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6 New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY “Teetcher! Teetcher!” Teetcher: “Well, Oliver? 0. Heck: “Very well, thank you.” Teetcher: as applied to the present Q. If 5 cents is deposited in the bank one week and 5 cents added to the amount deposited each week for fifty weeks, what would be the sum at the end of the 50th week? 1 kingdom. ‘wilh religious ceremonies? | From the earliest times. The sacred dance, to the accompaniment of drums and other musical devices dates back thousands of years be- fore Christ. the has been the case in Texas; but the | offer to pay part of the money by It was in reality an attribute of lhc’ come Lincoln conception of propriety that | the family the transfer of of their over- political was “Ma.” head of “Jim," barred from b son swerved sharply away fror and not man, [ plus of colonies their animadver |any such possibility. yecoming governor |sions can scarcely consid Tasued Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg., 67 Church Street THE ILLINOIS PRIMARY SUBSCRIPTION RATES AND THE COST hief $5.00 & Year. $2.00 Three Months. c. & Month, Th this written evidence as in the invest tion of Frank L. Smith over the Senator Willlam B. Me- was that Samuel Insull, Chi- brought out veteran New Britain | Kinley Entered at the Post Office at Matter. as Second Class Mall the cago traction magnate, donated neat sum of $170,000 towards his| TELEPAONE CALLS Business Office .... | campaign. Editorial Room Lisgewld | | This was quite a magnanimous | contribution, to be sure. In the old | 928 The only profitable advertising medium tn the Gity." Circulation books nd press | days it was considered rather im | proper for a public utility magnate | |to %o too heavily into paying the | expenses of politicians, the reaction | the public being something wi e effect, “How do you expect to room always open to advertisers. Member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for re-publication of | Of all news credited to ft or not otherwise | credited In this paper and also local news published therein. get your money ba But no such questions seem to bs | . The money comes and the public Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. |asked nowaday The 4. B. C. ls a natlonal organization | which furnishes newspapers and adver- | tisers with a strictly honest analysls of circulation. Our circulation statistics are based upon this audit. This insures protection against fraud In newspaper dlstribution figures to both national and local advertisers. from somewhere, suspects it does not come out of the lean purses of hungry party work- ers. It 1s only when there is a first | class inquiry into a campaign that _ | we learn exactly where the money | comes from; and nowadays we ars | so busy thinking about the auto- | mobile, the cost of tires, how, many miles we can travel on a gallon of | Basoline, or how attractive the mer- maids look at the bathing beaches | sale daily in New The Herald fs on Newsstand, Times | York at Hotaling's Square; Schultz’s Newsstands, Entrance | Grand Central, 42nd Street. T e A JUDGE ALLING'S SPEED RULES Judge Alling is laying down the law as to what constifutes reckless driving, and is improving his tech- nic and the force of his rflmarka‘ that we don't care an Eskimo's ice doughnut who paid the money and what they expect to get in return. But that doesn't hold good for all almost dail of us. Some of us get quite angry, | The other day he was quoted as|in a way. We'd be willing to give | saying that whereas 35 miles an |$170,000 to any candidate if we had | hour may not be reckless driving |halt as much left as Mr. Insull can | circumstances are right | command at the two dozen paying | tellers’ windows where he is known | . capable and when the for it, at other times five miles an | hour could be construed as reckless. [ as a perfectly hon This might have been a little dif- | upright citizen. ticult for some of the gas-steppers to understand, so the judge has gone into greater particularity. “Twenty-five miles an hour is | fast enough for anyone to drive in |relief that the two young persons in the cit he declared; | Maine who eloped and were miss- statement everyone will readily ut- ‘ ing for some days have been found | ter an amen. And then he elucidated |and fed. The fear they committed | his former observation as mcunlng%suirldc during a spell of thwarted | “any epeed within the confines of | passion fortunately was ill-founded. safety” is the proper speed outside | They now are “happy and well” — |in jai. What causes people to act that way remains one of the mysteries of SMITTEN BY LOVE AT AGE OF 11 All of us can breathe a sigh of to which the city. But there always are exceptions; one of these was noted when the judge reached the question of pass- | the heart. Very few few go dippy {at 14; more go lovelorn at 16; still | {more go daft at 18, and the ma- out of their ing out of line “Passing a line of cars is a thing that causes accidents. You are driving recklessly when the man going in the op- jority go completely | minds at around 21 to 24, resulting | the | feeling. again, actually has been the gov- wife. 1] ernor through his Those who expected Texas’ wom an governor to show the world how efficient a woman could be in be gravely disap- | The governor position must pointed at the results. facts | the in name and ma rear stood dear “Jim,” whose name | are, woman has been | papers | the | has signed the but on the motions, in the wife had so thoroughly *“vindi- cated” at the polls. Now the state is evidently tired of two governors, or two half-governors, or one-third | and two-thirds of a governor. | The estimable and youthful Dan | Moody, attorney general, will be in te new governor due course; on Democratic is and nomination ticket in Texas, of course, equivalent to election. Texas has not been conspicuous- | Iy happy in its political life during | there has been much excitement, acrimony and hard To Dan Moody come a splendid opportunity. He ought to be better than his forerunners, the | earmark of improvement. At rate, he has conducted himself like a gentleman, both in manner speech, something which cannot be ! said of all politiclans in Texas. | late vears; will any | ana | D HISTORY D ACT touching OVERLOOK IN VOLSTE It a neat and minder of how the Volstead came into being which a writer for the New York Herald-Tribune un- | earthed on reaching Wyoming, a 1 etiquet which re- Act was | point of congression: many of us once may have known about but which probably has been | forgotten by the majority. John B. Kendrick, still a senator, gives himself credit for having the | Volstead act favorably reported out of committee. Kendrick is a Demo- | crat, too. ! “At the time the vote was taken,” the senator told the news- man, “I was attending a session of | the finance committee. Senator Sheppard called me and told me the committece vote on the Vol- stead act was a tie, which would have shelved the bill. T was a mem- ber of the agricultural committee, so I hurried to the committee room. At first they refused to per- mit me to vote, saying that the vote already had been taken. Final- ly they agreed to my arguments and T voted to report the bill. The Volstead act was thus reported favorably by a margin of one vote. posite direction has to slow |In marriage. up.” | Here is a couple at 14 who went To our knowledge this point has|autoing together — not on a pet- upon by any |ting trip, ostensibly, but bent upon | never been touched commentator upon speeding in this | finding a parson who would marry | state. It means, in other words, that | {hem — and when the love chariot | tolpase they went berry hunting in | a line of cars, or only one car, and and eluded the Maine | it results in a driver coming from |woodsmen for so long a time that | the other direction being forced 10 | fear was felt for their safe | slow up, the person causing this IS | only that, but it was the guilty of reckless driving. iatatiated "couple This is putting it simply forcefully. Such a rule ought to be part of the state’s motor regula- | moon trip. tions or a part of the law. The rule [ ¢ jg said by greatly simplifies determination as|iye further to who was at fault in case of a|jter collision due to an attempt to pase ' one or more cars. when an attempt is made bucked woods time the | braved the elements and the con- on a honey- | and ventions and decided the wiseacres that goes the the mating gets started. Down near the equator, for 14 would be the proper appr ||28° 8t vhich to act foolish and o, |mushy. But Maine has proved to north one instinct instance, THE SON OF “HONEST PASSES FROM SCENE And so Robert Todd Lincoln no the son of the most famous of Americans of the last | century has gone to his eternal re- | ward. | It cannot be said st governor to make ideals and love of humanity of the |4 greech at the twelfth annual con- father was as actualing force in the | furence of governors at Cheyenne, | the country that in love, as in its is | elections, it acts up early. more; ¥ GOVERNORS AND LAW ENFORCEMENT that the great fi in being the Gifford Pinchot of Pennsylvania, | “I disobeyed President Wilson, | | who didn’t think it was fair that | Congress should enact the dry law | while 6ur men were overseas, but | I thought it was the only way to get rid of the saloon.” . The correspondent neglected to ask the senator which confessed he | saloon he referred to, as he says he | dian't any during a careful survey. miss GOV. “AL” SMITH AND PRESIDENCY Herald, one the | of The Boston grand old party's | supporters, declares possibility of Governor Al Smith’s most consistent regarding the election to the presidency if nomi- nated: “We have an idea that, if nominated, he would carry the southern states and enough of the wet states of the north to prove a formidable candidate, and probably a victorious on “But in gelting the nomina- tion lies the rub. This may de- pend on the two-thirds rule. He might conceivably get a majority of the delegates, but the dry south, with the remains of the Bryan influence, would measure fully one-third of the convention.” life of the son; not that the latter |yyyo, made haste to draw upon one did not possess ideals and a love of | ;¢ pic stock % foth humanity, but simply that they did |y, . of \{he the overpowering and | Pennsylvania governor as law en- of which the cities of Pittsburgh topics. There as dear to the heart not become dominating factors in his life. s He was connected with no great { Puitadelphia and reforms, he did not lend his name | excettent exampics. to political movements, nor was hc‘ The speech was made in a state conspicuously identified in the pub- | lic mind with great public issu during his long lifetime. Whereas the elder Lincoln climb- ed the rungs of the political ladder in Illinois and through the definite- ness of his convictions and ability to state them the of national leaders, the scion of this noble family rather avoided the highway of public acclaim. in where law enforcement has already been a gubernatorial topic. Tt was Mrs, Nellie Taylor Ross, the woman governor of Wyoming, who just re- cently announced a strong policy of strict law enforcement for her state. Then she reduced the state law en- attracte attention |, : attracted : orcement agents from nine to five men. It may be beyond Governor Pinchot, however, to understand As secretary of war he Gar- fleld and Arthur formed the t minister to Great Britain during the women any more than men can understand women on gen- But always understand the men. Fortunately Governor Pinchot did in governors, cabinets he per- asks acceptably. As e e pa eral principles the women can President Harrison he was of skill qu Republican con- term of pE A refer to law enforcement ignity. At several | Wyoming, a notable dry state was bruited as a but Mr HIBRESIUS DA TS | liquor may be had over the bars and idate, Lincoln |5 yestions asked in Thermopolis. 15 not ambitious to follow in his and t to concede | Rocky Springs, Evanston, Green tther's footsteps e party Tavote. . Laramis itself — thus 194,000 Midwest, Cheyenne | river, lers seemed he Was |, 4 even not presidential timber | embracing most of the became the president nd lite Finally he Pull latter population of the state. of the han company, dur- of “MAY FERGUSON LOSES BATTLE “Ma’” colorful been ing the part his was identified trans- commercial portation. hi days he had scen cnough of politics and Or again, per- with Perhaps, in carlier | Governor Ferguson Texas — the woman chief much in more quiet executive who has he public eye — failed to win the Jemocratic in the Lone and preferred a uneventful existence t L primary Star state because most of the peo- evidently had d of seeing her husband again of a | up | elements which | haps he realized the son famous rarely —measures to the man father t hecome in the rere constitute greatness, and that the in power through his wife's name. At no time {n American political | bistory has there been two such astute politiclans in one family as most logical life he could lead was one devoid of the suspicion of at- tempting to utilize the immortai .fame of his father in public life. R A . AL T AR A, are | where | of | It therefore remains a remar able stalemate within a political | | { party when its admittedly strongest | | such of candidate Is faced with ex- difficulties | treme in quest the | Hennessey two wee I city | man | neighbors to w seriously. That to accept such an of they could offer would ihe would colon; the sound worth money ow But of us. it well way. Of course, by th everyone well understands, they want to keep the colonies and also get out of pay- ing the debts. The possibility is they | will s0 | but not for awhile. | do in the course of time, | Meanwhile we very much dislike being called “U Shylock.” | M. Poincare, in planning some:| indirect taxes for France, evidently | has heard of Connecticut, sion is to be E ks' vacation with The building comm! highly commended for givi pay before terminating his s employes are entitled per treatment. Governor Cheyenne governors’ meeting n much to swap ideas as to give a few { FactsandFancies " BY ROBERT QUILL! The d is that where still think it grace to go to jail | hint people region a dis- Alas! A fool camper pro- duced as quickl forest, then it happens | o as a and Don't crowd the in the morning. lazy and stupid old stomach early It may feel just as as you do, . The cotton gin was inven by Whitney. The gins invented taste more like wool. | — | the ns. now | Queer world! Grass pesters farmer and won't grow on 1 Hair flourishes unwanted on and leaves pates lare. chins It's fun to predict If you're wrong, nobody and if you're right, you can remind them. the weather, remembers / e Our idea of efficiency is the way | the Charleston reduces a stiff col- lar. A gentleman is a man who would live just as he now does if there wasn't a law ainst anything. Fdison thinks art should be auto- matie. Well, the scenario is making | rapid progress in that direction The high cost of trouble people so much got along without six a week, | living didn’t when they | movies England more Sam, but what | France thinks generous than Uncle do terms matter so long as no cash | changes hands? When 16 year olds think they are confiding in one another they are just bragging to one another. of the Killing now, as it when Poor west. done by k in the | chased | Most is aliens was | Lo was dad to some much old resort except smoke There isn't do at a more. for Mr silenc Coolidge about As we go to enters his 215th d that third term blame be press, ay of business. Adam today if ch him. How sorry he had no Don't would Another good test of will power is to write home from a mountain re- sort without oning bla men cets. presidential nomination. Frank Kent, the Baltimore national reputation, has been mak- journalist of sibilities of the solid south remain- ing true to the Democratic ticket e Smith nominated, and has to the conclusion it would re- only come Tennessee The con- line, with Carolina in oppose Smith nominated | main and North in doubt would in but south | vention, once other considerations besides prohibition and religion would keep them true to thelr conventional political faith The main tussle will come at the As starter toward convention. a more common sense than charac- terized the Madison Square Garden affair two years ago it can be safe- date York learned carly in New this held nagers lesson. They Republican hold the ly said at be arty will City The not ma have their no longer will listen to capitalists as to where to presidentiz! preliminaries CHURCHILL - BORAH DEBT DEBATE The by Winston Churchill and Senator Borah does the good of brushing away some accumulated misconcep- | tions here and there and may en- gender botter thinking on the debts So far J\n each country. there is | Borah has had the best of the | ment. Our European debtors may be greatly aroused over the debts honestly contracted, but until they ing a careful inquiry into the pos- | debate over debts undertaken | arcely any gainsaying the fact that | I religions and science quarrel, it is because we have neither religion enough nor science enough. | hat's the the man- Correct this sentence coming up,” said | pitcher better walk him (Protected by Syndic 25 Years Ago Today Willow t f Kolodney nd | purchased the Parker and they for th Publishers’ 1te) | | ling up lelson have and Dillon are having erection Messis | propertics | plans mod three houses thereon Messrs, Platt and sub-committee of | bad plans made for | aadition and Hourd. 1 the about $15 The preva on Curtis street | vestigation It found that Charles Hart, one of the patient: had bathed in the pool in the rear of the Bishop place, now owned by Maxwell S. Hart, and examina- I tion of this pool it affected. Dr. Clark was notified and with Sanitary Inepcctor Turn- bull made a visit to th hood. They found that flowed along the brook meadow owned by Russcll & west of the street. It was that this w by an over- flow pipe the trunk line sewer through the district, and resi- dents of the vicinity will insist on rigid investigation. 1t is reported that Rule plant will shortly contract system and put con- tractors on a salary basis. Many local factories have done this dur- ing recent years, of the we Hibba hospital, the to report ition will si nd will proposed wre ready to be wost cost fover o an in- fee o yhoid has It an showed was neighbor- sewage in the Erwin found s caused from a Stanley the the abolish the [ty's work. |that'll make you want to lick a doz- {en tome Shop Editor, care of the New | Uritain Herald, and your letter | . will be forwarded to New York. Bargains in Humor, Folks! Special sales in underwear Were featured this July, But why not sales in Fun-to-wear? We need ‘em, You and It Even Up Medfy “After are married, lear, I'm afraid are going fo 1 out that I am not ag rich as you we vou That's Sl ot beautiful all right. You're that I'm not real- as you think I am, —Sunny. THIS BUSINESS OF FARMING By Harold B. Lund That city writ Bay) Is positively right; he farmer's life IS jolly; The work he does 1S light! My life is independent As he so truly If he were in my slipper 1 laugh himself to deat saith— T look at calves as he does 3ut all That 1 see he is silk! in my calves veal, beef, and milk! 1 chase and feed the chicken: He does the same thing—yet When T wake up next morning I have s funny, for no vain regret! You het farm life is lovely, Or why should town folks go Back to the farm each summer? THAT'S what I'd like to know! And all the long, drear w I have to laugh, I vow To think how city slickers Looked when they milked a cow! Her View ndmother (pointing to the skirt): “Aren’t vou ashamed like that?" | rn Granddaughter: “Of | Those are the very Kind | t to be shown!” —Philip S. Gr: nort to show Her Mod se not Neilson. woman sewing on tiny rments now you cannot tell whetlier it's for a baby or whether ‘s making herself a bathing suit! If you see a ¥rom Our Children’s Garden Of Curses Lillite Marian was very bright in r school work whenever she chose to be. But on this particular da she found it easier to look on Bet- The teacher spied her and step- ped in between them Finally Marian t ime st as moving, so she said: reacl I wish you would move; it's too much bother to look around you.” ought it was Jtime she w g, —Luella Pfleege. SOME PLACE TO LIVE! By Arno Wolf “So, you're a church mouse,” said curiously. “I've often heard You're poor, aren’t e ra of cl you mic What do you eat, anyway Fat,” the church mouse answer- “why lots—I have lots to eat.” Then how do they get that say- ing—'As poor as a church mouse?" " “I don’'t know, but it's all wrong: T'm lucky, I am. Why the minister fedes me lots of things out of the collection plate—cellar buttons, and things like that. And chewing gum from underncath the pews—why I have lots to eat. And say, while you're here I've got something to show you. Come this way and I'll show you some sacramental wine ch ed., and bite your way out of a steel trap!" | | | Matthews lets the wash the three weeks’ z the wild waves accumulation wife's absence. of dishes dur Polite | Wirst Farmer: “How did you dike that new man you got from the city, Cy 2! Second “Too much ett hull forenoon pitch hay, be- Farmer: iround the fold him to kete | when 1 sit Stand up. Recl Heck: erybody laffs at me in this big | darn old town Becawse Ive freckles and my cloth- ing's tore; Away déwn south in Snickersville | my daddy is a cop— Im a begun ware I use to live be- fore!” —Gladys Darula. (Copyright, 1926. Reproduction Forbidden) QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1322 New York avenue, Washington, D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can extended research be undertaken. All other questions will receive a personal reply. Un- signed requests cannot be answered. All letters are confidential—Editor. Q. Are inhabited? A. A small settlement of Ecua- dorians formed a penal colony on Charles Island in the group but the total population does not exceed 400 Q the Galapagos Islands What is the origin of the name Minor? A. C. W. Bardsley, a leading au- thority on the origin and meaning of family names, gives it as another form of spelling the name “Miner,"” an occupational name, one who digs in the mines. Q. Why are so many commodi- ties in England put up in 7 pound package: A. According to the British sys- tem of weights and measures 14 pounds is called a stone, a unit of measure, and produce is often put up in 7 pound or half-stone pack- ages for convenience. Q. What are “cut worms”? A. A species of moth that hi- bernate in the ground and attack carly vegetation. Q. What is the weight of heaviest hog on record? A. According to the Division of Animal Industry, Department of agriculture, it was a Poland China weighing 1,140 pounds, raised by Fred Seizeres, Audobon, Iowa, and | exhibited at the First Nationa! Swine show in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1916, Q. Ts it correct to wear a tuxedo at a formel evening wedding? A. No. Dinner jackets are not formal evening wear. A full dress suit is proper for an evening wed- ding. Q. What is the weight of a standard ited States? A. Practically all railroads in the United States use a rail 33 feet long ranging in weight from 40 to 130 pounds yard. Q. How can shoes from squeaking? A. Set them in water deep| enough to cover about % to of the sole and soak thoroughly. Another process is to have your shoemaker drive a few pegs through the center of the sole. Q. Can Horses swim? e but they cannot swim | great distances. iod Q. What is the home address of Chief Justice Taft? - A. 2241 Wyoming avenue, Washington, D. C. Q. How did Italy get its name? | A. The supposed derivation of the word “Italia” is from the Greek, “Italos,” meaning a bull, on account of the abundance and excellence of Italy’s horned cattle. There is, however, no deflnite information on the derivation of the word, Italia, the and | the length 1ail in be stopped A cause he didn't know which fork to Mary F. IN KLASS AT KRAZY KOLLEGE (Conducted by Judy) | Teacher | oM pupil, jmuch lafely Watterson. a brilliant seintillated MacErrol. you're you haven't Tell us, in your spark- just what ‘scintillate’ but way, means to you." Olie MacErrol “I'm sadly riled child, habits wild; talk's a fright sight, never by my flapper- |Her and manners drive me |Her and her clothes she scintillate at night.” And Irving Wessman. KRAZY KINDERGAR' (Conducted by Judy, Jr.) tightly Then through admit the with a | the s let beir would of one inch? hydrogen atom has a di- ameter of centimeter 1-254,000,000 atoms if they could by side inch, hence roughly drogen atom layers (layers each 30 atoms thick) would ness of 1 What is meant by terminating a rattling noise like castanets when shaken. TRACK ALK ] MounTAIN A, $63.75. Q. A. Q. A Q. into the with little em g it AL A would inch. Q. Seas''- The North and tic Oceans, the North Pacific Oceans, the the Arctic Ocean and the Antarctic Ocean. Q name? A, the Tor how long have musical instruments been used in connection in ‘public affairs; a lucky Who was Cavour? An Italian patriot the first premier of the new Italian | Kingdom founded in April, 1861. How can tobacco pipes cleaned? Cut one-half end of an ordinary cork and bowl of the pipe. a knife the cork wide enough nozzle of a water pressur 00000001 inch. measure cut a in Thirty s have a South and Indian tail, which What is a coup d'etat? A fortunate stroke of policy | Or8an, ussigning credit to a person move. who was inch from the turn on the water gently until the flow through is sufficiently atrong, and it run until the pipe is clean. How many layers, each la thirty atoms take to form thickness, a thickness be placed side 1-8500000 0,000 t “The Seven Atlan- S Ocean, What gave the rattlesnake its The horny jointed appendage makes Genesis 4:20 gives traditional view as to the harp and | Hebrew | originator of | (or tribe) named Jubal. Q. How many motor ere in Poland? A. cars | tn be| _ MALT BUSINESS BOOMS | Washington, Jul; | tacturers of malt had an valued at $24,053,000 in 10 out fit it hole | announced today. to|over the $16,431,000 tap | 1928, production | Snakeskin in Evidence | "Snakeskin is very much |dence for handbags, belts and er [Dat bands. as well as for shoes. Observation On The Weather July w or such Washington, for Southern er | by showers Wednesday change in temperature; | coming easterly and increas hy- N England: hick- winds ng. { Increasing clondiness, followed | showers, beginning late tonight Wednesday; little change in perature; increasing eas Conditions: tral this morning over moving slowly eastward probably reach Connecticut late |night. The temperature | slowly in the western districts, outh Ohio fair weather showers, followed by By Have you ever had to write “‘She says she has just arrived, and that she has a_pleasant room and the place seems delightful.”” “That’s fine. Tell her she’s a thoughtful girl to :elg‘phone us so prompt- ¥. THE SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE COMPANY BELL SYSTEM One System Untyersal Sercice FIRST IMPRESSIONS COUNT MOST thelr letters are correspondents known a letter and not known how to begin? Have you had to make written application for a job and not known what to say? Can know the proper form Governor, the Mayor, this and much All for you write a letter of thanks, addressing a Congressma an Ambassador more ington Bureaw's latest bulletin, filling out the coupon below and mailing as directed: Education Editor, 1322 New one of condolence? Do vou , a Cabinet member, the or in our Wash- Send for it by n s contalned r Writer's Guide.” inforr The Let CLIP COUPON HIRE York Washington Bureau, Avenue, of the bulletin, New Britaln Herald. Washington, I, C, THE LETTE enclose herewith five cents in loose, uncan: coin for sam I NAMB ADDRESS 17 EXPREss LAKE funing M2 Brousing [RrE he Bell Syn THE WORLD AT ITS WORST - - - JHE WORLL icate, Ine. T am a reader of the Herald. the the are 13,549 motor care and trucks, 27 (A—Manu- put an |increase, the commerce department of 46.4 per cent in in evi- for —Forecast} In-] ing cloudiness tonight followed) Litt be-| Forecast for Fastern New York: by or] tem- erly windsJ A shower area c en 14 and willl to-| is rising Conditions favor for this vicinity] locall + - By GLUYAS WILLIAMY TRAILING THROUGR THE STATION AT THE END OF YOUR HOLIDANYS , JUST AS A LOT OF CARE-FREE SOULS ARE STARTING ON THEIRS GLUYAS 7z W(LLIAHMS) ol step ing little| evil hour It specc vestj state exper keep pace. situa hat m Nowhe; ampl| ‘onnec| rées a ooling athe £ wee, ssume arpet alk ouses The Ing, eve