Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 16, 1921, Page 3

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7, Chicago, Nov. 15—Willle Hoppe, world's balk line champion, defeated Roger Conti of France, 400 to 188 in tonight’s game of the world's 18.2 balk line billiard championship tournament. The mateh went six innings. Horpe's highest run was 175 and his average 66 2-3, Conti's highest run was 150 and his average 37 3-5. 3 In the second afternoon.game Jaki Schaeffer Jr., defeated George Sutton 400 to 260 in 7 Schaefer made a high run of 187 in seventh period with an unfinished run of 144. His average was 57 1-7.- Sut ton's high run #as 148 and his aver- age 1-T, & Oro Morningstar, the veteran player san Diego, California, defeated Ed- of ouard Horemans, champion of Belgi-|his ‘savage attack. to of 1. 145, Morningstar 400 . while eleven innings. The averages innings. 1 the sixth inning and went out in the'; l 'HOPPE WIS FROW FRENCH CHAWPON— o s intermittent demand or. the future, then the plant is courting—inviting 'sure disaster. The Ashland Cotton Company makes Satsens—filling faced Sateens and nothing else. It has made them for 58 years, and in all that time there was and is a steady demand for them. Sateens, your grandmother and grandfather, yes, back to your great, great at Princeton; 11, Di outh at Pem 14, Princeton at Yale; 15, Columbia at Cornell.. PROMOTERS HOLDING PESEK S SHARE OF PURSE New York, Nov. 15.—Local promoters of last night's ‘vresmng bout between John Pesek, of¥Nebraska, and Marin Plestina, Serblan, have been ordered by the state athletic mission to hold the Nebraskan's ehare of the purse. Pesek was disqualified for rough tactics and forever -barred from wrestling activity n this state. Plestina was awarded the first fall on 2 foul after e'even mjinutes and nineteen seconds of wrestling, When Pesek ignored the referee’s warnings to desist from The Nebraskan con- had | tinued to gouge and butt. Plestina and Horemans | at t! d two runs of 60 and 63. The game |on end of 24 minutes and “four sec- Plestina was awarded another fall Members of the athletic commission Morningstar 38 4-11; Horemans{then overruled the referee and ordered 10, FASTERN INTER-COLLEGIATE BASKETBALL SCHEDULE New York, Nov. 15.—Thirty - games w copprise the schedule of the eastérn er-collegiate basketball ieague for the comig season. Play will open January 9 and final contests will be those of March 18. Six colleges will compete for the league champlonship—Yale, Prince- Cornel!, _Pennsylvania, . Columbia Dartmouth. The schedule follows: at Dartmouth; 13, tmouth; 14, Yale at . Cornell at Columbia; Princeton; 21, Dart- 21, Penn at Colum- at Cornell; Feb. 4, 11, Penn at Cornel'; t Columbia; 15, Dartmouth at 17. Cornell at Yale; 18 Penn at rtmouth: 21 Dartmouth at Columbia; Princeton; 25, Cornell at f: 25, Columbia at Penn; Dartmouth at Princeton; 1, ; 4, Princeton at Columbla; Dartmoéuth: 4, Cornell at Co'umbla at Yale; 11, Coérnell ton at Cornell; neeton neeton the match resumed untll a legitimate fall was galned. ‘Pesek again resorted to. gouging,. the bout was stopped and the decision:awarded to Plestina. I CARDS AND BROWNS SELECT SPRING CAMPS St. Louls, Mo, Nov. 15—The Cardi- nals and Browns have selected their spring training cdmps for 1922, it is an- nounced here today, The National Leag- uers will return to Orange, Tex., where they trained last vear, while the Browns wilt 'go to Bogalusa, La. It was also announced that Phil Todt, who played with Tulsa last year, will be given a try- out with the Browns in the spring. CENTRE WILL PLAY HARVARD AGAIN NEXT YEAR Danville, Ky., Nov. 15.—Centre's foot- ball team will play Harvard on October 21, 1922, one week earlier than the game was played this year. Centre officials announced today that acceptance of Harvard's invitation. rece’§>d yesterday, will go forward within a short time. In extending the invitationl Fred Moore, graduate manager, explained the MARKET WAS UNSETTLED Nov. 15.-43tock market 4 fresh unseitlement today, turbances of the previous tributed to the dis- eemed to exert less of companies which gre likely to ction of operations from a nav- made partial recoveries. strengthened 1n spots or of early announcement of the Haskell Barker merger and hat large contracts are soon to oils were under constant at- nning with the European group extending to Mexicans, the ng affected by rumors that the vernment intends to add a st to its present export Tax. s « better showing than any group, despite the unrest manifest- as a result of the cut. Over half a score ues made gross gains of points, ecoalers and trans-con- s partly impaired in the s essure of the last hour. Sales ed to 700,000 shares. as large sums in connec- November 15 Liberty bond in- ments created unusually eéasy iitions. Call loan rates drop- to 4 per cent. in exchange at and the minimum «figure was prime collateral in private exchanges were featured main- further rise of Sterling to its in several months. The d later on offerings of food m bills and most continental re- eased moderately. 1vestment conditions were de- he enormous over-subscrip- the $50,000,000 New York Tele- 6 per eent, honds-and the $10,000,— Grande do Sul issue. The Tel=- onds sold at a premium over the g price in the course of the ! sales of bonds, par value, 1 $17,275,000. STOCKS. High. Low. Close ¢ following ls a summary of vester- transactions on the New ~ York change to 3.P. M. mical N 23 35 @, pr 8 p c 1013 Cent Leather ... Cent Leather pr . Y 65 65% Chandler Motor 45% 452 543% 54% 4 16% 163 Chi Mt 3 23 23 Chi M & 36% 36% Chi & N'west % 68% 68% Chi Pneu Tool 52 52 ChiRI&P 32 32% Chile Copper 124 12% Chino Copper L 26 26 33 33 63 63% Crucible Stee] pr . 87% 87% Del & Hudson 108 108 Dome Mines % 19% 19% Erle 1% < 11% Erle 1 pr ¥ 17% 17% Erie 2 pr . s 12 12% Fishey Body ..... 85 85 85 Fisher Body (0) pr 76% 75 6 Gen Electric L1340 133% 1334 Gen Motor o 19% 11% Aty Gen Motor pr S70% 70 70 Gen Mot Deb . 70 69 69 Gen M Deb Tpe .. 81% 78% - 78% orth'n pr ..... 13% 173 73% orth Ore . .. 32% 32% 324 Hupp Motor Car ... 107% 10% 107 lilinois Central L 98% 96% 96% Inspiration Cop ... 36% -36 - 36 Int Harvester A7 4 1% Int Mer Marine ... 11% 11% 11% Int Mer Marine pr,, 51 50% 50% Int M Truck pr . Intern’l Paper Kennecott Lehigh Valley Mexican Petrol Mex Petrol pr Miami Copper Missouri K & T Missouri Paciflo Missouri Pae gr FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL Nat Enam & St . N Y Alr Brake Y Central .. NYNH&H .. Norfolk & West North Am: .. North Pacific Penn R R Plerce 0l Ry S:sel Spring Ray Con Reading Reading 1 pr Reading 2 pr .. Rep Iron & Steel ... Rep I & Steel pr . South Pacific . South Railway Southern Ry pr . Tenn Copper Tobacco Prod Union Pacific Union -Pac pr U S Rubber U S Rubber pr . U S Steel U S Steel pr . West Un Tel West. Air Brake West El & fg Willys O'land Willys 0’land pr Worth - Pump Worth Pump B New York, Nov. 15.—Call money easy: high 5; low 4; rullng rate 5; closing bid 31-2; offered at 4; last loan 4; call loans against acceptances 4 1-2, CcoTTON New York, Nov. 15.--Spot cotton quiet ; middling 17.05. Liberty Bonds. Hizh, Low. (lo: U 8 Lif 3%s .. 95.10 94.80 ("J.fisl'fl U S Lib 1st 4s., 94.30 94.00 “4.00 S Lib 2d 4s-94.60 94.36 54.60 7S Lib 1st 4%s 94.60 94 20 S Lib 24 4%s 94.60 94.12 U S Lib 3d 4%s 96.40 36.20 U § Lib 4th 4%s Victory, 4%s Victory 3%s 9.68 . 99.74 29.70 % 99.70 Quoted 'in dollars ajud cents per $100 bond. Foreign Exchange. Sterling— Demand Cabes France Guilders Marks Lire widfs Swiss, franes Pesetas . Belgian francs Sweden ¢ Denmark Norway Greece Argentina Testerday. ..$3.963] 9654 3 - T CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. Chicago, Nov. 15.—Reported sales of new Argentine wheat at 6 cents a bushel under the cost of United Stateswheat had a depressing influence today on the | wheat' market here. Prices closed unset- tled, 1% to 23 cents net lower with December $1.04 to $1.04% and May $1.07% to $1.07%. Corn finished un- changed to 3 cents higher; oats do®n % @% and provislons varying from 2% cents decline to 50 cents advance, Right from the start, the wheat mar- ket showed a decid leaning to the bear side, with attention of traders focussing largely on Argentina and Australia owing to the near aporoach of harvest in the southern hemisphere. Crop conditions in both the countries named were report- ed as favorable, and this circumstance appeared at least temporarily to out- welgh altogether the serious complaints of drought in Kansas and elsewhers in thesouthwest. ~ Scantiness of ‘domestic receipts failed also to attract much no- tice. Under such circumstances, nouncement that Argentine wheat for January, February shipment had sold in Europe today far cheater than United States wheat proved decidedly effective against the bulls. Covering by shorts here, however, led to something of a| rally at the last. Brisk export calp for corn, with sales totalling 1,500,000 bushels for today ang yesterday, helped to give firmness to corn. Gossip was current too about gov- ernment plans for assistance in financing the carrying of the corn crop. Oats, though, reflected the weakness of wheat. Provisions fluctuated ‘in_line with hog values. All deliveries of lard and ribs touched the lowest prices vet this sea- son but subsequently rallled. an- _ Chicago Grain Market. Wheat— Hige Yow. Close, Dec. ... 105% 103 10433 May ... 19% 106% 10713 Corn— i Dec. 47 463 43% May 52% 51% 521y Oats— Dec. ..., 32% 31% 317% May. ... _3T% 36% 36% - t ] Cornell ;. 18, Princeton at Penn; 18, Yale \staple, or grandparents, Sateen was used and Besides its uses for ‘most fabrics. oo Each process must be or off color. in any way. spin strong and even yarn. Detail Inform BARSTOW, HILL & €O, ! Boston, Mass. the Ashland Cotton Company. It is way by this request. Nam Address. .. high-class garments, dresses, shirts, linings, etc., it is greatly used by upholsterers and by undertakers. Sateen demand is not It’s an all the year cloth and when skil!ful from high-grade material, is a good seller. itself-—so much so that it demands a' higher price and gets red in the market with gopds put out by other firms. To be at its best, a_Sateen must be correctly and painstakingly made. erformed with an exactness that to the unitiated would appear superfuous. Every bale or raw cotton as soon as itarrives - at the mill is carefully inspected /and tested. correct length and evenness of staple as well as free from excess sand, leaf, nits, seeds, etc. Every bale must be white cotton, not tinged, stained, The character of the cotton must be such as to stre n After the cotton has passed all these tests, :h-n it is put into process and before it is baled up as cloth to be shipped o the finishing plants, it passes throug and intricate machines that clean, even, double, draw, twist, st brush, fold and bale the completed fabric. When you gonsid cotton in its various forms is doubled from 20,000 to 40,000 times From cotton bale to woven Sateen, you can judge that Ashland Sateen is given all the care and attention that would tend to produce a perfect cloth. BARSTOW, HILL & COMPANY 68 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass. _ R e Please send me detail information on the SAFETY FACTORS back of but if it is not demand at all in f but one product, likelihood of no Your mother and father wsed ranked high. such petticoats, the Jewelry trade, by easonable, like "; manufactured Ashland Sateen is a cl Every bale must be of the 18 to 20 different complicated , weave ¢ that the ation Coupon. understood that | am obligated in. no advance in the daté by saying “Centre and Princeton are too much for Harvard on successive Saturdays.” \ Invitations for games, also have.been received by Centre from the University of Pennsylvania, Fordham and North- western. NAVY TO HAVE TWO CLEAR WEEKS BEFORE FINAL GAME Annapolis, Md., Nov. 15.—The naval academy management decided to sched- ule no game for the Saturday previous to the final contest with army at New York Nov. 26. There wiil be a clear two weeks | of preparation for this one contest. The navy squad starts this perio dwith its squad in fine physical condition, its losses from injuries being .almost noth- ing during the season. There are a. few slightly strained an- kles or knees and some bruises distrib- uted over the bodies of a few of the play- ers, but it is believed that the team can be brought to the perfection of physical condition before the 26th. BOWLING. Eastern Conn. Power Co, Operating Dep't. Archer *. 81 75 107— 263 Coflin ..l L LTG0 AR, 91— 257 F. Sistare ...... 89 93 110— 292 Hallisay .. 96 114 94— 304 % 345 369 402—1116 Head’s Dep't. Harris P 76 84 87— 247 French e 1 7 76— 224 Humphrey 92 85 90— 267 I Pniltips 76 86 71— 233 315 332 324— 971 1Cormier 72— 23} al’ 86— 260 88— 270 86— 257 32—1018 on _. Mumford 333 353 Maintenance Dep’t. Furlong 244 Taylor 248 Gesner 278 Sistare 326 382—1096 ConStruction Dep’t. Bdwardson ;. 1 T4 67— 212 Larsen .... 76 80 , 87— 243 Hanrahan e ] i [ B N T Welsh 80 80 89— 249 301 312 334— 947 Miscellaneous Dep’t, Faurulte Ceea 2 7 80— 229 Peckham .. 87 88 95— 270 Anderson .... .. 78 87 88— 253 Miller ... .... 15 69 ‘82— 226 312 321 345— 978 YALE'S THIRD STRING END INJURED IN SCRIMMAGE New Haven, Nov. 15.—Patrick T. But- ler, third string end on the Yale eleven, received a broken leg in yesterday's iscrimmage, It was learned at the hospi- tal today. Butler's home is at Pengil'y, Minn. Flirst reports were that Butler was merely “badly injured,” but ex- amination showed both bones of the low- er leg to have been broken. His injury %s the first major casualty of the Blue's scason. EASTERN LEAGUE ADOPT 154-GAME SCHEDULE Springfield, Mass., Nov. 15.—Eastern League owners in a speclal session here today voted to adopt a 154-game sched- ule again for the 1922 season, in spite of wmentiment in some quarters that a shorter schedule would be better for the league. The salary limit of $4,500 will remain the same. President Dan O'Nell was given instructians for the meeting of the National ASSociation of Minor League Baseball Clubs at Buffalo in De- cember, WHITE SOX AND GIANTS TO PLAY SPRING SERIES Chicage, Nov. 15.—The White Sox amd the New York Giants are planning a se- ries of spring exhibition games while on thelr way north from southern tralning camps next year, it was announced here today following tHe return, §f Harry Grabiner, secretary of ‘the White Sox club, from Sequin, Texas, scene of the Sox 1922 training camp. Yale Basketball Schedule. New Haven, Conn., Nov. 15.—The Yale basketball schedule, announced tonight, includes the following® intercoFegiate league games: January 14, Pennsylvania at Philadel- phia; Feb. 7, Harvard at New Haven; 15, Dartmouth at New Haven: 17, Cor- nell at New Haven; 22, Princeton at Princeton; Ma.th 1, Pennsylvania at New Haven; 4, Dartmouth at Hanover; 8, Columbia at New Haven; 11, Har- vard at Cambridge; 14, . Princeton at New Haven. 18, Cornell’at Ithaca. Shevlin Regained Title Boston, Nov. 15—Eddie Shevlin, of the Roxbury District,” regained the New England welterweight title to- night when he won a 'ten round de- cision bout from Mike Morley, of Hartford, Connecticut. Shevlin is box- ing instructor at Dartmouth College. There is a limit to everything, but lots of men never realize it until it is too l:.ts EXPECTS RECORD ATTENDANCE AT HARVARD STADIUM Cambridge, Mass., Nov. 15.—All at- tefdance records at the Harvard Sta- dium, first of the athletic amphitheatres In this country, wi’l be broken Saturday, when approlmately 55,000 persons will see Harvard and Yale in their annual football game. The receipts will exceed $150,000. Harvard athletic officials an- nounce that more than 15,000 applica- tions for seats had to be.denied. When the teams first met in the Stadium in 1903 the attendance was 38,400. Extra seats of wood have been built In at every possible space and cranny of the sta- ‘dium, along the running track inside, and under the covered colonnade above. ARMY PREPARING FOR GAME WITH NAVY West Point, N. Y., Nov. 15.—The army squad was hard at work today in prep- aration for its game on November 2 With the navy. The usual “chalk-talk” In the gymnasium, a light scrimmage in the afternoon, and kicking and passing practice were on the day's program. Efforts 2re being made to perfect the army attack, which appeared ragged and somewhat inconsistent in the game with the light Vilanova eleven, The army punting was far from satisfactory last Saturday, and some time is being devot- éd to the kicking members of the squad. POSTPONED CHAMPIONSHIP CHECKER MATCH - Boston, Nov. 15.—Postponement until January 3 of the world’s championship checker match between Newell W. Banks of Detroit and Robert Stewart of Glasgow, Scotland, was anmounced in a dispatch. from Banks at Detroit today. The match was to-have. been held in Glasgow early ‘next month. - Banks sald the postponement was due to the death of his father. He would sail for Scot- land on December 15, he added. © Want Basketball Game. The Montville basketball team are out after games and would like to hear from any team in this section. Would like to hear from the Baltic Wanderers) Call 1878-5. SPORT NOTES. History picks Yale for a clean sweep this season. No Harvard team has ever{ 'beaten Yale after fosing to Princeton, | {But this is a year of surprises. Before the Princeton game, no Harvard team had ever lost the game after scoring first. Toronto has been admitted into the Union Printers National Baseball league. Other teams in the league are Philadel- phia, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, New | York, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, Chicago, De- troit, St. Paul, Cleveland, Washington and New Orleans. Next year’s tourna- ment will be in Cleveiand. Arnold Horween, Harvard's 1920 foot- ball captaln, is giving the Crimson coaches a helping hand in getting the varsity men in trim for the Yale battle. No. 13 was wished on Hank Garrity, Princeton’s great line-knifer, in the Har- vard game, but he took unkindly to the of the colege gridirons several ldea and discarded the numeral in fa- vor of a plain unnumbered one, v Another season of great quarterbacks is this. McMillan of Centre, Killinger of Penn State, Devine, of Towa, O'Hearn of Ya'e and Lourle of Princeton are nominated for the All-American. Those Who have, witnesseq Princeton’s play in the big games cannot see a chance for thé Tiger Don, however. Joo Harris, former Cleveland first baseman, who vefusel to report two years.ago when his demands for a salary lincrease were not heeded, is waiting an- xiously to hear from Judge Landis re- garding his application for reinstate- ment in organized baseball. Coach Heinsman of Pennsylvania is of the opinion that Lafayette's backfleld is not as good as Pittsburgh's, but that the line outclasses the one constructed by Glenn Warner. g St. Louis writers, ‘who a few weeks ag0 | were praising George Sisler and -Rogers Hornsby, who at the time were ‘the lead- Ing hitters ‘in the Pacific. Coast Winter League, have sudden’y become ' stilled. Ty Cobb and Harry Hellmann, Detrolt stars, who are now leading the league by wide margins, are the causes for the St. Loula silence. Everything zoes to Massachusetts in the big contests of 1921. Aldrich of Fall River and O'Hearn of Brookline did the scorlng for Yale last week, while Gar- rity of Newton did the work for the Tigers, Gllroy of Haverhill upset the Harvard team the previous week. Jim Thorpe, boss of the Cleveland ‘Tig~wa’ professional footba’l team, has foun, it necessary to release Miit Ghee, former Dartmouth quarter and Al- Shea’s News Burea MAGAZINE SPECIALIST UNION SQUARE THE DIME SAVING BANK OF NORWICH The regular Semi-Annual Dividend has been declared at the rats of 4 per cent. a' year from the earnings of the past six months, and will he pay- able o and after November 15, 1921, FRANK L. WOODARD, Treasurer. - ‘ . Taste is a matter of ‘tobacco qu We state it as our honest belief that the tobaccos used in Chester- field are of finer hence of better taste) than in any other cigarette at the price. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Chesterfield CIGARETTES \of Turkish and Domestic tobaccos—blended ty quality (and American selection, in order to strength- en his team. Brainy Bowers, another Dartmouth product, has oeen chosen to assume the signal man's burden. Kaw, Cornell's best bet in the back- field, is bullt along the lines of Charlie Barrett. but a bit bigger. Barrett, it will be remembered, was the whirlwind years ago while playing with the Ithacans. Kaw is the fastest man in Cornell's back- field and is extremely hard to stop. STAFFORD SPRINGS A bowling league composed of teams from the factories and stores has been organized. There will also be two oth- er teams, the Independents and All Stars in the league and some interesting match- es are looked for during the coming win- ter. Philip Dow, submaster at the high school has been absent this week on ac- count of the illness of his father. The funeral of Joseph E. Russell, 73, was held at St. Edward’s church Mon- day morning at nine o'clock. Rev. Felix J. O'Nefl read the requiem mass and buri- al was in St. Edward's cemetery. . The Hospital Ald soclety met at the Johnson Memorial hospital Tuesday aft- ernoon. Judge William Heald was in Spring- field on business Tuesday. There was a large attendance at the annual Tolland county convention-of the ‘'Young Men's Christian Association in the Congregational churé¢h Monday afternoon. Rev. F. V. Allen of South Willington opened the business mieeting with a short prayzr. Philip’ M. - Howe of Rockville was in charge of the meeting. ~After re- ports had been made by’ various officers the meeting closed with an address by E. L. Sexton, Y. M. C. A. secretary in Fairfield county. N Niek Kicopoulos has bought out the business of James Vaners and James Socolos. jTO DISCTSS REPORT ON WAGE AND WAGE THEORIES Washington, Nov. 15.—The executive council of the American Federation of Labor at a session which is expected to continue f~ the rest of the week, today discussed Lé preliminary report of its cemmittee on wage and wage t. Tha committes’s investization was dered continued. “The law of supply and demand has or- ories. | long since ceased to function in wage fixing, «xcept under exceptional condi- tions,” the report sald in part, “and the most acute suffering from arbitrary im- Dposition of un®igntific wage theories is found in industries where there is no organization of the workers, and where the voice of the emplover constitutes final authority from which therg is no appeal.” | SEVERAL THOUSAND GARMENT WORKERS TO RETUEN TO WORK New York, Nov. 15.—Several thousand of the 60,000 striking garment workers will return to Work tomorrow morning in the shops of forty manufacturers who have signed working agreements with the union heads, it. was announced to- night at the strikers’ headquarters. More than 600 applications have been received at “agreement headquarters” from manufacturers who ask their strik- ing employes to return to work on the old Weekly pay basis, members of the agreement committes of the strixers sald. MESSAGE TO EMPLOYES BY PRESIDENT OF PEN ROAD Philadelphia, Nov. 15.—Public demand that the price of railroad service be re- duced must be met through a reduction in the wages of railroad -workers, Sam- uel Rea, vpresldent of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, declaged tonight in a statement addressed to employes of the roatl. The company will proceed to seek reductions. “In accordance with law.,” the statement says, and will not make reduc- tlons “in accordance with law,” the statement says. and will not make reduc- tions untll conferences have been held with the employes and requirements of the transportation act complied with. INTERNATIONAL PAPER CO. . ,SUES UNION OFFICIALS Glens Falls, N. Y., Nov. 15.—The In- ternational Paper Company began legal action today against Jeremiah T. Carey indlvidually, and as president of the In- ternational Brotherhood of Paper Mak- ers John P. Bourke, president' of the International Brotherhood of Pulp. Sul- phite and Paper Mill Workers, James Ryan, organizer of the last named or- ganization, and about 300 gther union of- cla’s and strikers to recover $150,000 for damages alleged to have been caused by striking <mployes in alleged interference of the company's il Corinth, since la Supreme Cougt granted an particularly at Company while the prese pending. MORTGAGE FOR § 2,000,000 ON GENERAL 30TORS BUILDING Detrolt, Nov. mortgage for twelve miilic he Motors Corpora sued to the S. W. New York, was an: Pierre S. Dupont, poration. Thh largest real estate orded. The building bonds interest, will be ret March, 1922 to 1945. v General A Valuable Bocklet Full of Information INVESTORS DATA BOOK It contains statistical infor- mation on about 400 and bonds listed on the N York Stock Exchange other leading Exehanges. Also short analytical v present status, Earnings and Dividends, high and low prices. It also includes ticker abreviations, margin of safety table, etc. Mailed Free Upon Requést Investment Securities 742 Main St., Hartford, Conn. Phone No. 2, 2281 Main Office Branch Office 45 Beaver St. 1823 Broadway New York New York Army & Navy Surplus Co. 35 BROADWAY 35 BROADWAY - Per ) e MACKINAWS 0.D. Wool Mackinaw $9.50 Broadcloth Pea Jackets ........ $12.50 LEATHER VESTS Leather Aviators’ LEATHER COATS Genuine Leather Rever- sible Coats, length 36 Genuine:Leather, Sheep- skin lined, length 36 - inches ......... $28.75 4 BLANKETS" Imported 20% Wool Blankets, size 55x75, 95¢ All-Wool Blankets, Olive . Drab color, size 60x80 inches .......... $4.95 All-Wool Oxfords, Gray with Bordsr, size 64x 84, weight 4 Ibs. . .$5.95 Double Hospital Blan- Officers’ . D. ..... $6.95 UNDERWEAR - ARMY AND NAVY Regulation Navy .... 65c | Union Suits $1.55 to $1.95 MEDIUM AND HEAVY WEIGHT .25 MENS ALL-WOOL ARMY REGULATION UNDERWEAR SWEATERS Slip-On Sweaters. .... 85c Coat Sweaters. ....... 95¢c Coat Sweaters ..... $1.45 Very Heavy All-Wool | All-Wool Sport Coats $4.50-$4.95 SHOES Elkskin Leather Navy Black........ $5.95 Officers’ Dress . $5.25 Officers’ Barrack Slip- pers $1.95 O. D. Pure Wool Serge, double elbow. ... $3.75 O. D. Pure Wool Serge, double elbow, lined RAINCOATS Long Oil Skins . ... $2.50 Officers’ Raincoats. . $6.95 Officers’ Moleskin, rain and wind proof. $14.75 Per Garment MOLE—SHEEPSKIN BELTED COATS With Fur Collars Length 36 inches. . . $10.50 Ulster length, 44 in. $11.95 BREECHES Khaki ... $1.95 and $3.25 0. D. Wool Breeches $4.95 SOCKS Assorted Colors, pair Army Socks Cashm i ;;...3pnir$l.00 pair OVERALLS Overalls ........... 95¢ 0. D. Wool Long FPants 0% . $4.75 Khaki Unionalls ... $2.35 MISCELLANEOUS All-Wool Army Gloves 30c Aviators’ Leather Hel- . $5.75 20-Ib. Cot Mattresses $2.95 15¢

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