Besides he ivived by two sist ‘uneral service > Sowa year old daugh- | Alexander Sowu | a fishing c mamm brother will be held to- at $:30 at the home | er parents and in the Ukrainian ch on Winter street at 9 o'cloc | Burial will be in Ukrainian cemetery. shortly | 30 An reement pictures by | Productions, Inc., | theaters on the basis of the capacity |of a theater to pay has been rati- | fied by officials of R-K-O and of in- ' | dependent exhibitors in 22 states. | S | for sale of sound to independent possum Stockholders o i tockholders of Rest | York store, & Co., New vote September 9 on | splitting the common stock two for one, Funerals Paw Made Bum Guess e—— Ray stated frankly that he had thought “a heap” about Mr. Hoover [ and that he was “sorta glad he wos || 5 e 2 elected,” although he as frankly ad- | 2 mitted that his “paw was such a |G bum guesser he had to climb a tall | ot hickory tree after the election.” lites Quiet unabashed, he leaned |y against a tree and said what he had to say. The president sat on a camp chair, with members of the party | gathered about. Unconcerned the hoy enjoved a generous slice of the the chief executive’s birthday cake and then hill songs for the group. As he prepared to leave for his home in the hills, where he has six brothers and sisters, all under 16 years of age, the president gave him | everal of the novelties that had fig- red in his birthday celebration of Saturday evening, mostly knick- knacks and puzzles—commonplac perhaps, in cities, but pri for mountain children Miss Mary Leonard for Miss 16 years of age, street, who died Sunda at St. Francis hospital, were held this morning ne at 0 and ary's church at 9 o'clock mn high mass was cetebrated b Thor F. Lawlor who wa | assisted by Rev. Matthew, J. Traynor as deacon and Rev. Walter J. Lyddy sub-deacon. he pall bearers were Edwarl | Wilson, Joseph McAloon, Xenneth | | Dolan, Edward Dooley, I7. Ricley | and Edward Kuney. John Soun and James Shea acted flow bearers, As the body was borne into church Organist John J. Crean ADVANCES SLIGHT mvestmen Issues Neglected— (At orertory st sfuey' e Small Blocks Traded |and Benedictus” was sung by ur—‘ ganist Crean and Mrs. Crean.| New Mother Dear, Oh Pray For Me” et -pmw chimes by the organ- at the commun and (r\n:‘\hluy\ of the ake My Hand D m casket was from the i church Organist Crean played Chop- in's funeral march. | Father Lyddy cor I mittal services at the was in St. Mary new Miss Leonard w A pupil at Senior H — Crude ruber imports by the United States in July totaled 44 |compared with 44,499 in June 3.383 in July, 1928 servicr tons| and The Allied Specialty Leather Co. of Peabody, Mass., has been formed of the Allied Kid Co. BOND LISTS QUIET; 9 ev. g York, Aug. 14 (P—Tnvest- bonds idled today. Trading proceeded in the usual small blocks, with high grade rails showing a little improvement. A few other s 1es that were in or near new low ground earlier in the week ad- vanced slightly. Conver rare was POLICE DISPERSE TORONTO RADICALS Tnnocent Onlookers Kicked and Glubbed in Queens Park Aug. 14 (P borne bles Irregular Convertibles were irregular in the carly trading on small turnover. | American Telephone 4 1-2's crossed 200 for advance of nearly {wo poin the International Tele- | phone convertible dchentures pick- {ed up about the same gain. Atchi- son 4 1- nd Alleghany Corpora- tion 19 sold off. States government the best tone up as much as a quarter fair buying. The federal reserve holding of these securities expected to show an inc werk Middle West Ttilities, | Improvement, Amer ed the grave. ceme firs school. com- Burial | an nd A. Anderson services for Charles An- communist meeting i ed 5T 345 Arch street, resulted in a riotous drowned in Towers' brick- | tion \t when thousands of |yard pond. wil be held this after- | Unite fresh air were driven | Interment | displayed park by police ry Seven persons were arrested, of them a woman. Iive of vere freed in $200 bail o of disorderly co tee woman was charged ‘With vagrancy ind a newspaper reporter was held following a scuffle with offi- cer. Charles Toronto prevent a | Queens park iast ni pereons seeki trom the on ! Efforts to | ral [l who w of 5's of 1 Seene issies |noon at 4:30 o'clock. of the list, )will be in Ifa one | e men each irview cemet | moving point on | Mrs Agnes Clarissa Wunderlen | Funeral for Mrs. Agnes | Clar Wunderlen, aged a former resident of thi who died | Sunday at the home of her | Mrs. William Arnold of Torrington, | tric and American Light & Traction were held taday in Bennington, Vt.{-—all high priced stocks—were the Defied Police Orde) | Burial was in Bennington | zainers in the utility list, while such Police officials sald the park was |issues as Electric Investors, Ameri- cleazed M{]”m o Bchonald can Superpower, Allied Power and leader of the communist party R e R Canada, attempted to speak in e T e Hanceloriapolicaiordar, fluctuated within a narrow price At a given signal police on horse- T e e R back, motorcycle and foot, uni- 1d this 'net earnings of $24,064,560 for the formadiandiin plainiclothes ichansed and at . 12 months ended Jun the crowd. © Witnesses sald clubs, |g otclock in Ukrainian Greek Catho- Investment Trusts Up fists and feet were freely used by the | ;o chyrch on Winter street whel rly all of the Investment Trust | officers on those inclined to move | p. i paskicwicz, pastor, offi- |[moved higher. Interstate Baquity (slowly. No attempt was made t0];ateq. Rev. Fr. Paskiewicz con-|climbed above and Union Ameri- |distinguished between communists | QPG T T e o, ond bnln e el oners grave. Burial was m’,\:‘é:"‘g]?;,‘e A olic cemetery. 72 1-2. Goldman Sachs t | confronted by a solid stre | R i Tricontinental | mobiles that made cr | ; o | oughtare impossible. They jostled | Funeral services for Peter Wilson, one another on the curb with police | 68 years of age, of 388 M eet, behind and the packed roadway in |Who died vesterday morning at the | front until officers stopped the trafric [ NeW Britain hospital pneu- |and hustled the frightened pec ‘!“;fl:'r'-‘.\\;LW(lmin“)wl‘(i L’M;:- R | nome at High street and in St. | M H‘\ s church 9 o'clock. Burial Real Estate 1\e\\s 5 [will be in Mary's cemetery. | M on this ease city United Gas 'an Gas & Elec- sister, v police Walter Al serviee old son of | Theodore Kopka of who died yesterday morning home of his parents, wer morning at 8 at the home Kopka Waiter Mr. Fun Kop- ka, vea s for de- N . Gr | women and children they were am of auto- ing the tho ding was Corporation vhich is expected to announce $50,- 000,000 new financing, encountered profit-taking. Insull Utility Invest ment shareholders approved increas- ing the preferred stock Standard rails in higher ground included Union Pacific 4 1-2's, Mis- sourt Pacific New Haven re- funding 4 1-2's, West Shore 4's and | Atchison General 4's. Armour & Company 5 1-2's. which touched a new low rday. recovered their loss, while Goodyear Tire: & 3's advanced half a point from the previous close, where they cqualled the previons minimum. Ut =i fror morning funeral ins thilda (. Perkins hilda C. ¥ > funeral of Mrs. M Perkins, wife of Charles W | who died Monday afternoon in the Waterbury hospital, held this afternoon from her home at 23 De- [morest street, Waterbury with Pro- | fessor Benjamin Bacon of Yale offi- ciating. Following the services the body was brought to this city and interment was in Fairview cemetery Warranty Yot il Wagner to | Chadziewicz, Osgood avenuc John J. Hamilla to Mike chan, et ux, Commonwealth avenue Mike Mauchan, et ux, to Ernest C. Howe, Commonwealth avenue, Frederick Ghio, et ux, to Mario Baretta, Connecticut avenue, Emil H. Ammon to John | et ux, Columbia street. Mike Monkiewicz to Helen kiewicz, Smith strect Mortzag Mike Monkiewicz to Sofia | kowski, $700. Smith stroet Mike Monkiewi to Monkiewicz, et ux, $800, reet. Stanislaw Gorski, ot ux, to Polish Loan & Investment Co. $2.000, Alden and Stanley Heights (three parcels) ). Dr. Vincent | Man- % was s were neglected Forcign Exchanged ‘panese 61¢s, French Republie and Chile in the inactive foreign listings, were hought at lit- tle or no price change. The state of the Tennessee today marketed $4,000.000 in 6 per cont cne to three-year highway not to Plis. | Find neighbors and friends for SYm- | viald 575 to 6.10 per cent. Gal | pathy and floral contributons at the | fon \Wharf Co. offered $2,245.000 in time of sickness and death our | . morigage 5% per cent heloved father and husband, Wil- bonds at 100. [liam €. Kahns. We wish to thank > in a cial manner, Court Beeth- oven, Foresters of America MRS. WILLIAM . KAHNS, and FAMILY, ,Beno, Mon; THANKS s our thanks CARO OF We wish to expry to of funding e Dyonizy Smith Raza {8 the first Spanish | 1anguage newspaper in Chicago, where there are 185,000 Mexicans and Spanish, sp Ta composite | Radio-Keith-Orpheum | Cath- | distance of its previous high price of | Rubber | had | BULL MOVEMENT ON MARKET LAGS Heavy Selling Inspired by Fear of Loans Increase New York, Aug. 14 (A—The wild “bull” movement, which has been under way in some of the high pri ed industrials and rails since last Friday’'s drastic break, showed sigas of slowing up today under the heavy selling inspired by fears of another large increase in federal reserve brokers’ loans this week. A sprinkling of issues, U. 8. Steel common tric, Westinghouse E solidated Gas, |16 points to | including General Elec- ectric and Con- were whirled up 8 to ! new high records in | early trading, but sagged 2 1-2 to| 1-2 points below their m | highs the early afternoon selling move- ment. Profit Taking Heavy Meanwhile, the rapidity of the re- cent advance induced heavy profit- | taking and some short selling in cther stocks. giving the general list | an irregular appearance. At least a ccore of the recent favorites dipped 2 to § points below yesterday's final quotations. Several of the large commission | houses urged extreme caution in the | making of new committments, and this tended to bring in selling from | small traders and investors through- | out the country. | Operators for the rise bid aggres- | sively for stocks of high current| carning power on the theory that no major reaction on the market was| | likely until general business showed cigns of slowing up. Weekly steel | de reviews reported some season- | curtailment in demand but no ap- rreciable reduction in output. The latest batch of earnings reports ave further testimony to the pros- ocrity enjoyed by most corporations in the first hal¢ of the year. Credit Situation Relaxed Credit conditions showed signs of further relaxation despite the Bul-! lish stock market activity of the last few days. Call money renewed at 7 ner cent, as against § yesterday, and |dropped to 6 in the early afternoon. | was the first time in six weeks | that call money has been quoted as | low as G per cent. Time money | rates also were shaded slightly. | Meanwhile, London Cables an- | nounced the shipment of more than | $5.000,000 in gold to New York. | Wall street figures that each dollar ir. gold provides the basis for in credit. , | Revival of activity and strength | in the oil shares, presumably based on the reduction in crude output | teported last week by the Ameri- | can Petroleum Institute, was one of | the day's features. Houston ran up | 5 1-2 points and Standard Oil of | New Jersey, which ordinarily moves | within fractional liimts, climbed 3 points. Nearly all the other active | oils advanced 2 points or more. Westinghouse Rises Westinghouse Electric ran up 16 points to 250 and sagged to 243 -6, General Electric ran up 10 1-4 | to 399 and dropped back ta 392 1-2, Allied Chemical jumped 7 3-4 points and fell 6§ and U. S. Steel | ran up 8§ and dropped 4 1-4. Con- | solidated Gas climbed 8 points to a | new top at 171 1-2. Brooklyn Union Gas, & Ohio, Johns Manville, Union, U. S Industrial Public Service of New Jersey Auburn Auto all sold 5 points more higher. Delaware & Hudson dropped § 1 points, American Tobacco 6 3 Union Pacific 5 and R. H. Mac International Harvester, Dupo Shattuck and Commercial Invest- ment Trust fell hack 2 to 4 point American Woolen issues sagged *3 | new low levels for the year in re- | sponse to the publication of the semi-annual report showing a large deficit in the first half of the year. Chesaneake Western Alcohol and Sl THE MARKET AT 2:30 P. M. (Furnished by Putnam & Co.) High low Close Al Che & Dye 2333 2281 Am Ag Che pd American Can Am Forcig Pw Am Loco Am Sm & Re Am Sugar Am Tel & Tel Am Tohacco Anaconda Cop Atchison Atlantic Refin Balt & Ohio Beth Steel Bush Term Can Pacific Cer De Pasco Ches & Ohio CRI& Pac Chrysler Corp Colo Fuel Congoleum Consol Gas rn Prod Curtiss Aero Dav Chem Dupont g Pub Erie RR Fam Pl Fleischmann Fox Film A “reeport Tex Genl Asphalt Genl Elec Genl Motors .. Goodrich Tir Hudson Motors § Int Comb, Int Cement Int ol Int Harves Int Tel & Ken Cop Mack Truck .. 96% Mont Ward ..117% Natl Cash Reg 124% N Y Central.. 238% NYNHG&H 1203 North Amer.. 1697% North Pacific 109% Pack Mot Car 1387% Penn R R.... Phillips Pet. . Postum Co. . |Pub Serv N J Radio Corp. . Remingten Rd Reading. . 121 Rep T & S... 111% ars Roebuck 162% Sinclair Ol 35% Southern Pac .142% 101 134 12473, 1179 S0 284 % 1931 1203 1701 138 qo3 278Y% Sery 87% 30814 0% 733 % Eng 68% 6% 121% 119 ST% Tel 4515 | studel | Hartford | Phoenix Ilire PUTNAM & CO. Members New York & Hartford Stack Exchanges 31 WEST MAIN ST., NEW BRITAIN TEL. 2040 HMARTFORD QFFICE, 6 CENTRAL ROW, _TEL. 2-114 We Offer: Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. Price on Application. EDDYBROTHERS & Co Members Hartford Stock Exchange NewBrray HARTFORD h MERIDEN 65W Mainst. 39 Lewis St. 43 Colony St. ETEET N We Offer and Recommend: INCORPORATED INVESTORS @Thomson, Tenn & Co. Members of New York and Hartford Stock Exchanges 55 West Main Street New Britain Phone 2580 Stuart G. Segar, Manager We Ofter: Travelers Insurance Co. Right Price on Application. “Investments That Grow” Fuller, Richter, Aldrich & Co. COMMERCIAL TRUST BUILDING NEW BRITAIN MEMBERS HARTFORD STOCE EXCHANGF Joseph M. Halloran, Manager. Tel. 1253 We Recommend: UTILITIES POWER & LIGHT Cemmon The company serves a populahon of 2 cities and towns. kilowatt hours cubic feet. ,800,000 in 832 Electric output in 1928 was 673 million and gas output totaled about 12 billion Traded on New York Curb Toboco - Blumenthal and COMPANY 99 WEST MAIN ST. TEL. 6671 RAPHAEL BLDG. We Will Buy IRVING TRUST St Gas & Std Oil N J Std Oil N Y Stewart Warner 1377 633 4014 lec | Bristol | City Conry % | Colt's Arms Lock AKer . nir Bearing rexas Co Hart & Cooley Tex Gulf Sulph T e “im Rol Bear 10 4[N B Machine l_ndsrunml 146 | North & Judd Union Pac .. 280 S Union Carbide 118% P = 5 | Peck, Stow & \\\I United Fruit . 115% S e U 'S Ind Al . 186% \W"»:*I s ol U S Rubber .. 463 S0y =t Co U 'S Steel 24 rd Screw .. Wabash Ry Works ... | Torrington o West Elec ! Willys Over | Union Mfg Co | Veeder-Root Woolworth Wright Aero . 120 | Public Yellow Truck . ec Co 146 118 115 155 T4 18 46 Utilities Stocks a9 Conn JiCt Lt LOCAL STOCKS [Conn (Furnished By Putnam & Co.) (117d F &P Power Elec Light Hfd Gas Co com |12 Gas Co pra ]\ R Gas | Southern | 4 ervice 54 o Insurance Stocks Bid 2000 1360 755 560 2050 1030 Ask 2050 SURY BALANCE Balance, $111 ‘onRpED Aetna Casualty Aetna Life Ins Co Aetna Fire Automobile Ins Conn General TR Treasury 1“4 3 91 Bl FASES RE Donnelly wed to Benjamin 1060 89 1 ord avenue, Travelers Ins Co 1860 STOiEk An Travelers Ins Co rights 248§ used for Manufacturing Stocks [ A 16 Am Hardware 81 et al Arrow-Hart & Hegeman 46 | shop Billings & Spencer .... 11 {three Hartford Steam National Iire Boiler ke rill, a store for one year The premises will wholesale merchandisi 69 45 12 . to Harry Haroin, t 15 Lafayette street, ¥ at $70 a month. has at at be ng. has been given by 1. Wexler, on a barber for Lipew’