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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1925, 10 p. m.~Muslc 11 p. m.—Fenway theater organ re- cital VOICES IN THE AIR WEDNESDAY, KDKA—East Pittsburgh—309, 15 p. m.~Dinner concert 15 p. m.—S8tockman reports of th primary livestock and produce markets Through The Static | Lots of dance music on the alr last night, In fact, almost too much, Never have we scen It to fail; when we de abundance dance music, the ether is sure (o be carry- ing a burden of specches and classl- but when our desires other way, dance musie ga- | pour out loud | WIP—Philadelphia—509, Officlal weather forecast, ‘ Diuner Market reports, story and rold call. i p. 5p.om 45 p. m Tp.m musie, Bedtime an of wholus WEAR—Cleveland—361, 7 to § p. m.—Dinner concert by o= eveland orchestri. run the Romane loro w 15 p. m.— $:30 p. m KDKA Li and soprano Ar - - ol our WZ—New York Clty—155, 7 p. m.—Din “Coal and Coke speaker, L Word a Day.” tmospherie conomics,” gh on Jewish His- nish p Byt conditions werc und, probably outside of Inter- was mostly of t al type, y leaky electric light wires um from fair ion ne, ierator some- L Th a hut the crashes came at and interfered not stations proved falrly Trish songs. hern Trio. Wy s G rehest in onr viel . Wi P m KYW in ( p. m WAANM—Newark—263. o Soclety orchestra n ar Heart Problems, inin nd and ind piano. Maclntosh—The New m present- which welcome m the period of almost total i ed shortly before ning. This pr up of musical se- ¢ Chateau Laurier con- and vocal solos by a woman si whose lid not cateh, although it This station was trans- WBZ—springficid—: ¢ p. m.—Hotel 1 . m.—Market r p. m.—Radio Nat orchestra, WOO—Philadelphia—309. F'rench s BT 1 program. armonic society. nd the program boiled in in » signals. grea 1 her forecast. m.—Musical program. WHDB at Kansa ed its way ght th en approximate Circus of The has also length. n tion broadc 64 meters, “The ' was the feature r having presentation at 1 church, Kansas er tempting vis- t and view the m WGR—Buffalo—319, . m.—Dig -“Some I we st red for ardian An 12 cireus 1. enter h athered fi rth” was true to life, and tongued oratory was of th d when citizens of this call- suits and luge ing of the ircus performance through without sta the effeet. A novel resting one. n.—Jules Kiein's Hot rchestra itors to WHN—Ncw York City=—360, Dinner rry Ric is En- h Eddie Elkins and nor. iman and WTAM—Cleveland—361. i to 7—p. m.—Dinner to 10 p. m.—Co danee music| program. RGN came CNRA—Ottawa— —Ha P of the Cong. $:20 p. m.—Songs. 130 p. m.—Dance p. m.—Irish tenor. 5 p. m—Jubilce &inge p. m.—Harmonica & 145 p. m.—Judll DeRose—Entertainer: WHAS—Louisville, Ky.—100, (Central Time. 7:30 to 9 p. m.—Concert Tropical Hawatian chapter of the “Dilly storics. Recitatio pertant ws bul central et We have another kick to register, and that against dance orchestras ! tha 1y the same chorus in exactly manner about six times in n. One department of ity rket reports. m.—Dinner concert. p. m.—Pia solo; goprano monologuc; ; address; dance | ani| CROWLEY BROS. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street Estimates cheerfully given on all johs, —TEL. 2913 m is Chat tra. 1u Laurier Hotel orc by the xtette. A 1J Late i Dificial ndard time at 9 o'clock. Alta.—180, Vocaitst 1 by follow ina, hgram. New Britain Sign Co. “Doing Better What May Do Well” 34 CHURCH ST. Tel. 894 KOA—Denyer—: WOC—Davenport, Ta.—198. :45 p. m.—Sport news and weath forecast T p. m. p. m.—O0 animan’s \ WNAC—Boston—280. p. m.—Children :30 p. m.—Dinner including folk songs; am by Oli r M KOA GBS—New York City—316, 1 Ge . |John J. Tarrant Puneral Director amd Embalmer 284 E. MAIN ST. « Tel. 221-12 Upholstery and Repairing Residence 153 Jubilee. Tel. 1451-2 —eee | MARYLAND OYSTERS Our Crackers Are Always Fresh CLAMS FOR CHOWDER SHRIMP CRAB MEAT SCALLOPS LOBSTERS " HONISS OYSTER CO. """ Temporarily Located at | 25 CENTRAL ROW, Hartford BY STANLEY Concert program. WEAF—New York City—192. w to 12 p. m gogue servi the Ame company Phitharmo - Artists Mi WNYC—New York City vis' Lido V t WFI—Philadel :30 p. m.— p. m.—"Sunny Ji What ashioned family 0 hard? THE OLD HOME TOWN has becom e YOU SAY- ) /Z/—’T\ You DONT |[ NO-NO-1 SAY) { SEE HOW \ ITS HIS ! HE KEEPS(| FAITH IN THAT | ELECTRIC BELT| —_— WHEN STATION AGENT DAD KEYES SAW THE BiG LOAD OF BAGGAGE AT THE DEPOT, HE HAD HIS ELECTRIC BELT RECHARGED STy AND MOVED ALL THE BAGGAGE SINGLE RANDED' === 01925 BY MEA SERVICE. WS 3-4—25 the selection is being played l\\'h‘o.‘ but after that there is @ monotony | which palls, to say the least. WNJ | at Newark presentod an orchestra of | | that type last night. This station is not the only offender by any means. MISSING LINK OR We dabbled into DX for a few minutes and for our trouble brought | in WOAT at San Antonlo, Texas, pre~ | senting a dance orchestra, which, | atrange to say, did not play “All . 1 e ano My oy 1iend| - DiSCOVEred in Bechuanaland Best' Girl"™ throughout the| listened to the siation, | L) | wondon, ¥ Leo Reis his orchestra{ Africanus, from WIZ eclipsed all other pro-| has named the original owner of the grams they have played in several | skull which he discovered at Taungs, time we an and SOMETHING SIMLAR “Austalopithecus Alricanus” Is) “Austalopithecus | Raymond Dart | d ulvely fn- versity of Sydney and served im the Australian medical corps during the war, He joined Prof. S$mith's etaff hero in 1919 and in 1920 visited the ' MANUFACTURERS WILL United States, where he worked in BE GWE“ PRoTEGTIo“ He was appointed professor of anat-{But First They Must Show Thut \;:I:r:);.ln Witwatersrand University In‘ They Are Suffering From Un- The dispatches describing his dis-| covery sald the skull was burled in llmestone at a depth of 60 feet, rep-| London, Feb. 4.—A governmental resented something midway between | white paper says industries in man and the great apes, and was|Great Britaln may henceforth se- much finer than previously discover-|cure protection if they prove to the od pre-historie skulls, Its owner, | satistaction of the board of trade | Prof. Dart sad, while not human,|that they are suffering unfalr and wag yet more intelligent than the|abnormal competition and also dem- gorilla or chipanzee, and must be|onstrate that they are managed effi- regarded vather as a man-like ape|ciently and economically. No appli- fair Competition: B able” and say they will satisty all but “the most hidebound free trad- ers.” The exception is the Morning Post, which clalms that many in- dustries will sufter “for consclence's sake," The liberal pross angrily de- nounces this “tarlff by the back door™ ‘and accuses the government of a breach of pledge by falling ‘to embody the proposals in l.rar\llur | parllamentary bill, TOKIO PRESERVES LANDMARK Toklo, ¥eb, 4.~The building and grounds of the famous Peers club have been sold to A syndicate which will erect modern reinforced con- crote office buildings on the site. Visitors to Tokio will recall that the ntertainment, CNRA at | wn aerial output of $00 | | sting all corners | tercsted while | weeks, with the broac ing. The sel ones and man deserves | trom the highw | orchestra leac orest among anthropologlsts and t that, N | anatomists here, Their attention is| edit ng|all the more closcly cngaged because | y along which all{of*Prof. Dart’s well established rep- | rg travel, that high-| utation [ way which binds them to play, well, | f Prof. Dart makes claim.to a| the numbers which every orchestra | ain discovery, 1 am prepared to| | plays each night. Relsman's orches- | regard It as reliable,” was the com- tra, playing the|ment of Sir Arthur ¢Keith, noted program last night | anthropologist, whtn shown Cape- atime to come, Among them | Town dispatches in which Prof. Dart were “Way Down Home,"” “You and | ascribed the greatest importance to | 1" “Peter Pan,” “Tell Her in the|his find, Sir Arthar, however, added | Springtime,” *Oh, How 1 Love | cautiously that it would probably be { My Darling A snappy collection | more correct to regard the skull as ind rendered in faultless tyle, al-| one of hundreds of “missing linke” | | though WBZ's transmission gave a|iather than “the missing lnk"—in | | tinny sound to the musle. | other words as an additional piece of reEre | evidence in the alrcady overwhelm- | Ing proof of man's evolution. | Grafton Elliot Smith, professer of | anatomy in the University of Lon- |[ | don and an authority on evolution, | 8 also paid tribute to the trustworthi- | ness of the discoverer. He recalled | § | that P’rof. Dart was with him when | famous Rhodesian skull nd and was formerly his assistant | B wre in anatomical research. Prof. Smith expressed belief that the skull | belongs to “a period twice as long | Defore the Piltdown and Java skulls as the latter were before oursclves.” | Prof. Dart was born in Queens- | land, studled medicine at the Uni- hy sad to sa | numbers on the | tor sor T d Apple club | Detroit, provided a few hours' | tertainment, We heard a few sele | tions by the Book-Cadillac hotel or- che rom WCX, Wennerberg Chorus to | Sing for Bible Class | h, an organ- ch-has made reputation throughont New Eng- | land, will sing sever selections at thie session of Every 8 Bible class Sunday morning. e chorus is so well known in New Britain that | dion ta hear it at s annois conceris, CINDERS FOR~ SALE A. H. HARRIS Rev, Dr. A. A. Ahlquist, pastor of ~—Generai Trucking— the First Lutheran church will speak at the class mecting. He will tak 1366 STANLEY ST. TEL. 3472-2 nis suhject “From Sidetrack to Main | Line.” |ALL CUNNINGHAM | RADIO TUBES Reduced From $4.00 ,, $3.00 This includes all Types—300, 301, 299. Why not treat your Radio to 2 complete new set? For sale by all good dealers. The Post & | ester (o DISTRIBUTERS OF EveryTHING IN RaDIO 14 MAIN ST 1 CUNNINGHAM § DETECTOR TUBE TYPF C 300 Four-Wheel Brakes ' That Heat and Cold Do Not Affect Buick mechanical 4-Wheel Brakes func- tion properly and safely. They are designed for winter driving as well as summer. Their operation is not altered by extremes of heat and cold. Buick is engineered to be immune to temperature changes. CAPITOL BUICK CO. 193 ARCH ST. TEL. 2607 " When better automobiles are built, Buick will build them Two-Family House on Hart street in a good location— This is a good location with a good sized lot which runs back almost to Walnut Hill Park.—If you have a house to sell, see us. ' Camp Real Estate Co. | 272 Main Street Phone 313 Hooms 305-6, Bank Blag. [/ than as an ape-like man. man who raises a car without the | jack, But he can't keep up a car without the jack. entrance to this club was through - one of the three remalning great gates of the Yedo period, sald to be one of the finest types extant of the architecture of that time. The gate is to be preserved. “ cations will be considered from in- | dustries dealing in food or drink. about @ Strong| This polley receives a mixed re- ception in the press. All the con- servative organs but one welcome | the proposals as “eminently reason- Here's a story For General Business Call 2-5151 'o Place Telephone Orders, Call 2-5101 New Britain patrons may now give their telephone orders on direct private wire without usual toll charge, Call 3500. DURING OUR GREAT FEBRUARY FURNITURE SALE We present opportunities for you to select from our tremendous stock of high grade, guaranteed furniture at very advantageous prices. [ ES At Prices That Will Interest You Every bedroom suite in our furniture stock—each sold under the Fox guarantee of quality—is included and at the reduced prices afford oppor- tunities for savings that are decidedly worth while. A seven-piece suite consisting of four poster bed, dresser, chifforette, dressing table, bench, chair and rocker. A five-piece suite con.~iéting of twin beds, bureau, chifforette and dressing table. An excellent value. A four-piece mahogany suite decorated in fioral design. Suite consists of bed, dresser, chifforette and dressing table: Suite Mahogany Colonial Suite Former]y;Sll:lO Genuine Walnut Suite Formerly $700 Mahogany Decorated Suite Formerly $525 Ivory Decorated Suite Formerly $565 A seven-piece ivory suite painted on mahogany, decorated with floral designs. consists of bed, dresser, chiffonier, dressing table, chair, rocker and bench. Spool Spindle Suite $ 550 ["nrn‘lerly $667 A seven-piece, black painted on mahogany suite decorated in floral design; Twin beds, dresser, semi-vanity, chiffonier, night table, chair and bench. . French Walnut Suite Formerly 5‘1‘%5 . A four-piece set consisting of dresser, bureau, dressing table and bed. well built. Exceptionally FURNITURE—EIGHTH, NINTH, AND ELEVENTH FLOORS