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PAGE FOUR THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1935 OGDENSBURG JOURNAL C£tJU!22UCWC2iiB522^%C^i^^ kr i f iii V9 n it « I I r» «W M t= r, *.i It /I u I *.* r iT Is a- ir. 1ST Si' St It P s. :i| I »• s •s-i: I' l u mi ?< L I A*) W 331 Ford Street Presents AN IMPORTANT FUR SALE Frill ay mid Saturday Only -by- Edelberg's - ? Est. J 904, oaranac Lake, N. Y. Because this is pdel- i berg's First .Sale At ALGIE'S, They Offer These Exquisite Coats At August Sale A Complete 1936 Collection Virtually Every Fur Pelt on the Market Will Be Displayed including: — Imported Lapin Coats Northern Seat ... Beaverette ,. iniisKrax .. Kid Skin American Broadtail Raccoon » Caracul $ Caracul & Silver Fox Hudson Seal . Leopard Cat , Krimmer Russian Squirrel Leopard & Beaver .. $ Jap Mink ...... Alaska Seal.. $ Moire Caracul & Silver Fox and others to $2,750.00 185 275 325 Take Advantage of This Unusual Opportunity To Buy A Fine Fur Garment Guaranteed As To Pelt, Lining and Workmanship At An AUGUST PRICE! Mr. Edelberg will personally conduct \his sale! Sale is for-^-r Two Days Only! Friday & Saturday 331 Ford Street •wmz4M!l!*:*T.*^'*i+'!<:*iMTlr*!Ji9*4t'i<m.t rrs-*. m-^M' ZXO&SrXMXttCGtZZXSn \Don't be a poke,\ says the missus. \You're old, I know; but you don't need to be archaic.\ \It ain't that,\ I tells her, \it's discretion that keeps me from , wanting to make a ninny out of myself, going to a masquerade. I haven't the shape for that sort of thing. Besides, what could I wear?\ \You might go as a matador,\ she says, \if you had a stiff brimmed hat and a sash.\ \And a bull,\ I adds, \Oh you can double as the bull,\ she says. \You're bound to break some glassware or spill '.ce water down some guest's leek. How proud I am at such noments of my big boy!\ Then he changes from light banter to ;rim resolve. \But you're going, nyway,\ she says, in one of diose tight-lipped voices. \I want to go, and for once you're going with me, whether you like it or not.\ \But what good am I at a mas- querade or any other social func- tion?\ I demands. \You say your- . self I am a washout at these soirees, never doing or saying the Tight thing, and when I try to ' get away from it all and forget, you always come and drag me away from the punch bowl. I don't like parties.\ \I notice that everytime Jim Graney, or someone, wants you to go to a party, you go,\ she says; \Sometimes she says, aftei- a moment, \I wish when JJm: Graney takes you to a party, he would keep you. When he sent you home to me the last time I would have traded you in for almost any cheap knick-knack, and thought I had the better of the bargain.\ \Now see here, my fine feath- ered; friend,\ I comes back at her, \no taking liberties with my boy friends. Jim Graney is. all very much okey. Many a tim« anon, when X am short on Wednesday, I go to Jim, give him a check dated for Friday, and say, 'Jim, slip me two bucks on this., It is a post-dated check, but 1 will be around Friday noon, af- ter we get paid, to pay you off and tear lip the check.' Jim Graney, I tells the missus, indignantly, 'keeps me better than you do. I eat, because of him, from Wed- nesday to pay day. You would have me go past lunch room windows, looking in at r o ai.t*£fij$iain7 and chocolate meringue pie, and all of the other delicacies of life, and eay, 'Sing for your lunch nioney, youfve had your lunch money, allowance this week.' No, no, I says, you cairft disparage my boyfriend.\ Then she says, \Well you are going to the masquerade,\ and I know, from the way she pats her foot, that I am going to the masquerade. And I do go, too, moreover. The next night, when I get home, there is my costume. She hasr got it down to Will Keys' store, in the village. It is a pair of overalls, with a union label, a Blue shirt and a bandana hanker- chief. \I thought I was going to be a matador,\ I says. \Now I am a hilli-billy.\ - - - . \X know you don't like mas- • querades,\ she eays, \so I thought I'd let you go more or less nat- ural. Get in those things,\ she says, \and let's be off. We've got to meet the Todds over at Dfc. Little's on Plymouth Ave- nue.\ . So, with no more ado, I get myself into the overalls -and blue shirt, and when I have wound the bandana hankerchief around my neck, I look like a hero in a Phil Stong novel, a strong, stal- wart son of the Soil, with just a little too much stomach. We are to meet at Dr. Little's at 10 p. m., but when we get there, and ring the bell, no an- swer and no Todde. I go back to the car and say I can't raise anybody, and perhaps we had better go on to the club, where the masquerade is to be held, but she says, \No they will be along, go ring again.\ So I go and ring again,' and no response. Then I think, \WeH she is a woman. She likely got the ad- drees incorrect. I will go down to the corner store and tele- phone the Todds, and see just where we are to meet.\ I go to the corner store, and the guys lounging around the cigar coun- ter give me a good looking over. They haven't seen a guy dressed as I am dressed, I guees, since last harvest season, and I hear a couple of- guys (snicker, the little loafers, and one oaf says, \Where did it come from?\ Whereupon another oaf says, \You tell me.\ But I am disdainful, as I enter the telephone booth, I give the number, but no an- swer comes from the Todd house. I am jingling the receiver hook, when the door of the booth pops open and young Mr, Dick Todd, who is our faoet for the evening, appears. He is wearing a starched white stock and white coat and pants like a doc in a hospital and he grabs my arm rudely, and in a loud voice says, \Oh so you skipped out again, eh? Who are you this time, Napoleon or Will Rogers? You will run away, will you,\ he says, clenching his teeth angrily and giving my arm a sound jerk, and before I can think up a bit of sharp repartee, he has dragged me out on the sidewalk, and is pulling me down the street towards the car. When I look around, which I do a moment later, *he guys from the store have flocked into the street, astonished at what has happened, and I see, by their faces, that they really believe I am an escaped nut, and that a doc from the nut house has just captured me. I know that to be a fact, because one guy says, \Holy smoke,\ in a kind of fright- ened voice, \maybe he to vk* / lent.\ And another calls, when, we have gone a little distance, and they think Dick Todd has.a good hold on me. \Who's looney now?\ I'd have gone back and smacked him, if it wasn't for making a scene. Weli, Dick Todd has a ••great • time, telling that on&on me; and they all laugh merrily, as we go . on to the masquerade. And at the masquerade, they'make me a judge. There are three of us, we judges. There is I, and Mrs. Alvah G. Strong and Mr. Sam Durand, and when the judging for girls begins, I pick out a girl with a very short skirt, and Mrs. Strong says, in a tone of reprimand, \Henry you are sup- posed to look at the costumes. We are judging costumes,\ she says emphatically. \But my dear lady,\ I says, \that girl has a costume, has she not?\ \Yes she says, \but you are not looking at it.\ And to tell the truth, old rogue that I am, I am not looking at the costume. Then Mrs. Strong says to me again, \This isn't,\ she says, \an Atlantic City beauty contest. There are no points given for— er, nether limbs.\ The lady they pick, for first place, wears a train. Which just goes to prove, as\ I irifer to the missus, I am always wrong at a party. Snell and Wife to Make Trip to the Philippines To Be Among Party of Congressmen and Famil- ies to Attend Gathering -Washington, Oct. 3— (AF)—Plans were being perfected today for a masjs journey • of- 19 senators and 29 congressmen across the Pacific to witness the birth of a nation. Headed by Vice President Gar- ner and accompanied by wives and relatives—97 in all—they Thrill sail from Seattle Oct. 16 for Man- ila to attend the inauguration of the Philippine commonwealth Nov, 15. Enrbute they -will stop in Tokyo, Shanghai and Manila. The Philippine Government is paying the bill. It is. a sort of •gesture of gratitude to the United States for initiating fulfilment of a promise of independence made a quarter of a century ago. The revised list of senators, and members of Congress attending the commonwealth inauguration includes: Representative and Mrs. Berffand H, Siiell, Potsdam, N. Y.; Representative Bert Lord and wife, Afton, N. Y.;- Representative W. Sterling Cole.and -wife, Bath, N. Y. Tax on beer would be used to increase the salaries of policemen and firemen under a bill to be in- troduced in the Alabama legisla- ture. DANCE AT ARMORY ON OCTOBER 11TH A treat is in store for dance lovers: the evening of Oct. 1-1 -when Fredddie Kay and his band' of 13 musicians comes to Ogdefisburg to play at .a dance at Stat,e Armory. The dance will be conducted un- der the auspices of Company M and a large crowd is anticipated. The Journal phones hummed this afternoon with inquiries about the World Series game at Detroit and the war in Ethiopia .... There were scores of calls about the ball game .... and three about the war .... there may be a war going on in Ethio- pia but it will probably, have to wait until the' Cubs trim the Tigers or vice-versa ..... Joe Louis the Brown Bomber is in Detroit today pulling for the Tigers to win Detroit, you know, is Joe's home town . . . . (and if all Detroiters hit as hard as Joe, the Tigers ought to take this series ; .'. . but they probably don't .... * * * During the broadcast of the Ser- ies this afternoon by The Journal in co-operation with Sperling's Store through the pdblie speaking system, the radio reception went haywire because of the storm and It was necessary to fall back on The Journal's Associated Press running account of the game com- ing in direct from Detroit on The Associated Press wire. A few min- utes later, however, the storm af- fected the press wire and Francis Corcoran in charge of the radio set-up shifted to short wave to get the returns. In the fifth inning the AP wires were cleared and the broadcast continued from The As- sociated Press service. •§- SOCIAL AND PERSONALS -€» <S> , : i $> • Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Darst of Corona, Cal., who are visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Genereux, enjoyed a motor trip to Lake Placid Wed- nesday. In the party beside Mr. and Mrs. Darst were Mrs, J. B. Leonard and. George and Annie Leonard, of this city. Herman LeRoux of the Whelan Drug store staff is attending a meeting of soda chiefs in Syra- cuse. Miss Claire Newell, daughter of Assemblyman and Mrs. W. Allan Newell, 415 Caroline Street, has been elected to Bpsilom Sigma, the student Press-Board Association of the Emma Willard School, Troy. Mrs. Morley Merkley, Mrs. Emma M. Cheney, Mrs. Carrie W. Austin and Mrs. Roswell Rose all of Heuvelton, motored to Water- town, Tuesday. , Miss R. H. Agnew, R.N. of New York City is visiting her sisters, Mrs. E. Doe and Mrs. E. Sloan, also her niece and family, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Hollenbeck of Mbira. Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Lapine have returned from a 10 days trip to Bosr ton, Mass., and Hartford and Bridgeport, Conn. Mr. and Mrs. Kneeland Lowe o£ East JafCrey, N. H., are visiting relatives in the city* Miss Charlotte Fay will leave Friday evening to spend several days in New York City. The condition of Dr. and Mrs. Charles Temple who \were stricken ill this week, remains unchanged. Dr. Temple is in the A. Barton Hepburn Hospital while Mrs. Temple is at her Washington Street home. ' Dr. Temple's daugh- ter, Miss Lucia Temple,, of New York City, was called \here. COMING EVENTS <s>- FRED S. M'GUIRE, RETIRED MILL OWNER/WEDS / Fred Sherwill McGuire, who op- erated a'\Woolen mill'and - overalls manufacturing company at 309 Wa- ter Street, was married to .Hen- rietta. S/Meria, a' t'oi-elady-in the factory at Redwood Tuesday, it; be- came known today. Mr. McGuire, who is 75, and Miss Meria,' who is 65, were married by Rev. R, F. Henderson, pastor of St.\ Paul's Lutheran Church and were unattended. Mr. McGuire • -ently retired and Was wideJv known throughout Northern New York where he WOMEN'S REPUBLICAN CLUB Members of the \Woman's Repub- lican Club will have a silver tea and listening-in party at the home of Mrs. Charles Dillingham on League Day, Oct. 4, a t 3 p. m. The members, will hear a.radio broad- cast by Miss Natalie .Couch. CHOIR REHEARSAL A regular rehearsal for mem- bers of the Congregational Church choir will' be held Thursday eve- ning at 7:30. JAUNTY FROCK FROM SIMPLE PATTERN ^^^^^^HtfBh^ ^^•Hi * ' l^^^l W&t^x? JMR^I ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^HS&^^^H^^^^^^^^H ^^^n^^l^HHHBHfl ^^^^^^^^^^^^^H^JH| ^^^^^^BH^^^H ^^H^^^H^^HH ^^^^^^l^^^^^l .^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^i ^^^^^^^^^^^I^^^^B \^^^^^^^^^^^1 i^^^^^^^^^^^H * \ - .'•''- f y ' > Wffe* HRf ^K Mm 'H ' /. w K Eg K B\ ^^K> ^^K H| j^^B <s> — ••. • -.,;..•—• • .v,-,,-- -—-*$ 2 P. M, STOCKS ,,.;> ; »„. Alaska Juneau ..„„.;.., 4-.--.--.*-. 14> 5-\£ Alleghany Corpn. .-. -. 1 \'1-2 Allied Chemical , .„...., 165 Allis Chalmers ..:..:.. 26 1-2 ,Ahvn. Qan ........ ....;.,..„ ...........139 3-4 Amu. Foreign Power ,....„,.„„...., 5 $-S Amn. Stiieliers ..„...,...,.,..,....,.. 47 ' Amn, Smelters „ , ,...,..,; 47 Amn. Tel. & Tel. ,...„,.„ L^l'S* - Amn. Tobacco \B\ .....„'...,. -.,3.00 3-S Aran. Water Typrks » Z.:„, 14 5-8 Anaponda ,..,~. .,.„ r .,....„ ,19 5-8 Atchison .,.'...^....,..v.„„...:. ; .:..,..„.,-,;>„,.. 45 Vi Atlahtic Refg. ...„.,. „....„;.,.....,„ sl -2Q 1-2 Auburn Motors- ...,....< .....^........:. 36. - Balto. Ohio R. R ;,...„,... i-3 1-8 Bafnsdail ....:.... :..........,1.„....:..„..„.,' 9 1-4 Bendfx ....'....., u ,U.;.,...w. 21 ' Beneficial Ind'L. Loan 18 5^8 Bethv.Steel ......^.....:....;..:.:.._;.i i .'. -36 : Bohfr- Alum. - : .;..„,-..„•.. ....x.;;./ 46 • 'Bordens .,:. ........ w J, „.„..„ %% %.% Canadian Pac. ...1. ,., 5 7-8 'Case Threshing ...„• „.....;. 78 34 Ches, . & Ohio _.... 44 Chi-ysler Motors .:..~...„.,....__..._ 70 5r8 Cerro De Pasco 55 1-4 Col. Gas .: .^..v ,... \jj 7^ Cbm.'I. Solvents ..:....., ...11 11 3-8 ConimbnWealth Sou. a .158 Con'tt. Can ...... -...._. ...;....,.. 85 1-S Cons. Ga? „„ „ _ 26 5-8 Corn Products ..,.„ „......,.\.. 61 1^4 Crucible Steel „...-.: _ 23 1-2 •Curtiss-Wright „, 2 7-8 Diamond Match 37 1-8 Dome Mines\ -_„. .;...... -...,„. 39 1-4 Dupont _ „..._.„ •_ 125 \ Go places . . . and go jauntily!\ is the gay\ message Marian Martin brings you in this latest pattern-design for Fall.- You'll find a chic frock like this just the thing, for shopping, for business, for mo- toring, or for making you a very decorative spectator, at. football games. Its youthful collar, big patch pockets and down-the-front buttons will make you feel smart, dashing. And you'll- be proud of your own little secret—how fast you turned your frock out, from the easy-to-use- pattern! What .fabric: to choose? Rabbit's hair wool with a velveteen collar (as pictured) will give you warmth as well as smartness. .So will wool Jersey or a novelty wool crepe. Sizes 12 to 40. To get pattern H9469, send 15e to Ogdehsburg. Journal* Pattern Department, Ogdensburg, N. Y. -\I\ *'- r '~'~\r -V.\--•'•• '<• .'-'_-''*-- BIG MOTORCADE PRE-COMMUNION SERVICE Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock in Presbyterian- Church chapel Pre-communion service ..will be held. The entire -.congregation is expected to be present. Reception of new members. - - HARVEST SUPPER Oct. 23rd, M. E. Church. PUBLIC BINGO 525 Greene St., tonight. ROYAL NEIGHBORS There will be a meeting of the Royal Neighbors at the Hall on Ford Street Thursday night. All who wish to attend the convention in Watertown are asked to be pres- ent. CHOIR REHEARSAL Rehearsal of the. Young People's Choir of First Presbyterian Church will.be held at the church Thurs- day-evening \at\ 7 O'clock. Choir Rehearsal. - '.\-A-'rehearSaf of. St. Mary's Cathe- dral - ChOir c will be held-' Thursday evening at 7:45 o'clock. Already two bands have been se- cured for the Boy Scout motor- cade which will be held in St. Lawrence County on Oct. 11 to in- augurate the financial' drive. Gouv- erneur will provide an American Legion Band and Canton has promised another musical organ- ization for all, or part, of the trip that the autocade, composed of county scout troops, floats, and bands will make. Wednesday George C. Aydelott, campaign manager, conferred with the Gouverneur steering commttee, which is composed of Earl E. Laidlaw, William B. Sim- ons, C/ R. Rodger, E. J. Robinson and Harry H. Hodgkin, They told him they would serve a lunch to the scout troops when they arrive in the Marble City at noon. To- night at. Gouverieur a scout mass meeting will be held in the Presby- terian Church and plans completed and committees named for the event. A reception committee com- posed of prominent men and Wom- en will meet the scouts at the vil- lage outskirts. At Canton, Mr. Aydelott confer- red with the scouting group com- posed of Rev. John Erickson, Mark Phalon, Charles D. Wight, William S. Meade, E.- E. O'Leary and Van C. Whittemore. The cam- paign was discussed and the Boy Sqout canvass workers commilSee was completed. The Canton canvassers, will be Mark Phalon, chairman, Harold Barnes, Homer Kelly, Nelson May- bee, George Robinson arid Waiter Russell; Clarence Runions, chair- man,, Charles D. Wight, Clifford Wilmarth, Wilmer Severance, Wal- ter Wilmshurt, and Leonard Chase: Gerald Fitzgerald, chair- man, Myron Barbour, Luther Cochran, Robert Hale, Roger Hath- away, and Paul Hosmer;, Emmett E. O'Leary, chairman, Leon Claus, Carl Sullivan, M. M. Pitt, John Fitzgerald, and William S. Meade; Henry Horn, chairman Walter Safford, Lyndon Merril, Clarence Armstrong, Horace Ayers, and Hervert R. Frair; John A- Erickson, chairman, Sidney S. Robbins. Lewis T. Cool, Floyd M. Callward,-Cand Roy Clogston. Canton, Oct. 3^-Raymond Dafoe of Canton was arraigned today with 23 other prisoners indicted by the grand jury in Supreme Court. IDafOe was\ indicted on a charge of entering his brother's store on Miner Street and taking merchan- dise and articles valued at $100. 'The sheriffs office reported that 3Dafoe has two brothers noW in prison serving life terms as fourth offenders. All pleaded guilty, although some said they intended to change their pleas When they appear iii County Court. • Those arraigned were: Norman Tarbell, Sam Catuffa and Floyd T. Benware, Fre'd North, Kennetft McDonald, Joseph Foley, Charles S. Cole, Clifford Edward Johnson, Robert Holmes, Richard Pierce, Clifford Latray and Crandall La- Plant, Herbert Kendrew, Leo Jock and Arthur Jock, John George Whittier, Roy Haywood, Peter Gil bo, Frederick Lesperance, Mar- tin Hussey. A well filled courtroom got a good laugh when John Muskidine of New York City told the court that the county jail was \not so' hot\ when asked how he liked to; stay there. It was no. reflection, on the treatment at jail , merely mean the didn't like to be confined.. Muskidine and his two bfotto ers, Buddy and James, Negroes, had \they guessed they could\ in answer to Justice Brewster's ques- tion-\Do you think you could stand it a little longer at the jail.\ They will await county court. § •( —4 traveled extensively in . the inter- ests of his factory. He lives at 410 Lincoln Avenue and his first wife passed away in 1931. Mrs. McGuhys has been Jiving with her sister, Miss Harriet L. Meria, in an. apartment over 211 Ford Street. DR. CBARBOMNEMTS RITES ON FRIDAY Funeral services for Dr. Leonr ard CharbonheaU will be held Fri- day morning at 9 o'clock from his residence here and at 9:-30 o'clock at N-tre Dame- Church. Interment will be at Notre Dame Cemetery. TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE -4> Can you answer seven .of *fchese; test- questions? Turn to classified page 4 for the answers. 1. What is the name' for the war- hatchet used by North Amerifean. Indians? 2. How many members has the: U. S. House of Representatives? 3. Where is the state \of Mysore?: 4. HOw many square,\ rods.\ are in an acre? - .... 5. In which state is the city of Coral Gables? . '. 6. Does any state of the X!.. S. prohibit divorce? 7. What is the present name Of the islands formerly \called 'Sand wich Islands? 8. What is the number of the re- peal amendment to the Constitut- ion of the United States? ' 9. What term is used in astron- omy foi the point in the heavens exactly opposite td the zenith? 10. In .What year were Nathan i Hale 'postage stamps first issued? Closing Prlc«* FURNISHED BY FOSTER & AD AMS Watertown, N. Y. Members New York Stock New York Curb Market TELEPHONE OGDENSBURG 5000 Eastman Kodak Elec. Auto Lite .-151 30 Elee, power & Late ....„.., ..,...„ 4 1-2 Gen'l, Elec. ,...,;, 31 7-8 Oeneral Foods ™.....l... 32 1-3 Gen'l. Motors .™......„!-^„..^...^;.,„„ 44 5-i Giilette ~ ..\..... ., is ^g_ Goldt-Dust „.._ „„J.„ Is 7-g Gt. Nor. Ore , ,„,„....., 12 Gt. Nor. Pfd: ' .„ ......„, 23 1-8 Hudson Motors „._........, 13 1-4 Inf 1. Haarvester ; .. 55 3-4 Int'l. Nickel .„, ,...„..w.....™...... 1 29 5-8 Inf L Telephone „ 8 3-4 Ifelvinator ., ,,„.„„„, 12 7.8 Kennecott ,. „, 24 1-g Kresge ...-. ., ; „ 25 1,2 Kroger :. ,_...;.. ; %i. %.%, Libby Owens ..:.... ;„.„. 3-8 1.4 Life-Savers .. „„ „..:.„ ; 22 7-8 Mo Kan & Tex 3 1-4 Mont'y Ward .„... 30 7-8 Nat'l Dairy Products 16 i-8 N. Y. Central ll .^...... 20 7-8 Nor American Co ; 18 7^S Pacltard , 4 7'-% Pehna R. R. J..;.!..........^,.......-..; 24 7-8- Phiilips Pete .„ .,...„.,.,„.....„.\ 27 3-8 PuhLS.vc N J,, ..-, ,,....„...„:....„;59-1-8 Kadiff :;;;...:i;r.::.:.l:.^.:.^.X:,-^r '-- Republic Steel \ ..,„. 15 '-?-& Reynolds \B\ ..;. ; ...„..„. v $4 Safeway Stores .._....... .....,„. 32 5-8 St. Joseph Lead •„> , 21- \Sears Roebuck .-...!.........•.;. .,...,._. -f.4 1^2 Shell Tfnion .... : .............,,.„„„„„;.„„.. r 8 1-i Simmons Co ... „ 13 j-g Soeohy Vacuum „., m .. „.„,... 10 7-8 Southern Pad ,...,„ ,.......,.„ tS 5-8 Southern Rail i „..._ _ 7 7-g Sperry Corp 12 •\' Stand. Brands ,„ :„..! „.„.....-,|2 7-8 Standard Gas ..-.-.....».........;......„..... - 2 5-4 Stand. Oil. of Ind. s :. .24 54 Stand. Oil N: J. ^....:. ..... 42 1-i. Studebaker 5 3-8 Texas Corp'n : is L-4 Tex. Gulf Sulphur „ „...,;.......' 31 5^8 United Aircraft ...„., ,...........,.„.,. 18 54 tTnited Cofcp'h ..:.i.„.,_l....... -4 :r j tTnited Drug .„; -., 9 is-2 U. S. Irid. Alcohol. 43 \ U. S. P-ipe ;.,„„..„, 17 .. IT. S. Rubber ,„.,. ; , li i':2 \ET. S. Steel „ ,...•..,..... 42 5-8 Vanadium .'„...„.... m „...,.,.,...„„..,„.„ 16 ^4 Warner Bros .....„....„...„.;..„ .,„ 6 54 Western Union ....... ,.„,......„. 46 1-2 Westinghousi& E. & M> ~...... 74 K8 Woolworth ... , ,.. 60 '\- : Yellow Truck ;, ,., ,•.,„„„ 4 7^8 GORB ISSUES J ' Cities- Service Cons. Aircraft .... 1 5 « .,. 14 1-8 .« 11:5-8; .... u • ,-- -, 7 5-8 Hudson Bay „.._„,...,„ ,...™.™i...ii. 18 Niagara Hudson- ....:,..........„-„..,;„».. 7 1-4 St. Regis Paper ..^^.„^ mM J 2.' United Founders : «riJUu^™ i H ,^.; 13-16 Maryland Fund I „„„,... „.:...„... IjS Elec Bond. & Share. ... Ford Canada A Ford Ltd .„, BULLETIN , Paris, GSci 3M-(APj*-. It WM announced today that Premier Laval of Frarice. *nd Anthony Eden of <lreat Britain have agreed on League of Nations action for the.iht- rnediaie rupture of finan- cial and economic rela- tions with Italy. \.:. (Member* New York Stock \ and Curb Exchanges 100 Trust Company Bltfg. Watertown. N. Y. 'Phorie Ogdensburg 5000 Jitnes M. Strong -and Georg* Cornelius, Mgra. Hetoert W Hall wm—mm k m