New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 4, 1928, Page 6

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New Britain Herald EBRALD PUBLISNING CLMPANT lowwed Dally (Suaday Eacopted) 4t MeraM Bidg.. 67 Church Streer mediur. Circulation books and pres ©ped to wdvertisers. Membes of the Aseuristed Press Uhie Aswniated Press 1o exciusively eu Utlea 10 tue use for re-publication 4l uvws credited to % o1 Dot otherwine 1edited 10 this paper sad elso locw news yublished thercin. Memiber Audit Baress of Cireulation 4 B L W s oatodal which turnishes tiwee with strictly housst elrculation Uur circuistion etetistics are ased upon this sudit. This Inmres pr. tection aga'nst fraud in tribution Ogures to both local advertisers The Heraid 1s o esle dally ng'e Net Grand Central. ¢3md Steet. Being a political manager is just one claim after another. | September started as if it mistook itself for October. The politicians will have to get over some of their best licks before the World Series starts, with its week of 50 of nothing but baseball chatter. The best home brew we know of is coffee that is nearly as good as what they serve downtown, Dr. Hubert Work, hard at work prognosticating, says Al Smith will get as many votes as Davis got in 1924. After that take Dr. Work as seriously as you can. American farmers live in a vast area, but that doesn’t prevent any awivel chair politician from telling the world just what they think. He | can do it, in fact, without moving from the chair. The New Britain young man who spends his vacation right in New Britain either is exceedingly eco- nomical or his best girl lives here. A HOT GOVERNORSHIP CONTEST Willlam E. Thoms of Waterbury is on the crest of a boom for the nomination as the Democratic candi- date for the governorship. His popularity remains unabated; strength with the average Demo- cratie votes is undisputed. He is what the boys call a good-fellow, a ready hand-shaker, a political aspirant who never wears a ready Waterbury has instructed its 27 delegates to the state convention to vote for Thoms. Letters have been sent throughout the state requesting support and the returns are said to] be vastly satisfying. What if the Democrats of New Haven in an vf-’ fort to boost their own native son have instructed 45 delegates to the state convention to vote for Charles the Democrats gain considerably it ‘“luanvd" Geheral G. Morris? That is only what they | were expected to do considering the || sations from these his | high hat. Al-, to see the delegates instructed for the Waterbury man. There is also some sentiment for Morrie in the city, largely on the score that he is willing to run regardless of Al Smith. This has weight with some voters, no doubt; but others feel that as this is an Al Smith campaign all unquestioned boosters of the re- nings along with him. And Thoms | has been one of the most stalwart | Al Smith men in the state. Word trom Democratic circles in | Plainville, Southington, Bristol and | nearby points where Al Smith senti- [ ment is strong has it that Thoms is |the favored man |ship nomination. Some of the dele- | state convention will go uninstructed but there is said to be little doubt New {tonight whether to support Thoms {at the convention. Morris. 1'or some reason they think he is casier to defeat than Thoms. | From all of which one gets the im- | pression that Thoms | stronger man politically, ~although |this is not saying anything at all against the unquestioned capacity of | Morris to be governor, “if and when clected.” THE RAINY HOLIDAY Nothing is more disgusting than a rainy holiday, which turns the antici- pation of pleasure into the doldrums |of gloom. Those who |afield during the perfect week-end | were faced with the necessity of | wending .their way homeward dur- ing the wet day: these were cheated ,of one good final day of joy but had | the satisfaction of having had much |delight on the day preceding. | The blow on the holiday was dealt most heavily to the sports. In- stead of its being one of the greatest days of the year for outdoor games of all sorts it turned into an ideal and that's went far day for parlor abeut all. games, ON GREENLAND'S ICY WASTES It was fortunate indeed that Bert Hassell and Parker Cramer, pilots of the airplane “Greater Rockford,” reached Greenland before being forced to descend while attempting to fly to Stockholm. Though failure came to the expedition the lives of |the two brave men were happily spared. Nowhere was there more joy at the of the two aviators after of suspense than in the family of Hassell in | Rockford, where Mrs. Hassell could gleefully tell the Yyoungsters that “daddy 1s coming back soon.” There should be an unwritten law among exploring aviators in the future that those with families re- [frain from oceanic flights, or trips {into the unknown. family responsibilitics him stick to the well-traveled | routes, not engage in stunts to | glorify aviation or for publicity pur- ) PO« location weeks must fly let | MAINE ALL SET The state election in Maine next | Monday is again supposed to be a | barometer of national sentiment. 1f is supposed to mean prosperity in "lhv national election to come; if they | doubtable Al should have their in- for the governor- ! i towns to the ! as to whom they will vote for. In| Britain Democrats will decide | If a man with' NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1928 8mith does not seem to injure the Democratic chances greatly; rather it has served to clear the atmosphere. There is now less Ku Klux mixed up in the elections up that way and more common sense. 1t is to be hoped that the Republican committee, in assigning Senator Watson of Indiana to orate in the state, does not think of national awakening this obnoxious issuc once in. PONSELLE'S EARLY CAREER A correspondent seems to have the been pestering publican while self-appointed |that amiable newspaper for hibiting “crude manners” in refer- ring to the time when Pon- song bird, rode around in a flivver and appeared in small movie houses. The Waterbury paper iere- ly alluded to these s while 1 chronicling Miss Ponselle's latest ad- from the correcting suffering task of ex- Rosa selle, fa I 9 QRS AN " | o The Republicans are favoring venture, when she ‘was struck with a golf ball. | What is there about this to arouse | the ire of any reasonable person? It must be the js common to say, when discussing | a prominent person, that he once was a bootblack, or a new®boy; and the he now is the more respect for his attainments the public possesses. ‘ It wasn't considered “crude man- | nera” for people and newspapers to :r«(or to the fact that Abraham ‘meulu once split logs, that he was born in a log cabin and spent his boyhoed amid mean surroundings. | It wasn't “crude manners” to refer to the boyhood pulling a canal boat. It isn't “crude | manner” right now to refer to the fact that Al Smith was born on the | East Side of New York. that he had a job in the Jefferson fish market, |that he had other humble begin- | nings. It is the glory of America that a person can begin humbly and attain gréatness. Had Rosa Ponsele been born to riches, had she started perambulat- /ing in a silver or gold go-cart, had !she had all the advantages in her career that money could buy, there would not be half the glory to it !that there now is. She lifted her- 6elf above her surroundings and has | become world famous. Perhaps it is Inot pertinent to mention flivvers and movie shows every time she is | worthy of public mention, but there are no “crude manners® concerned with it. EVENTS IN PHILADELPHIA Two events have taken place in | Philadelphia the past few days. One |of them has received 100 times as much publicity. as the other. And we " have no hesitancy in saying that the licity is the most important, The event that has obtained much | attention, of course, is the revelation I that the city honeycombed with speakeasies, gangs and crime; that | the police have been in cahoots with !the crooks; and that Mayor Mackey has taken radical steps to improve the dolorous situation. It will be eral is the,U. 8. Marines Smedley Butler to Philadelphia and that after much ballyhooing the general left the city years ago spirit that animates home towneruvlum’ by the usual majority in Maine | oty conditions pretty much as he to uphold the aspirations of a fel- low citizen in the political firma- ment. If Thoms can get the delegates of New Britain, Bridgeport, Hartford and sundry other cities, towns and places, maybe Morris won't be the candidate after all. That is the rea- soning, and the battle is on, one of the most interesting in the state do- ings. Early in 1924 Thoms refused to be a candidate unless Al Smith were nominated later in that year. Thoms, canny as a Scotchman, saw the wri ing on the wall and was so strong a 8mith booster that he could not find the heart to enter a campaign with- out his idol at the 1 of the ticket. In other words, he knew his political onions. Smith waen't nominated and Thoms voluntarily stepped out of the picture. He said at the time he wouldn't be an aspirant for the candidacy until Smith got the national nomination. Now that the New York governor is waving the Demo- all he nd ena with he; battle-scarred standard of th cratic party Thoms remenibe ever &aid on the bounced 1nto the politic a mnoise loud enough for all Morris \dherents to hear it. With Al at the top of the he w a - of the No politician ecan subject has ki tail s to be hin. ris, who twice ran for gov or luiirg the years when there was no Al Smith also would like to figure in the tail of the Kite body will blame Morris, Kite anywhere around. 1 No- The this year Cither gentleman is the son of a former total New been governor und has a ce of prestige Haven and Haven Republican papers boosting Morris imazingly that one suspects they fhink h rtain s in 1ron and Newtown ave s0 is an easier man to beat than Thoms, it being part of the game for political papers to lend their influenes toward helping the the weaker candidates Thoms ie a strong contender New Britain, where it is helieved the majority of Democratic voters prefer other party sct up in lit is supposed to mean the usual Republican landslide nationally. Residents of the Pine Tree state take pride in their barometer elec- 'tion; but how the political eentiment in Maine is going to indicate the | sentiment in New York, Connecticut |sen lor Kentucky, for instance, is hard to | explain, The best explanation is that ;n doesn't. The issues in Maine are thoroughly the Democratic candidate for gov- ernor, i6 a personal dry, but his chief campaign issue is the continuation of laws prohibiting the exportation of the power. Willlam Tudoe Gardiner, former football star at Harvard, the Republican candi- dute, is not dry, only being moist and he the restricted expor- tation of the state’s water power. s which state's water favor: The Insull power inter have invested in Maine power plants the that the eventually would be changed hing the Maine tussle with more t than others elsewhere, The on «peculation law are inte only barometer in Maine that inter- csts them is the power barometer. Gardiner is practically certain to be elected, of course, the only dif- ce of opinion among observers But 4 of power export in being the probable majority. even with a the governor's chair that would not mean a certainty that power would at depending upon the be a tep in be exported, th Legislature. 1t would {hat direction, however. The Moran cam and for national is a vigorous one 1o first time in years the Democratic committee ceems able to s money for the Maine election. The ia the cans trouble. only one giving the Lepubli- The national Demo. committee evidently believes Maine cratic that if gressmen one of the four con- can he turned into a Democrat the tment will be inve worth while, The Justice defection Mrs. sensation: all tangall from the Patian and on account of the nomination of Al | gummed up. Edward C. Moran, Jr., | second district | | of Pat- Democratic ranks | had found them. Mayor Mackey evi- |dently thinks he can improve upon | General Butler. | The other major event was the opening of the Broad strect subway, | trom the famed city hall northwards. |A new subway in Philadelphia is |not as frequent an occurrence as in | New York; and a new subway in any | other than in the metropolis does Inot get a tenth the publicity a similar event gets in New York. The Philadelphia subway, which took years to and was started only after even more years of discussion, is a four-track affair |and is distinguished in possessing | “many new features” of subway con- struction, one being that its tracks gauge as railroad future any of it to transport commuters into the downtown sec- . This is an ad- New new construct are of the ne tracks, so that in | the raitroads ean us tion without chan vance York. Most citizens in Philadelphia are happy subway, and over any subways in at the finish of the great new will be even happier when the spur from the city hall to South Philadelphia is completed. It is likely that discomfiture over their rotten police force cannot outweigh their joy over better rapid transit. The subway is far more with citl- while the portant because it will be zens for a long time, hullabaloo over the police will blow over in a few weeks. COMMUNICATED Saloon A Repuliive Sight The death of the two men r cent- our eity had vith the 18th wndment. Poizon 1 have been put in the heer in har room as y as it was in » home. It is not the only important issne ronext cleet v 1 ill not led mith i1y T was horn zenerations ek and than a lot of | can say Waterbury Re- | less he once was and the more | of President Gar- | fleld, who drove the beasts of burden | event that obtained the lesser pub- | remembered that sev- | im- | nothing to do and the | in the . a= was my family for that is more | I &mith” backers I have a son growirg up and 1 carpestly hope he may never seé & saloon ‘with 1ts yawning doors and drunken men staggering away from it. T wax raised in the country and at the age of fourteen, I visited the city for the first time. and have never forgotten the repulsive scene | caused by the saioon. | One of the greatest acts of the | late President Wilson was in abol- | ishing saloons and making the 15th amendment. Me tor Hoover, and more znd stricter enforcement of the Volstead |act, and the 18th amendment, us should every man who prides him- self as being a real American. Yours truly, ONE REAL AMERIGAN. Fc ots and Fancies Editor White to Al's ‘motionalism.” he adore Calvin, objects How The first killing frost is scheduled for a certain Tuesday in November. Whether a straw vote means much or nothing depends on wheth- cr your candidate wins or loses. The lady who yearns to be kissed as it is done on the screen shouldn't Llame her escort. He might do it if she rescmbled the lady on the sereen, A police captain says the finest | cars have the fewest wrecks, which merely upholds the theory that a radical is wild because he hasn't much to los Every traffic cop knows at leust | one driver who always glares at | him as though he had stopped a pa- rade. Of course the big men are collegs bred. Training helps a race horse— but it wouldn’t get the training if it didn't have the class to begin with. The objection to seeing America first is that newspaper men don't photograph you with your legs crossed when you get back. Happy thought! Maybe the young- sters, before going back to school, will be at home for a day or two to get their equipment. Americanism: Inventing machines to reduce effort; inventing nostrums to reduce flesh. And the nations will beat their ords into ploughshares when, like Tunney, they get all they want. As another means of reducing competition, they might arrange & merger of automobile and telephone | pote interests. There are two reasons why peo- ple live on and on in the same neighborhood: the home instinct, and the fact that doctors don't tell all they know. | Allens make the best waiters. No American can develop the knack of making another one feel important. When society becomes too hu- mane to kill in cold blood, perhaps its members will become too de- cent to kill, even in the heat of anger. Maybe all accidents are accidental, but very few of the old cars that |survive to be trade in are insured. You seldom sce the grand manner any more, but there is the man who taps the drug store show case with !a coin because he is in a hurry to buy a stamp. The cotton mills are going South, and it is only a matter of time until |the olive oil people will move to save freight on cotton sced. Correct this sentence: I sounded my horn to let him know 1 wished |to pass.” said the tourist, “and he | didn't speed up.” Copyright, 192 syn- Publishers’ Florence Bache, |Jules S. Bache, was robbed Saturday night asleep in her hotel room. Police today were searching for a ‘mm-l to question her. They believe {that chloroform fumes enabled a 'thief or thieves to rob the room. | Fifty-four hundred dollars in cash, two fur coats valued at $8.- 000 each and jewelry valued at a considerable amount were taken. New York banker, while | The camel was one of the first ani- mais to be domesticated. 'RABALM RELIEVED ' VARICOSE | SUFFERING Discards Elastic Stockings After Using Two Jars | | “My Varicose condition with ecsema. about mv_ ankies bas been o that my family pnysician, who, by the way surgeon, 1old me {he veins could not be | as it wouid be like removing the bark from a | tree," szy5 Mrs, Jos. P. Glynn, Miller Place, | Merrick, N. Y. “My legs were completely sur: | rounded by varicyae vems. After having used | the second jar (51.00 size) of Rabalm, the eczema hasdisappeared and the veins are great- | od <0 T am able to discard the elastic rich 1 have worn for the past 10 nks to the wonderful di of ™! 1f my pame would in any way help | those win sufier as I did, you have my personal consent to use it.” 1f you are suffering the torture which Varicose | Veins can give, start using Rabaim tonight, and speedily find relief as Mrs, Glynn and many others have you. Twosises: 50-cents, and $1.00 containing 3 times a¢ much. Rabals is for saie by all druggists. must | Taat Lot Dovn Post-Vacation ¥ocling! tember's stone is chrysolite, We wondeY if they've spelled it right? Vacations done and bills to pay, It should be cheersolite, we'll say! Possible Explanation? Henriett: 1 wonder what on rarm causes Freddy to be so effem- inate? Donald: *I don’t know, but I've heard that several of his ancestors were women!"” VERSES AND VICE VERSA We Might Escape! | On: wad some power the giftie | gie us | To some folks before they see u: —Philip Bricker Alonc On An Island “I'm monarch of all 1 survey, My right there is none to dis- pute!” T've a toothache today, And—darn it! —the pain is acute! I twist and I stamp and I squirm, All aching! above and beneath! What am. 1 on earth? A mere worm! A worm? no teeth! Happy worm? you've —Louis Morris Model Jane! Both beautiful and dumb My own true love to be; Beautiful, s0 I'll love her— And dumb so she’ll love me! —Brand Storm A Horrid Thought! Blake: eavens! I don’t believe that that announcer could possibly be worse!"” Reeves: “Oh don't say that. Bup- pose he should start singing some- thing he wrote himself!"” —P. C. Cherna When a doctor gets on the right side of his patient he wants to operate! OUl OUI PARIS! By W. E. Wentworth Since the steamship people have 1efused to pay me to write this ar- ticle, I will write it so that they will pay me not to write it. The atory is about Paris, that quaint city locat- ed in he Eastern Hemisphere and in an indirect line between the North and South Poles. Paris derives its name from & habit peculiar to the ladies of 2t city. They wear garters. And not around their necks! The citizens are famed through- out the world for their dyeing abil- ity. One of the basic colors was in- vented by Parisians: Paris Green. It is also a good city for plaster- ers, You have heard the old story about the fellow who was going to Paris? He sald he was going to plaster Paris, This city is also a tamous tourist stopover. The tourist acason reached its height in 1918. That was when the doughboys were making the world safe for bootleggers. 1927 brought a revival of the doughboy invasion of Paris. They were making the world safe for divorcees. Parisian Mammas are considered the knee plus ultra of the feminine world. They have more ways of get- ting their man than a French Man has arguments on the cancellation of the War Debt, The City's chief bid for fame is that it was here that Colonel Lind- bergh landed on his flight across the briny deep. They are going to have a swell acrial when they get the other tower built. I jesture heard about Eiffel. The Fun Shop's Suggestion an Appropriate Book Jacket. . Mostly Bullt Simmons (reading baseball “What's the ‘bull-pen?"" Simmons: “It's what the political cditors write with!"™ —Edgar Betz News ands Views By Dr. Rockwell The trouble in China is the result of an International argument over some tea, which has been brewing for several years. In the midd'e of this crisis, an epidemic of the Australian Crawl broke out among the silk worms and they left in a body for Catalina. This threw the country into an uproar. A committee was sent to the silk worms offering them shorter hours and longer stockings, but the silk worms refused to talk with the | do business through another party. His Own Stuff! Garage Man: “Doctor, I want you to look at my wife.” “Is that she, standing with old junk like that. Why don’t you turn her in and get & new one! Well, throw her in the back room and maybe next week sometimes I'll get a chance to look her ove —Herbert F. Kachry (Copyright, 1928, Reproduction Forbidden) QUENTION® ANSWERED You can get an answer 1o any question of fact or information oy writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau. 1322 New York avenue, Washington, D. C., enclo:ing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken. All other questionr will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are con- fidential.—Tditor. Q. How many miles did Col. Lindbergh fly on his New York to Paris flight? A. 3,610 miles. Q. What branches of the Gov- ernment service employ women as nurses? A. The War and Navy Depart- ments, the Public Health Service, the Indian Service, and the Vet- erans Bureau. Q. Where did mountain ranges such as the White Mountains and the Green Mountains get their names? A. The White Mountains are so called because their highest peaks rise above the timber line, and are frequently covered with snow. The Green Mountains were 8o called.be- cause they are for the most part forested and have a green appear- ance, Bimilan color names are _the Blue Ridge, due to their misty®ap- pearance, the Great Smokies, Mont Blanc, ete. Q. What is the difference be- tween an academy and a college? A. An academy is a school inter- mediate between a common school and a college or it may be an in- stitution where the higher branches of learning are taught or where ,u- pils are trained in some aspecial science or art as the United States Military Academy and the United States Naval Academy. A college is an incorporated institution fn ‘hich advanced courses of instruction are given. Q. Where is the largest Leper colony in the world? How is it run? A. Culion, 200 miles south of Manila, Philippine Islands, is the world's largest leper colony. “‘he inmatea are given all possible liber- ty and a degree of self-government. They have their own police force and elect their own mayor and city officials. They have special money, not circulated outside the island. There are at present over 5,600 in the colony. Q. What is the derivation znd meaning of the name Hatenhauser? A. The name is of German or- gin, from Hatt meaning “war,” trife,” and Hause °meaning “house.” It evidently originated as a nickname “house of strife,” though it may also mean a ‘“home of brave warriors.” Q. How does Pike's Peak in the state of Colorado rank in compar- izon with other high mountains of the world? A. Pike's Peak is twenty-third in the list of 36 named peaks which reach an altitude of over 14,000 feet. Q. When did Queen Victoria be- come Queen of England? A. 8he ascended the throne on delegates. They insisted on dealing direct with the principals, unlike tkeir cousins, the tape worms, who the death of her uncle William IV, June 20, 1837, 8he was proclaim Queen June 21, 1837 and was crowned at Westminster June 2i 1838, Q. Did the United States or Mexico produce the greatest amount of silver in 1926? A. Mexibo produced 98,291,166 fine ounces of silver in that year while the production in the United States was 62,672,953 fine ounces. Q. Why has the top of Mount Everest never been reached by man? A. The cold, the rugged ascent and the rarified air are the main difficulties the climbers have to contend with. Q. How can one wash a quilt at home? g A. Allow the quilt to soak in generous suds made of pure soap and a little ammonia and warm water. Sousing and squeezing in other fresh suis will remove the rest of the dirt. Quiie should not be rubbed. Two waters (v the same temperature as the suds should be used for rinsing. The quilt may be successfully !to dry, spreading it between two lines and shaking it often. It is best |to avoid ringing the quilt for it is likely to make the filling lumpy. When partly dry, beat lightly with a rattan carpet beater to 'uf up the filling. Cotton, woo: and down quilts may all be washed in this way. Those with &ilk or sateen cov- ers may be pressed with a warm iron, Q. Does Mrs. Hoover belong to any college sorority? A. She is a Kappa Gamma, Q. Can grease spots-be removed from stone steps? A. Try pouring strong soda wa- ter or boiling hot water over the spot, then laying on a thin batter of fuller's earth and boiling water, Let it remain overnight, and if the grease spots still persist, repeat the process. Fine sand with very hot water and soap is also sometimes effective. Q. What is the correct nunciation of “Neither"? A. “Neether” or ‘nyther” both correct, HEAD RUNTERS SAID T0 BE NOT BLOODTHIRSTY Practice Merely Part of Moral and Religlous Code, English Lecturer Says, Karpa Ppro- are Cambridge, Eng., Sept. 4 (UP)— 8chool boys and adventure seekers will be disappointed to learn that the savage head hunters of New Guinea are not really very blood- thirsty after all. That is the opinion of Prof. A, F. Heath, who is lecturing before the summer school here. “Head hunting,” he declared, “does not arise out of any peculiar blood lust; on the contrary it is part of a moral and religious code.” He explained that when the cus- tom of going to a neighboring vil- lage and bringing back a he: or two was prohibited there was a'ter- rific joutery. “How else can we judge the worth of a young man?" demanded the women, They felt, the professor tennis you want to know what it s prepared one of its interesting and low and mail as directed: ,—-——— - to cover pustaj NAME ' | | | ( STREET AND NUMBER FOR THoSE WHo ARE Fo WAS A NIFTY BY ELMER FUTTY , THE VILLAGE WISFCERACKER L The Toonerville Trolley That Meets All the Trains. By Fontaine Fox. THE FIRST ¢oMMENT oN THE SKIPPFRS PRICE AEDUETION CLIP COUPON EERE TENNIS EDITOR, Washington Bureau, New Bnitain Nerald, 1322 New York Avenus, Washingtom, D. C. T want a copy of the bulletinn LAWN TENNIS RULES, and encless herewith five cents in looss, uncancelled, U,-§. postage stampa oF eels, and handling coste: added, that they “were - Sutitin some mesns of judging preves When it was suggested that. task of capturing &' wild Wag armed would serve equally- a test of manhood, the tribe ed the plan at once, he said. . ° “Nevertheless,” he " is extremely difficult m head hunting in some parts of t! Britisk Emplire.’ e T Observations On The Weather ‘Washington: Sept. ¢.—Forecast q Southern New England: Fair {, night and Wedneaday; cooler g night; moderate west and west winds. i Forecast for Eastern New Yoi' Fair tonight and Wednesday: cook tonight; moderate west and nort west winds. % Conditions: A® area of hig| Lung dripping outside in the shadey Pressure centers this morning ovd Kentucky and is producing pleasar weather with moderate temperaturd in nearly all districts east of th Rocky Mountains. Rain has od curred during the past 24 hou from Illinois northeastward Maine and along the Atlantio from Virginia southward to ¥ The greatest amount of ' rain. ported was 1.20 inches at Mass, The temperature is normal for the season of the along the Canadian bord below normal in the southera tions. . Conditions favor.for this fair weather with cool nights warm, sunny days. Temperatures yesterday! High Atlanta ... cnscsm— 80 Atlantic City smmasessm 76 Boston n..scrmmeuenms 13 Buffalo v, . o= Chicago « v e —— " Cincinnat! aeese—— 73 Denver wormm sousmammn Detroit resssmssm—— Duluth «oramem—— ¢ Hatteras v, unmmesmmm 30 Kansas City svmmmweses 73 Los Angeles v.mmommmny 8¢ Miami +amaverss 38 Minneapolis evammmsw 66 Nantucket wmmas—res 76 News Haven vwarmseas 70 New Orleans umwan-wee 8¢ New York - .vepnummms 76 Norfolk, Va. .vevewmmm 78 Northfield, Vt. symme 8 Pittsburgh Portland Me. w Washington woevevrnem 8¢ TENNIS RULES You may not be & Bill Tilden or & Rene Lacoste, but when you play 1l about. Our Washington Buresu hes informative bulletins, containing the complete and up-to-date rules of lawn tennis, Included.in the bulletin aise are suggestions on building & proper tennis court. Fill out the coupen be- 1 STATE I am a reader of the NEW BRITAIN HERALD, —— - - .- - - w3 & REEP o RIPE ©N THE Roop

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