New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 8, 1928, Page 6

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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY 1sswed Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Hersld Bldg.. 67 Church Btreet GUBSCRIPTION RATES 9500 & Year. $3.00 Three Monutha T6c, & Month. Watered at the Post Ofce at New Brit ain @8 Second Clase Mall TELEPHOND Business Office Editortal Rooms CALLS 26 loae The only profitatle advertising medium @ the City. Circulation books &nd press room ! open to advertisers. Member of the Associated Press The Amociated Press s exclusively en- titled to the use for re-publication of all news credited to i1t or not otherwise credited 1a this paper and also local news published therein. Member Audit Buresa of Cirenlation The A. B C. te a pational organisation which furnishes nDewspapers and adver- tisers with & strictly honest analysie of circulation. Our circulation etatistics are "ased upon this audit. This insures pro- tection sgalnst traud in Dewspaper dle- tribution figures to both pational and losal advertisers. dally tn New The Herald fs on el ewsstand, York at Sguare; Grand Central. ——— s If this were China the city would he known as whritenfu. Now what made General Motors g0 up yesterday? To the best of our knowledge it must have been the general motoring habit. Since the hello girls turned into thank you girls the telephone com- pany thanks the public for every opportunity to get the wrong num- ber. The automobile nowadays has be- come just a car; long. The girls who forced their gentle- men car companions to walk home doubtless thought that a good way to teach mere mankind how it feels to be imposed upon in this prevailing and disagreeable method. IN RUMANIA 1s the rule of Bratiano in Rumania coming to its end? When Jon Bratlano died last November his brother, Vintila Bratiano immedlate- ly was appointed by the regency as | premier to succeed him. The suc- cessor i3 no better than hfs predeces- sor, In the eyes of the 200,000 peasants who marched miles to Albajulla to voice their displeasure at the government. These peasants, | though forming the most astounding army of protest in Europe, were not bent upon violence. Their idea was to impress the gov- ernment with their objections to the rule of Bratiano. Under the lead- “ership of Jullu Maniu they metely veoiced their feclings and then dispersed—all but a part of them which meved toward Bucharest. With this under way no one knows what may happen, as it is possible for “extremists” to find supporters for more active enterprises. The eolorful peasantry in Rumania has been at odds with the ruling classes for years, and it may only be a question of a short time before radical changes are forced in the government. The late Ferdinand was an ameliorating factor, and even today Queen Maric functions soniewhat in that capacity. But despite the regard manifested to the relgning house, the peasants give every evidence of heing tired of th Bratiano family Crown Prince Carol, who has been in England, offers complications, of course. The latest dispatch is that he has heen ordered and. Whether that doubtful, as he probably will find a King out of F wil much i even mor ven for his lived for ptab plans fn Parls, . mever: ars o nouncing the suscession of the thirone, or comes to id Americ y 15 to nis principal of internatio rd is destined to continue this role for some time fe that tinus longer. One possinility P ¢ of ter g the latter ed more favor upon a return of Prince Carol, and it is now pretty generally accept- ¢d that the Dratfano influence was flout wishes o v be forc uppermost in bringing about his re- nunciation of the throne in the first 1t Bratiano is forced from kis control of the government Carol place. 1¢ Premier it is quite likely that find the triump Prince may way paved for a return fo Rumania HOOVER IN INDIANA The great pre-convention show- down takes places in Indiana today, and being one of portant West, the doubtful states of the ) with a outcon vorite son thre will be Hoover cause. n in, Senator Watson t wd Tris il or machine, has heen working night 100 per vent arti political organization, and day trying to arouse the elector- ate to the necessi convention delegates for himself. He even the short ! word “auto,” Wwith two syllables tb worry the tongue, turns out to be too | the history of | important to the | ¢ of instructing the | has been stumping the state in an | endeavor to tell the people he is a | bonatide aspirant to the presidency, and that he does not want the dele- gates to turn them over to Dawes or Lowden—or anybody except Hoover. | What everyone knows, however, is 'that Watson 18 not considered as a | presidential candidate anywhere else {but in Indiana, and there only {among the cohorts of his machine. He has less chance of Dbeing | nominated for the presidency than | John D. Rockefeller, the only differ- ence being that Watson fools his compatriots and Rockefeller doesn't. | Records show that neither politi- party has ever nominated a strictly favorite son candidate—that 'is, one who entered the convention with no support outside the delega- I tlon of his own state. | A favorite son candidate, one with no support elsewhere, is about the cheapest and most Ineffectual politi- cal cog in the national political machinery. | cal “AS NEW YORK GOES"— “As New York goes so goes the | election.” That has been an axiom of politics for generations. It gained currency because since the Civil war only three candidates have been elected to the presidency without the aid of New York's electoral votes—Grant in 186§, Hayes in 1876 and Wilson in 1916. In each of these clections the win- ning eandidates were opposed by New Yorkers—Seymour, Tilden and; | Hughes. Quite a record, no doubt; but not as good & record as that made by Ohio. Since the Civil War the candidate for whom Ohlo voted won the elec- | tion in every case except once. That | one exception was in 1892, when Ohio was carried by Harrison while | Cleveland was clected to his second term, tion in 1916, when California is popularly regarded as turning the east had seemingly elected Hughes, Ohio had made the election of Wil- { son possible by going Democratic. It | Ohio at that time had gone for | Hughes there would have been no need of waiting until the early hours of the morning.to learn how Cali- | aitterence how California voted. “As Ohio goes.” TROLLEY BUSINESS A report on nationwide street rail | way operations shows a distinct fall 'mz oft compared with last year which perhaps s the why the street companies are busying selves im efiorts to | penscs, ‘Their main method, howe is to install as many ene-man cars as possible. Except In such cities like Hartford, where local 1aws or agree- | ments have been an obstacle, they have already gone nearly the limit in this respect. They scarcely can re | duce expenses any further. If the | once profitable business of operatin | street cars has become profitable only three months of the year its ultimate disintegration in the small- | r elties, where most of the losing lines are sald to be located, can be foretold with a fair certainty of cor- | rectness, It the street railways continue to | lose money the , can they be expected o serve public at a loss indefinitely. main car them reason reduce e ari the Higher fares are scarcely in prospect | | and are not desirable; their main ef- fect would be to further reduce perhaps to the vanishing point. As a matter of fact, fares al- rendy are too high between some points, vastly stimulating the use of private cars, The profitable to and it | travel, trolley industry remains equipment concerns, at they have any influence all in the industry they will endeavor to keep it on its feet as long us pos- sible, The cquipment concerns ticularly averse to having motor ars 4 cquipment, but do not seem to have : essful pre- 3 in conversion of rural trol- ug the lincs into bus lines. ALL ABOUT THE WAR IN CHINA only i the object of the fight- China similar to the object of t fall but the plan of campaign is somewhat similar. The object, of course, is for the Natlonalists to take Prking, there ending the domination of the north by Chang Tso-lin. t fall, when a series of defeats and bad weather ended the cam- ign temporarily, the object of Feng was to advance from the south- Tenchow on the west, capture Chihli-8hantung border, advance on | Tsinanfu, the capital of Bhantung, | by way of Tsining to the south; and the capture of the Suchowfu raflroad | junction to the south of the Shan- The Chinese good on tactics, and tung-Kiangsu border. nationalists ar |though the defeats of last year at Soochow, and Pengpu temporarily used Chiang Kai-hek to go into exile near Shanghai, the unification of the Nationalist Hankow and N ber paved the way for his returning governments of nking last Septem- 1o th reralissimo again harness this spr | The Japancse have been credited Even in the Wilson-Hughes elec- | scales in favor of Wilson after the | ! fornia voted. It would have made no | The axiom should be changed to‘ question naturally | the place of the clectric | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, with giving sustenance ‘0 the north- ern generals, enabling them to con- tinue their fronts against the Na- | regarded generally as a pawn of the Japanese, and without their aid he undoubtedly could not have sustain- ed himself. Similar aid is said to have been extended to Chang Tsung- chang, the Shantung war lord in |alllance with the Peking government, |and to Sun Chuan-fang, the former | war lord of Shanghai, who is also in | Chuan-fang last fall advanced to the | outskirts of Nanking, but later found it more convenient to backtrack to | Ktangsu, south of Shantung. : 1t is a peculiarity of Chinese war- | fare that whenever a brush with the | Japanese occurs nobody knows ex- actly how it started. To read the | declarations of both sides following | | the Tsinanfu fighting leaves one en- "tirely bereft of exact knowledge. It | seems evident, however, that the ! Chinere generals have among their armies many irresponsible characters who are hard to control. The ) | tlonallsts, for instance, are said to | have accepted the ald of the hood- lims who looted Canton last fall and | dispatches stated these were in the form, as they did at Canton, there i3 little to be surprised at. On the other hand, the Japanese are not overlooking any opportunity to be of | and | assistance to the Northerners, just now they happen to be following the role of the protectors of foreign- ers, including Americans. This is a most agrecable role, of course, and leads to the general hope that they will be able to maintain order at Tsinanfu. The Nationalists in their spring campaign present a strong front, and there are many who think they will be able to drive Chang Tso-lin from Peking this spring and summer. Feng Yu-hsiang, and one of the mainstays of Chlang | Kal-shek this year, operates with | two armies northwest and southwest several directions at the same time | Indicates the tactical weakness of Chang Tso-lin. The main reason why observers think the days of the Northerners in Peking are number- ed, however, is the alliance of Yen Hsl-shan, war lord of Shansi | province, with the Nationalists. This alliance Is less than a year old. | One need not wonder long how the generals and their armies are able to | maintain themselves. | country, | | with innumerable well- populated towns. The generals force | tribute from the towns, and the chambers of commerce, or what ap- proximates thesc merchants organi- zations in China, find it to their ad- vantage to make terms with the gen- | cral who happens to be close at hand. Chlang Kal-shek, whose head- quarters have been at or near | Shanghai since that important city became snared in the Nationalist cause, is at a particularly strategical point to obtain the sinews of war, he rich merchants of the city being aid to be steady contributors to the {war chest. | Chinese contributors to the |are also clsewhere. A journalist vis |ing the Straits Settlements, where | Chinese millionaires are abundant, |gave it as his opinion that much | money flowed from there for the | Chinese revolutionaries. And there re other places where Chinese mil- | lionaires do well and don't forget the | situation in China. war The Natfonalist scheme for a com- | mission of five to control the govern- ment, or the party, which originates from the time last year when Chiang Kai-shek temporarily with- ! drew from his command, seems to be | working efliciently. It has resulted in |a definite break with Moscow, is dominated by the combination of | Nanking and Hankow factions, and { has resulted in the Nationalist cause being conducted from a central 'board, & sort of general staff. The Nanking government, or what | formerly represented that faction, is in control. It will be remembered, perhaps, that last year after Scna- tor Hiram Bingham returned from his thorough-going trip through China, he recommended to President Coolldge that the United States recognize the Nanking government. The bad for Japan from China is that the Nationalists are beginning another Loycott of Chinese ®oods. This always The | Japanecse can outshoot the Chinese, |but they cannot get along without {selling them the products of their | plants. When will the civil strife in China, end? The casicst answer to that fs, When Peking §s taken. And even | that may not be the finish. news works. BREAKING HIGHWAY LAWS The communication sent to Police Chief Hart anent the advisability of educating automobile drivers about the law respecting the need for stop- ping when the fire siren on fire ap- paratus s heard no doubt will be carciully considered and to teach the But the police cfforts m; W 10 car owners. department incvit- ably will find ftself at something of a disadvantage. Nine ten there will ilong the routs apparatus times out of n be to a fire after the beyond the town section. The situation will have to right itself, gets dow for the most part, tionalists. Chang Tso-lin at Peking is | alllance with the Peking forces. Sun | | melee at Tsinanfu. If they acted in | Christian general,” | of Peking. Pressure on Peking from | China is a big few policemen | through the voluntary efforts of car owners themselves, who through the publicity attending the recent ex- perlence on West Main street ought to realize more fuily than ever that the fire apparatus have the right of way and that it is dangerous to race with the red trouble wagons. Facts and Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN Brief history of Mexican relations, | before and after: Sorrow; Morrow. | Blacklis®: A D. A. R. devise lhz\t‘ serves as a spot light, floods the Some of the Spring worse than usual, but seems a little lighter. are poetry A photograph of Marines in icaragua to keep an election pure shows two boys laughing. Probably | Chicago boys. vs a hicad- the way “Party split widens line. It's not surprising, they straddle. Among the things that prepare youngsters for the responsibilities of parenthood are white shoes. Happy thought! The surplus wa- ter of the Mississippi can be stored in the emoty pork barrels, Hand-shaking is barred in Italy, | and now there's no way to rocognize, and dodge the man who represents a worthy cause, Many of Canada’s permanent resi- | dents are from the U. 8, but they are easily distinguished from the transients. They're sober. | Americanism: Brilliant white | teeth in a smiling countenance en- ! closing a hot dog. Shut-down cotton mills are a de- ! pressing sight, but something of the kind might have been expected when the klan unmasked. News photographs should be fresh, though it's all right to use | that old one of Wales dismounting. “How you like to try parachute?” ed the Chicago gangster. “Me,” sald his pal, "I only need one-a shoot."” The carly bird gets they worm, | but what does the early worm get? Well, the one next door gets his own breakfast, Niagara's roar fsn't noticed by | those who hear it always, and Con- ‘xrrnsmvu accustomed to much ora- | tory shouldn’t be expected to hear the still small voice, | Instruction for laymen: *Log- rolling” is a professional term uscd by writers and means: “You call me la great man and Il call you a | great man.” TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1928, Financial notes we never read For it's fun-ancial notes we need, That stock exchange of merry jokes The Fun Shop runs, we're for it, Folks! Sounds Dorothy, Jr.: “Mamma, does Dad- dy eat cats?" Mother: “Why of course not, child. What makes you ask such a question?” Dorothy, Jr.: *“Well Daddy sald they raised a big kitty at the poker party last night and then they all |had a good feed!” Shoer Maduess By George S. Chappell Dear Lady, fairest of your kind, So tempting in your garments clinging, . and hope you not mind . . Some items that have winging. note B4 wiil got me To wit: your length, with + now and then . a glimpse of garter, Enough 1o test the mettle, quite, Of any anchorite or martyr , skirt's distracting Like wise me!, .. My reason says they must be pres- ent! vour hose . . Oh, dearle { And vet 1 marvel silk can be So like to Nature pleasant! + + .« and 50 | But, though your skirt, your waist, your hose, Are sheer and light as any feather, | A sable neck-plece you dispose About your throat, weather, against the Now is it logical or right To wear at once the sheer and furry? To tempt and baffle, thus, my sight, 'Till I am mad ’twixt hope and worry? T do not know . . . but I will say That mine is not a wall of sad- ness: By me, dear Lady, you're O. K. . . Be yours, the sheerness . mine, the madness! ! | Proper Profession! Uncle Ezra: “What {8 your son going to be when he finishes col- lege?” Uncle Walter: “A detective, I guess, He writes me as how he is getting to be an awful good track ——A. A. Greenberg. J. R. F's Examination Paper (Reported by F, T. MacLeod) 1. There are two kinds of Friars, Franciscan and Nasturiums. 2. Penal Code is what & docter gets paid for his services, 3. Caesar was a great prophet, 4. Stephenson got a prize for making an engine three times its own weight. 5. Socrates died of a dose of wedlock. { Democratic freedom from cam- paign fund scandals may be a result of righteousness, but a drunk sailor = [couldn't be prodigal if he had only two bita, ans failed to con- }!rol rubber because of a fresh sap |supply. As a rule, however, that's what enables politiclans to control. | Corrcet this scntence: “The reason T like fans” said the umpire, “is be they're so fair and reason- able. Copyright, 1928, Publishers Syndicate | 25 Vears Ago Today The High school lost its third out four games yesterday afternoon it lost to the Senecas by 25 to 6] Electric fleld. Starkey and !Lawrence were in the points for the Sene nd Mangan and Classen were the school battes | Residents of Columbia, Ma Parkmore and other streets unit fn their desire for the specdy cxtension of Columbia street througl tition soon be presented ! !to the council. The residents now have to detour to Monroe or Win. but the distance is hundred feet and by cut- down the hill an outlet could of when 1ting | irute at the action . T. A. U. in adopting the rules of the Amateur Athletic union {for its coming mect at Charter Oak ipnrk. The local society, the largest of any in the unfon, has several athietes who have competed for {money and will be excluded it the Irules remain in force. The carpenters’ strike entered a new phase today and it is believed that it will soon be over. The men are returning to work by virtue of |agreements of the individual build- %, who are making their contracts | with the workmen and not with the union. ly formed Svea Coopera- . has been given the con- to supply coal to the local ‘hools. | trolley car will take the Britain members of the Hartford lodge of Elks to the pre- tentions celebration in connection with the taking over of $100,000 worth of property. Among them will be Fred Beloin, James M. Cur- Farcell, George Flanagan, Muller and Philip J. Tor- ract public Tn Russia there is a “language 8- where about a million and a lialf German-speaking people form a community founded by Catherine tand” 6. Queen Mary had many peeple burnt. She ought to have known better, as she was a lady. 7. Direct taxation you must pay at once; indirect taxation you needn't. 8. The highest mountain in Switzerland is Blanc Mange, 9. Houscbreaking: (1) pulling down a house; (2) going into some- body's house as an uninvited guest. 10. Coroner's Inquest. When you have died unexpectedly you are cross-examined by a coroner. 11. Justifiable homicide is when a woman kills her husband. 12, Manslaughter is killing a man for no apparent reason, Hoever To Run Volatead Gots &hoes Too Tight — In Other Words! Lusy: “The dentist found a cavity in my wisdom tooth and extracted 1" Arthur: “T see. He pulled s wise erack!” . ; ~—Stephen Dennet (Copyright, 1928, Reproduction Forbidden) QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to amy question of fast or information by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washiogton Bureauw, 1333 New York avenus, Washingten, two cents {n stampe legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can ez. tended research be undertaken. All pere sona) reply. Unsigned requests can- D. C., eaclosl for reply. M other questious will peceive not be answercd. All letters are con- fdential.—Editor, Q. What Is the value of a Stone Mountain memorial halt-dollar dat- o4 19257 A, Fifty cents only. Q. Is the President's salary ex- empt from income tax? A, Yes. Q. What do the United States assay offices pay per ounce for pure gold, silver and platinum? A. They pay $20.67183 for pure gold. They do not buy silver unless it s contained in gold and buy no platinum. Q. Does the United States own and operate the Air Mail Service? A. The United States Atr Mail service s now operated by a num- Mrs. Lauer: “Oscar, what in the world arc you doing out in that wet grass? Lauer: “Just practicing my cor- respondence lesson in marcel wav- ng.” The Sliders To Bases! “I wus down watching a baseball me today,” said Dert Thomas, and seeing the players who slid along the diamond stealing bawes it occurred to me that the men who risk their all in doing this sort of thing are not paid enough money for their services."” “Do you mean that these base stealers ought to get a bonus?” ask- ed Paul Brandt. ut how would you fix the rate compensation 2" “I'd have a sliding scale!™ —P. L. Arm#by THE MIRTH OF A NATION | Filipinos Given Address In Tub To Soak on Liberty Puts Shirts the Great. | Coolidge Expects ber of aerosautical concerns who contract to perform the service. Q. How many motor vehicles are there in the United States? A. The registration s 23,253, 882, Q. How can leather be cleaned? A. Strong ammonia water may be used. Moisten a colth well and rub the soiled portions until elean. Q. Has the new Roxy theater a larger seating capacity than the Capitol Theater in New York? A. The Roxy seats 5,920 persons and the Capitol ¢,624. Q. What part did Gene Btratton play in the plcture *‘Freckles"? A. Bhe played the part of Anj 8he is fourteen years old. Q. When it is twelve o'clock noon at 8an Franclsco what time is it at Dublin, Ireland, A. Beven-thirty-five P. M. Q. Who was Thucydides? A. An flustrious Greek historian. Q. When was the most recent to- tal eclipse of the sun? It occurred June 29, 1927, Tt visible' as a 'partial eclipse in the Arctic reglons, in Europe and in the northern parts of Asia and Af- rica. The total phase was visible in the RBritish Islands, Scandinavia, Northeastern Siberia and the Aleu- tian Islands. The greatest duration of the total phase was less than one minute. Q. ‘When wis Isadora Duncan born? A, 1880, Q. Must one be a citizen of the United States to enlist in the Naval Reserves? A. Yes, Q. Where are the United States Navy training stations located? A. Hampton Roads, Va.; San Di- ego, Cal.; Great Lakes, Il.; and Newport, Rhode Island. Q. When @id John L. 8ullivan, the prise fighter, die? A. February 2, 1918, at don, Massachueetts. Q. Has anyone ever climbed to the top of Mount Everest? A. Neo. Q. How many Groeks are there in the United States? A. According to the last census (1920) there were 321,768, the Abing- Q. What United States battle- ships carry 18 inch guna? A, West Virginia, Maryland and Colorado. Q. How old should a boy or girl be to bave “Mr.” and “Miss" on their calling cards? A. Many boys use cards without “Mr.” even while in college. A &irl, after she is sixteen, always has “Miss” before her name. Q. What was the so-called “tea party” in American colonial history? A. There were several. The most famous was in Boston Harbor, De- ecember 16, 1778, when a cargo of tea was dumped overboard as a pro- test against the English tea tax. The buring of the “Peggy Stewart” oc- curred at Annapolls, Md. At Charleston, 8. C., the tea was inten- tionally stored in damp cellars where it soon spoiled. The inhabi- tants of New York and Philadelphia sent the tea ships back to London. Q. What is the difference be- tween a liar and a prevaricater? A. A liar is one who intentionally utters that which is false or untrue, A prevaricator is one who uses am- biguous or evasive language for the purpose of deceiving or diverting at- tention, COMMUNICATED REBUKES CLERGYMEN F. A. S, Comments an Their Stand on Sunday Movies, Editor New Britain Herald: I take the liberty of voicing my indignation against the nonsensical farce and opposition of some of our ministers against Sunday afternoon movies in this city. It is evident on the part of our ministers, that it is their personal egoism and not the interest of the citizens that prompts them in opposing Sunday movies, which question as a matter of fact concerns us common mortals and should be decided by us and not by the ministers whom, as far as I know, the citizens have not given the ministers permissions to speak in thelr behalf. We manage success. fully to solve the most intricate earthly problems of our daily life and am sure that we are well cap- able to gettle this Sunday movie | Question ourselves without the inter. vention of our divinely inspired cler- gy—or, do amusements fall under thelr religlous jurisdiction? I per- sonally will have more respect for |our ministers, if they atep down from their high pedesta become human, study our interests and con- fine thelr activities to discussion of the original decalogue and the Four Gospels, In which matters they arc experts. Would it be so terribly wicked to have Sunday movies? It it should be immorat, then moral- ity is enly a matter of plain geogra- | phy, for other surrounding cities in addition to movies have vaudeville concerts on Sunday afternoons, Are ministers and citizens in those cities less reilglous? Arae they guided by @ different code of morals? The citi- zena of our city should be given an opportunity to exercise their right of personal liberty and be able to at- tend a movie on Sunday afternoon, if they so desire. Our theater own- | ers and managera have always striv. ed to give us the best and well se- lected productions and have succeed- ed in their efforts; the owners in- vested comparatively large sums of entitled to fair returns on their ine vestmenta. They should be encoure aged and not discriminated againsts How much bave our opposing mine isters invested in their respecti churches, which also must be made “paying propoesitions They accuse the owners and maae« agers of local theaters of & desire for money. Well, is it a crime? Is this desire foreign to our ministera? Arc they woll contented with fn comeas their churches bring them?® This desire for more money a.d the things that money can buy is res aponsible for the world known pros« perity of this country. Our ministers lament, that permitting Sunday movies would be a violation of Sab« bath; that every man should rest the Seventh Day. It would be more appropriate to their calling to worry and find employment for those, who due to temporary depression in lo- cal industries were forced to REST for many months, The men actively engaged in presenting movies, the astage employes and operators as fae as I know, do not approve the mine isters stand in this matter and have not given them the right to spwak for them. The majority of our citie Zens demand Somday afternoon movies and should have them. Our energetic Mayor, . Mr. Paoneasa, whose record showa that publi¢ in. terest comes first should wuse hiw influence and cut this Gordan knot for the benefit of our citizena and not the aemall group of ministers whose motives are most egolstical. F. A 8 Observations On The Weather_ Washington, May S.—Forecast fog Southern New Englan Fair to« Wednesday increasin cloudiness, probably rain on the southeast coast and warmer in western Massachusetts. Increasing northeast and east winds becoming strong off the southeast coast and probably reaching gale force. Forecast for Eastern New York: Increasing cloudiness tonight and Wednesday. Probably showers in extreme north portion. Warmer tonight and in interior Wednesday, Fresh northeast and east winds. Conditions _favor for this vicinity fair weather with slowly rising tem« perature followed by increasing cloudiness. Temperatures yesterday: High 54 50, Low 4 48 42 42 “" Atlanta ....... Atlantic City ..... Boston .... Buffalo .. Chicago Cincinnati ... Denver . Detroit . Duluth . Hatteras Jacksonville Kansas City Los Angeles Miami .... Minneapolis Nantucket . New Haven New York . New Orleans Norfolk Northfleld, V Pittaburgh . Portland, Me. , St. Louis ... money in their enterprises and are || the Goudfsh owners who unwittingly (=-=- GOLDFISH EDITOR, cents tn loowe, postage and handling cost: NAME STREET AND NUMBER . euiieven CLIP CUUPON BERE Washingtcu Buresu, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. ‘Washington ARE YOUR GOLDFISH HAPPY? 1f the Boclety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals knew about all torture their pets, half the eountry would be in jail. Goldfish are easy to keep—If yuu know how. Our Wai ington Bureau has resdy an authoritative bulletln on the care, fesding and treatment of goldfish—the kind of aquarium to have, diseases and treatment—everything you want to know about your pet fish. Bend for it and save the lives of your fish! lght, water, food, Datly He rald, B I want & copy of the bulletin GOLDFISH, and enclore herewith five l uncancelled, U. S. postage amps, or coin te cover ETATE ...coou. I I | J WHEN No 9 HAP -Te LAY UP ON THE SIPING WITH A HeT BoX , ELMBR FUTTY SWUNQ ABOARP AND WALKEP 'RIGKT THROUGA THE OBSERVATION CAR

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