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FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAY —eeeee. .w“ OF DEALINGS Chi M & St P pr .. 3 Chi & N'west . = "IN NEW YORK STOCK MABRKET | o5\ 000t Chi RI&P .. Chile Copper 38 36% . 831 7 ) ® S SJampleoflgp WAUREGAN HOTEL BLOCK <Day's -total sales, 952,000 ~shares. #Tyrenty _industrials averaged Mil:; ow, 16, High 1922, 103.43; railroads averaged $3.70; met High 1922, 93.99; Jow 7343. | Gryciie Steel pr ; Del & Hudson MARKET WAS BEARISH. New . York, Nov, 23.—Further liqui- @atlon of stocks took place in today's toek n:‘nkst. short umng,lespelclallynv‘n[ o raifrdad shares, accelerating { y "mrd, movement. Declines in_ac-| e fl“;‘;‘; ittye issues ranged from 1 to 3 points. | SO ap P {Public buying support was again Geh JIGL oot bears pressing thMr advantage| oo M OCR. T B and: g alded by increased margin|c oo ot ore «ealls and some further calling of loans, | gt A B0 70 Ahe- value of the coMateral for which [pyinc, BEI ad- been substantially impaired by the|Ting cent Tepent actlon. A few half-hearted at-|ngniration Cop tempts were made to rally the list butiyne’ prorvecier . they . were given up wWhen the outside|r s er Marine ‘Public refused to come in. Short cov-|in{ Mer Mar pr ,+ influenced by the. lower callijn pPaper . 1 rate, largely accounted for the|In¢ Paper pr .sta mbderate rebound in the final dealings.|Kennecott .. iSpeculative - disappointment over the|Tenigh Valley relatively poor October earnings state-|Maxwell Mot A fments ‘and a decrease in car 10adings Mexican Petrol dicating that the peak of traffic had Miami Copper fim‘ passed for the year resulted in the M St P & S S M. throwing over.of a large volume of rail-(Mo K & T w i read shares, which also was reported to Mo K & T pr w i ihmve been influenced by fear that the Missouri Pacific transportation act would be amended by | Missouri Pac pr .. Nat En'& St N Y Air Bk .. N Y Air Brake A. N Y Central 194 MAIN STREET For~ correct dress, wear November Sale of Coats STARTS TODAY A TIMELY SAVING THANKSGIVING SALE OF WOMEN’S OUT- ER APPAREL — BEAUTIFUL DRESSES, COATS, COATS AND SUITS FOR THANKSGIVING FESTIVITIES, AT PRICES THAT YOU CANNOT RESIST. COATS - - $16.50 ONE RACK NEW MANNISH COATS, IN VELOURS, CHINCHIL. LAS, ENGLISH COATINGS, AND PLAID BACKS. COA1S $25 to $112.50 VALUES TO $195.00 ALL DEEP PILE FABRICS, RICH COLORINGS, TRIMMED IN BEAUTIFUL COLLAR AND CUFFS OF GENUINE MANCHURIAN WOLF; BEAVER AND SQUIRREL. All Fur-Trimmed SUITS... $25.00 VALUES TO $69.50 IN SIZES 16 AND 18 ONLY Come to us just this ONE SEASON for your furnishings—from hose to head. The high quality of our goods will become bet- ter known to you the longer you. wear them. When WE furnish all of your furnish- ings one season you will always come to congress. Louisville and Nashville slumped to J%¢ and then rallied to 125 1-8 for a net 168 of nearly four points, Rock Island §: per cent preferred, broke more than|N Y N H & H . three points and losses of 1 to 1 1-2yNorfolk & West fook place in Atlantle Coast Line, Ch{-|North Pacific «cago and Northwestern, Lackawapna,|Penn R R Tilinols Central common and_preferred, | Plerce Oil .. #w York Central, Northern Pacific and|Pierce Oil pr ‘Umion Pacific. Atchison got below 100 g::dlcgn .o but rallied to r at the close. n; e Airioat dhat. | which Reading 1 pr . our store for them. ©pe 3 1-2 points, was one of the bright'Reading 2 pr . i S T ke s To KNOW our store means to make it 8g favorably influenced by another’ in-[Rep' I & St pr .. terease | nthe price of the refined .pro-|South Pacific . our store. ‘fuet, bringing it to the high level of gg:g: *};;flg:! . ¥ : J the o o 6y - ” ¥ b sugars responded only feebly.|Tenn Copper Suppose you “try it once. Wear our good, “Nifty” clothes. | QUINN & DESMOND 184 the afternoon recovery, closing at|ToP Prod A . 283 MAIN STREET PHONE 1375 : Union Pacific ® met gain of 3-4 of a point. Baldwin, | Un! which had sunk to 120 1-2, rallied 1 5-8| Union Pac pr T S Rubber .. 6 its close of last night, while Ameri- “éant. Locomotive, closed 'at a slight|J § Rubber pr . fiactional gain. , Burns Brothers A,|U S gioo) Corn Products and Beechnut Packing | 5, S°e, PY Were strong during most of the session, | yo ity TR closing at substantial gains. West'house El Ofl shares were in rather fres supply | winvs Oriand during the height of the reaction, but Willys O'land 3 et losses generally wére not very large. | wortn Pump Producers and Refiners and Standard!worn Pump B .OBL of. California, each yielded more than ‘a point, but the declines in Paci- g Oll, Standard of New Jersey, Mar-l Jand and Pierce ewere held to fractions X Asphalt and Houston were slightly better. Bteels offered a little better resistance bt final prices were mixed, United Steel common, Bethlehem B, Re- public, Replogle, Vanadium and Midvale; dfopping to lower ground while Lacka- winna, Crucible and Gulf States eith- o ced slightly or were unchanged, . “National, Lead failed to respond to hé ‘announcement of a higher dividend, ing three points, probably in ecalative disappointment over the di- y8tors’ failure to declare an extra divi- dend in addition to increasing the reg- plmr ‘.rate. Other conspicuous weal 3:&! ‘Wwére American Smelting, Ameri- R Tobacco, Continental Can, General | ¥estric, Pressed Steel Car and Wool- iWorth, the losses ranging from 2 to 3 | points, growth. Bears laid stress also on the fact that the amount of grain afloat for Europe had become much enlarged of late and that the total at present ex- ceeded the aggregate at the correspond- ing time last year, Argentine exports for the week showing a big increase. Abatement of car shortage, too, was re- ported as having resulted in larger ac- RS v FUR COATS .........: 1.3 OFF Something of a rally, which however, 2 FOR SATURDAY ONLY e Rt b e nesd . st aptur wau based ! pactly DRESSES ........ $16.50 to $39.50 e Tuvers of nited Siates. sargs VALUES TO $65.00 NEW MODELS FEATURING LONG WAIST LINES, DRAPED AND PANELS, NOBBY SLEEVES AND PRETTY NECK LINES. MATERIALS — CANTON CREPES, CREPE SATINS, RADIUM SILKS, VELVETS, POIRET TWILLS AND TRICOTINES. HATS — Special ........ $4.98 ican Agricultural 7 F-2's, Midvale Stect| 5's were bid up at the close, climbing nearly two points. Total sales (par valuee) were $11,- 310,000, The recent reaction has had a de- pressing effect on new offerings, An- nouncement was made today that a New York syndicate had purchased $8,- 100,000 in three months city of Mon- treal 5 1-2 per cent, treasury . bills; which will be offered séon on a 5 per| cent basis. The Dayton Power and Light company has announced that on New York, Nov. 2—Call maney eas-| December 1 it will redeem $4,500,000 ier; high 5; low ‘4; ruling rate 5; clos-, first lieu and General mortgage three ing bid 4; offered at 4 1-2; last lgan 4;| year Ts, dated March 1, 1920, at 100 call loans against acceptances 4 1-3. |1-4. METAL MARKET. New York, Nov. 23.—Copper steady, electrolytic spot and futures 13 7-8@14; tin- weak, spot and nearby 36.12; fu- tures "36.25; iron steady, ptices un-! changed; lead steady, spot 7.00@7.25;! sinc steady, East St. Louis spot and nearby delivery 7.00@7.05; antimony, spot 6.50@6.75, MONEY. business at the Gulf of Mexico were: likewise a temporary aid to bullish sen-| ument, but proved insufficient to with-! and general selling which prevai at the end of the day, S Corn and oats were relatively firmer than wheat, the south and west being reported as- bidding activity for corn with demand from New Orleans show- ing improvement as a result of reduc. tion in the large line freight 'rom St. Louis. g ks Provisions were sive support. COXTON. New York, Nov. 23.—Spot quiet, middling 25.45. Liberty Bonds. High. = Low. 98.20 98.20 ..100.46 100.24 Lib 1st 4%s 98.68 98.26 Lib 2d 4%s 98.00 97.68 U S Lib 3d 4%s 98.56 98.40 U S Lib 4th 4%s 3 98.06 Victory 4%s ..100. 100.30 do called 100.06 100.02 °100.06 Treas 4%s . 99.52 99.40 + 99.40 Quoted in-dollars and cents per $100 bond. cotton Close 98.20 100.24 98.26 97.74 98.48 98.06 100.30 BOND MABKET 3 New York. Nov. 23.—Renewal of ra- ¢ Call money opened at 5 per cent.|titer heavy liquidation took place in to- eamed off to 4 1-2 durig the noon hour|day's bond market, United States Bov- ®ig thence to four, where it closed. The| ernment securities vielding more read- tfine money business continued to De|ily to pressure on an apparent absence lbBe on. 2 G per cent basis for all ma-|of new and vigorous buying Dower. turities and commercial paper rate. was| Railroad mortgages were depressed 'n fnchmnged at 4 3-4 per cent for the|sympathy with fhe fall in stock prices, bext, names, industrial ‘lines. offered = better resist- } Foreign exchange business was quiet-| ance, and the chief losses in the for- or jearly strength being followed by a| eign list took place in the more specu- od of weakness. Demand sterling|iative issucs, #gain touched $4.50 but later reacted to; The first 1-4 per cent T government| $4:49 3-8 while francs got down to 7.14. ponds dropped 4 cents on $100, the Lib-| "Cnndhn exchange conmtinued at a slight erty 3 1-2's lost 22 cents and the sec- Somt ond 4 1-#s, 20, while losses of 2 to 16 without any aggres- Forelgn Exchange. With the exception: cf sterling, al guotations are ln cemts per umit of for eign cuzrency: Chicago Grain Macket. Wheat— * Hign. Close. Dec. ... 118% 1178 ;'fi:! ;;;% 116% uly ... Iy % 107% Low. 117% 116% 107% 20% Sterling— Demand i v Cables g -y 71 Celery, doz. STOCKS, ;The following is a summary of the trafisdctions on the New York Stock Ex- ehange up to 3 P. M.: R Hizh. Low, Y 691 423 42 Clos 943 28% 60% 37 7 Cop Associated Ofl .. &S F &SF e 1 g Way . i {Loans For You § "Winter ana the ' approaching k tys bring financial ;l:vbl;nu to bywe iof us Who have no bank ac- mits or ties. Phere is fuel to buy, the children d .warm clothing, family and "should be remembered with these obligations the Bene- lidate your debts em off in six to fifteen ,-86 STATE STREET 1Y cents took place in the other active is- sues. Framerican 7 1-2's proved the most breaking 2 points; Marseilles 6's slip- Francs .. .. Guilders vulnerable target in the foreign st M2 e,| ped back 1 1-2 and Uruguay 8's, Prague S 7 1-2’s, Jurgen §'s and State of San Paulo §'s alt sold a point under yester- day’s final figures; 2 Disappointment over ¢he October| earnings statements was held - respon- sible for the free offering of the rail- road bonds, Minneapolis-St. Louis re- funding 4's falling 2. 1-2 points and In- ternational and Great Northern adjust- ment 6's, 1 3-4. Seaboard issués were ume when the rallroad list began to sag, the consolidated 6's and adjust- ment 55 each droppiig a point or more, as ‘did a number of others, inr cluding Chicago Great Western 4%, Frisco 5 1-2's, adjustment 6's and in- come §'s, “Katy” adjustment 5's, Nor- folk and Western convertible 6's and Atchison stamped 4's. American Telephone convertible 6's dropped 1 3-4¢ and Chile Copper T's, 1 1-2, with losses of a point thrown onto’ the market in large vol-i 12.62% CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. Chicago, Nov. 23.—Wheat had a gen- eral downward drift in price today largely as a result of fine weather and slowness of export demand. The close ‘was ‘heavy at l-4c to lc net decline, with May 116 1-4 to 1.16 3-8, and July 1.07 5-8. Corn finished unchanged to 1-2c lower, oats unchanged to 3-8c off; and provisions varying from a setback of 30c to 7c, advance. Ideal conditions for the winter crop h being | Wwere emphasized by Kansas reportsthat|English walnuts; Ib. sustained by Marland Oil 8's, with war-| wheat in the eastern half of the state|Cabbage, bbl rants, Wilson convertble 6's and Amer-| was all up, and making e.xcznenzlcarnu. B 5 oo e 10c a'Line, Av:n..i 5 "R P, D. o Street. memens. 1 Post Office wcscvrmnenss o oietels ate e orese oot o May 70% July 69% Lettuce, doz. Onions, bu. { Parsnips, bu. Furnished by the Marketing Bureau of the "State Board of Agriculture to the Norwich Bulletin. Good demand: Boxed apples, . boxed grapes, potatoes, lettuce, Conn. fan, eggs, ; and fowi. Fair demand: Oranges, carrots, tur- nips, celery, spinach and cranberries. Slow demand: Squash, cabbages, beets, parsnips, onions and veal, Fruits and Vegetables. Apples, gr. A. bbl. ..... $4.65 $5.50 ' Apples, cooking, 14 qts. . .75 1.00 Cranberries, bb. Oranges, box . R 8 b 23" .29 125 '1.75 3 ‘l.zs';.w ‘| MAIL-AD FILL OUT AND MAIL TO NORWICH, CONN. Words to & Line — Wants, To Let, For Sale; Etc. : ClasSIfCAHON e oiosimiai \ THE NORWICH BULLETIN N - R sioiresar e rwsscwenis NUMDET Of INSETHONS o« vuvie .00 eine B Gl LR S e - . Wrife complete ad below including narhe and address : — Or if biind address Is wanted mark X here” ovessennssasssasass. Besssessvinrnssestns Besesssermussscoscae = 2 Potatoes, nat., du. . Potatoes, sweet, bbl. Spinach, bu. Squash, winter, Ib. Turnips, bu. ... - Poultry and Dajry. Chicken, dressed, Ib. . Chicken, live, 1. . Fowl, live, . . Fowl, dressed, Ib, Turkeys, -live, Ib. . ‘Turkeys, dressed, Ib. . Eees, Conn., newlald, fan Eggs, Conn., hennery Eggs, Conn. gathered Eggs, Western . Butter, best tub, 1b. Buttér, best print, Ib. Pork cuts: Pork loins, $-10 Ibs. av. Pork loins, 10-12, Tos. Porik loins, 12-14 'lbs. av. ... 14.00 15.00 { Mutton, good, M. .... . Meat Products. Calves, best live, B, . Calves, heavy, . .... Cows, live, nat., 100 Ibs. .. Cows, live, nat, common . Cows, ‘milch, hd. ... Steers, nat. 100 Ibs. Hogs, live, 100 Ibs. . JEWETT CITY Last Tuesday evening there was & lchlcken pie supper at Newent. A_pu: jber of parties went over from the bar- ough and>had @ fine time with plenty of good “things to eat. ‘F. E. Robinson, treasurer of the Jewett City savings bank, thought he would go and take his{ family for a fine chicken supper, Long after dark he wenf out. to his garage, didn’t, stop to turn on the lights, step-! ped in and backed out his machine. His | family came out and after all were! comfortably seated Mr. Robinson drove down Main street to G. Curtis Hull's house to take him along. While stopped there Frank Wilcox came out-from the jother side of the road, his head light threw a broad beam around as he tuaus the turn. When Mr. Robinson’s car was brought into .the bright reflection Mr. Wilcox made eut something huddled up on the running board of the other | machine. He stopped, and asked Mr. Robinson where he was headed for and, | hearing the answer, “To the chicken sup- rer,” he asked, “What! do you have to take your chicken with you?” , Both Franks got” out and investigated. Mr. Robinson’s surprise is hardly to be | imagined, whén he saw on his rumming i board, comfortably settled down for the night, one of his prize Ted hens. Mrs. Hen stood for- being left, while the party went on. Returning, they took her in. ‘At home piaced on the roost in her accustomed bed, the night's ex- periences had mo ill effects. No one need take their.supper with them when they 80 to Newent. Their hounteous hospital ity is unquestioned. Mrs. Frank Colesworthy of Worcester is the guest of Mrs. George H. Prior. Henry E. Paul who has been ill for 2 week was able to get up Thursday and is improving steadily. - Levi Adams who once lived in the Joseph Brown house sdys the well with the big drum was dug im 1810. The well originally was fitted with a counter. balance stone, attached to a heavy leath- er strap, that ran over the drum shaft. This contrivance reduced the lift of.a bucket of jwater, so that a child might draw it" with ease. Nearly 100 years o] : P i Iy E i H R E g E. ¢ f { =§ i 53; the uplift and benefit of those with whoil she came in contact. The Ladies Aid society of the Baptish church held a fair and supper in the vestry on Thursday afterfioon and ev- ening. In tbe parior were the domestic, fancy and doll tables In charge of Miss Ruby Thornton, Mrs. Harvey Kennedy and Mrs. E. M. Swift. Miss Ida Foster was i charge of the home made candy sale whicih was arranged on a-table on the platform under a canopy. of .yellow and white crepe paper. A baked beas supper was served from six to eight Mrs. Nathan Babcock, Mrs. JohnHarris and Mrs, Samuel Cathcart supervised this department. Mrs. Charles Gardner was in charge of the dining room. waltresses were Mrs. E. M. Gray,™ Lewis Herobitt, Mrs. Otis, “Mrs, Roberl Willis, Mrs. E. E. Gifbert, Miss €ampbell, Miss Neifle Franklin, Mist. Martha Morgan, Miss Alice Brown, Ag- nes Franklin, Grace Olin, AMNce Mrs. Louisa Johaston, Mrs Raney. They: wore, \dtiractive paper hats, Mrs. Francis Campbel presidenty of the soclety 'Which con the successful affair. . ‘Wednesday night the meréary to 19 /above, of the season.