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Tpm k Wilbur's “Personall- tes," 8 p. m.—Atline Felker, soprano 20 p. m.—~Al Goodhart's orchestra p.m TUFESDAY. | 8:3 (All Programs on Eastern Daylght| s s o' A1 Goodhart's ore Saving Time, 9 p. m.—Ired Ruzicka DANCE MUSIO TONIGHT. 9:30 p. New Zealand.* Noeman 9:30 WHN—Pallsades \ Pearce, 10,00 WJY==Irwin Abrahams’ 10 p, m.~—Hour of musi 10:00 WTIC—Dance music 1 p Ernie 10:30 WGBS—Calif. Ramblers. ) WIP—Dance music 30 WCAU—RBilly Hayes' 2 WEAF—Y 1t Lopez WJZ—Meyer Davis. ) WMUA-—E Golden's I. Night Hawk Ala Arline Velker, soprano lestra violinist m Golden's orchestra New York—361 g 5, BOPrano. Oakland's Chateau Shan WHN n.—\ | 7 pfm. =0l 7:15 p. m.— 7:50 p. m 30 p Colonial Ve WIHN AR Clft Murray Bob songs. p. m Miller, Mabel Wayne, songs. ‘Fadrian 8 Ihomas & WEAF—Ncw York—102 m.—Dinner e Haas, soprano. ylumbia tenor. m.—Charles Toblas, songs m.—Palisade Hock and Jerome, sing m.—Alab £:30 p 9p m a:15 p 0:30 p ' pom 30 p. n.=—( nch Se m.—Ad RDG IBAYISE s orchestra u Ca planist no. 11 Haas, 80 11 uma orchestra , planist WEBH—=New York— Ra io rambles, Radio talk, Bill Sch WAHG—Richmond Hill—316 :16 p. m, 1re 6 in the Man Moor WIZ—New Mastiff 1l York—ind I'rank Do Tren m.—"Sports,” Bill Wathey WAAM—Newark—263 Major Tate Dusenberry's orchestra Trio. Thomas Hewson Marra and Ella, vio ilt orchest s vl review namalker pr Sports, k's Own tenor in and iques, clarinet vis' orchestra "homas Hewsot ~Transcontinental four. Jinimy Shearer, songs W FI—Philadelphia—395 m.—Roof garden program lam Carroll, pianist. Metes and Bounds —The Twins eready hour 10 p. m.—Opera, “1i Trovatore tenor. WY —New York—105 series, WGBS—New York p. m.—String quartet m.—Philip Horn, planist hris Mee m.—Pan m.—Dance ins WIP—Philadelphia—~508 ~Captain Archibald. p. m.—Dinner music Barrls 6:35 p. m.—"Uncle Sam's Best Crop" . m.—Roll call; church choir. WOO—Philadelphia—508 m.—Diny P N r music folinist n 5 p. m.—Comfort's Philharmonic hestra. p. m.—Story. s0n 10 p. m.—Marguerite Stern, 39 p. Marguerite Harri- Song (of the Burt” elli's band. 80~ o's Movie m.—California Ramblers. |10:30 p. m.—Dance music. WRNY—New York—258 | m.—CQOrlando’s Concert orch. m.—Jeova Blix, contralto m.—H. Winfield Secor. m Jeova Blix, contralte. ina l.anza Raue The Trapeboldians WCAU~—Philadelphia—2 Why Women Hate washing.” 2:10 p. m.—Recital, 10:30 p. m.—Bill H Dish- sopranc s’ orchestra WPG—Atlantic City 6:45 p. m.—Organ recit p. m.—Dinner inal baseball scores p. m.—Chanters and soloists p. m.—Chalfonte-Haddon Trio. a WEBJ—New York—273 m.—-M. Peterson’s orchestra 7:45 p. m.—Edith Law, soprano. | m.—Rallroad talk, Garrow Geer. 3:10 p. m.—Arthur Feldman, hu- —300 lance music 3 S p 8:05 - 9 10 p. m.—Band, Glee club a p. m.—Bert Roborn's Trio osamund Leweck, go- WGY—Schenectady—350 m.—Dinner music 5 p. m.—Bee talk 7:40 p. m.—WGY orchestra §:10 p. m.—Wa from WJZ— 9:10 p. m.—Edward A. Rice st rude Cratg, reader. 110 p. m—"Over t en feas! 11 p. m.—Meyer Davia' orcl FProb- . m h spots p. m.—Merritt Hughes' Ramblers. 5 m.—Baschall results; police . maker progr am 5 p. m.—"Manhattan," Mayor Hy_ | m.—Herman Neuman. Ge plan- st p. m.—"Ne 15 p. m— eme.” e of the day.” Knotty Basebal WRW-—Tarrytown t n.—Musica 2 m.—Edgemere Radlo Night program Bible s WMCA—New York—341 516 p Krueger's orct dance music ainme ——t » ALGONQUIN PARK /4 Nild Life-al dose:range and Fshingiwithout parallel (o) J the very ridge of Ontario's"Highlands.” Algonquin Park isin mar sections2,000 feetabove sea-level—that means kealth-giving, bracing2it Although but # night's train journey from Tore {ovely fakes and fir-clad islands is still an unspeiled the deer and bear, to be 'shot" enly with the camers fleis unknown in this vast forest and game preserve of 2.72 i nadian National train will take you right to Highland Inn—a mod resort accommodating 10 guests. Nearby are delightful log built cottage camps fer thess wholike a combination of sutdocr lifeand indo -t comfort. Ask for tourist lates, resort rates and booklets. ) W. 1. Gilkerson Pass. Dept., 333 Washing ton Street, Boston, Mass 201 Province Bldg ~~= Agt THE - LARGEST Just Like a Magic Carpet This rug which a local housewife advertised for sale in the Classified Ads of The Herald accomplished wonders! It convinced the advertiser that those Classified Ads DO produce results— And this so pleased that advertiser that suaded several of her neighbors to try them, too. o per- To buy, sell, rent or exchange—just .call ask for an Ad-Taker. 925 and Herald Classified Ads Bring Results. |8 P Broad- | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HE WHAM-Rochester—278 m,—~Theater organ, T:16 p. m.~Dinner concert 5 p I'heater orchestra; m seores WGH—~DBufalo—310 m.—Program same as W¥ WIIC—Hartford—g49 | Hascball scores. Organ recital m 1. K. Slack, Dance music. 70§ 5 p.m $:40 p 10 p m tenor; talk. | m W EEI—Boston—176 80 p m 80 p.m 45 p.om {$-11 p. m ~Lost and found me as WEAE WNAC din wton orchestra WBZ—springfield—3 Lenox enscmble. m.—Play Edward Morgan, son nswick orchestra ket Teport Market Baseball ¢ suriey sults; timn WRC—Washington—469 n.—Haseball 6cores n—Wanamaker's anniver sary concert, 10 p. m.— 10:30 p. m Washington,” p. m.—Meyer Davis' orchestra (midnight)—Organ ital KDKA—Pittsburgh—300 3:30 to $ p. m 2:45 . 11:30 p ver th ~"'Political Seven Seas Situation —Raseball score m.—Concert m.—Grand theater conc:r | E— WCAE—Pittsburgh—162 6:30 p. m.—Dinner concert ' p. m—Unele Kayber 8 p. m.—Program from WEAI $:30 p. m.—T wins, 9 p. m.--Eveready Hour 10 p. m.—Grand opera WEAR—Cleveland—389 M al progran £ all String Trio, TD—Moosehead—302 | m.—Relmont Hotel Tric. H m.—Mooschead concert 1 1:30 p. m io numbers; Char ey Straight's orch; Severa organ 7:45 p. 8115 p. | WGN—Chicago—370 | 7:30 p. m.—Dinner music. ; tudio program Drake dance frolic WMBF—Miami Beach—330 m.—We m.—Fleet WSAI—Cincinnati—326 Sinton Instrumental Trie 18 WEAF. I studio program 10 p. m.—WSA | — e | Through The Static Static did not make itself felt to any great extent until after 10 o'clock last night. After that time | it gradually increased, hecoming ex- avy at midnight. New | me in with good vol- distortion, ered gome. interested in s of races from and las! announcer was seated cht which kept pac each action wa audience, T} asting e events is de interesting. At times istles could be river and it was a w a pictr r. He 1old of the s along noon 4 of the boat w 1 from the iraw up many thou stered on the and on tops o 4 of the observation elled back and fort ants from t finish mark. H rything that happe hemselves, teiling men were rowing, wh ding as the t pace they w Yo th not respo; station came in | volume yesterday a poseible 10 bri 7 and WRC event in company announcer fnserted ing anecdotes be. nd succeedsd ter- | in w eresting program 1ng in the which has Springfield eve made up among Mysti Cadets. and stirr < the mi taxed with re program Conlidge was Waehin gton, and he WLAF night, Rureau of m ( n was clea mont vaic es. Th mption ianks APPINESS depends on how you feel! If you do not feel good, full of pep and the joy of living —nine times out of ten it's your liver. CHAMBERLAIN'S TABLETS Act without making you sick. Take two tonight. Feel good in the morn- ing. Get a package, only 25 cents, ; Sold everywhere PLEDGES REQUEST A A D AN s WL - \ FOR TAX SLASHES Coolidge, in Speech, Says He Wil Ask 1t in December n RALD, TUESDAY | have been reduced | the lightened, we tax end to the congress budget message. peopla has been But the reduction lLay not ye reached the point where tuxes ha ceased to be a burden. hus been prepared for further redugtion. This 1 will recom In tho next “Economy in the cost of govern- | ment is inseparable from reduction Washington, June promise that he will recommend turthee reduction of taxes to con- | s at the December session was | de tenight by President Coolidge an wddress at the semi-annual budget meeting | He predicted a surplus of $200,- | 000,000 at the end of (he fiscal year June 30 and estimated that the sur- plus for the coming fiscal yevar would approximate $280,000,000, | Expenses Stay High. Admitting there was little pros- pect, ftor several years at least, of cutting government expenditures be- low three billiow dollars annually Mr, Coolidge salu tne outlay tor th current fiscal year would total 085,000,000, exclusive of money ap- plied to reduction of the public debt ind operation of the postal service. | 1t is his desire, he added, to hold expenditures for the including the amount applied to debt cduction but excluding the postal ifee within 5,000,000 or | 000,000, he said, less than est mated comparable expenditures for this year. Mr. Coolidge also declared he would attempt to hold estimates for | the figcal year beginning July 1, 1926, to $3,080,000,000, exclusive of the postal service. No estimates | were given of the amount needed for | redncing the debt and operating the | postal service. Successful Efiorts, to ‘Back of the tireless, persistent | and drastic campaign for construc- |3 tive economy in federal Pr—A it g been the rellef of the people of this|in nation for a great burden of taxa-|h tion in ter without the former. sources made that this continuing drive for |tlon in the legitimate cost of gov- | economy [ hurting business how {to business [ [ been followed by a revival of busi- |sources and numbers will leave the ness. fothers that will st [1s tax reduction takes less, private | more. federal expenditures can be assured |ing more diffienlt, but the mora dif- {o enter- | fieult the task the greater iy the re- | tion | Coolldge asserted that | penditures coming year, | %7 |$2 had debt which then 977,000,000, he sald, totalled $1,000,000,000 {against $870,000,000 this year. dent strengthened the eredit of our trea ury, selling our secirities goes We can not have the lat- From some has been taxes. the statements in federal expenditure is “ have been unable to determine reduction Iach tax redoction has If there is one thing above all If constructive economy in will be a stimulation prise and investment.” The Budget Systen Reviewing the four years' oper of the budget annual which in 1921 fotaled 116,000,000, had been reduced hy 081, while $3,426,000,000 been lopped from the aggregated Tnterest pald in ex- $2 “Our sound debt policy.” the presi continued, “have progressiy 1921 are As the price of interest Bonds which in Ning much below par were ell ahove, up. the rate which we must pay on new flo- fons declines “This month the treasury offered a per cent one-year certificate on , JUNE 283, 1925. Interest must be The burden of h-muu theye ure léss bonds out-tua-lhlnau. 1t lles with the people, . It materially [ing upon which will come when they realize the | puid. Over thirty milllon of this de- | necessity of state assumption of atate It is to the |jower rates are the reaching of this point that our ef- | proved ercdit, secured by the order- | forts must be directed. system, Mr. | tinuing today |confine terest These of Im- crease 18 due to the lower i rvates pald on our securities, result 40 Million a Year “Thirty million dollars a year I good pay for a sound polley, Tt shows how orderly management goes hand In hand with economy.” Declaring that "we are fast ap- proaching the time when we cannot Jook forward to appreciable reduc- ernment,” My Coolldge continued: his nation is growing, and in the normal conrse of events we must in taxes is injurlous | face a gradual expansion of its leg) timate business, but increasing r burden on eachi of ne diminished imulate business it | Even greater watohfulness, greater 1f the government |care over our expenditures, must be business can have | exerclged successfully to continue this campalgn, The fask is hecom- ward of muccess, “In this great husiness of the gov- ernment we are undoubtedly con- activities which are no longer essentlal or productive. The undertaking of new projects or lines of effort made essential by changing conditions should be marked by the public | weeding out of those no longer =5- sentlal. 1 refer, of course, to those 1821, | functins which are within your ad- a5 [ ministrative discretion. “Unfortunately the federal govern- ment has strayed far afield from its legitimate business. Tt has® tres- passed upon fields where there shoulld be no frespass. If we could our federal expenditures to itimate obligations and func- tions of the federal government =& material reduction would be ap- parent, But far more important than this would be its effect .upon the fabric of our constitutional form of expendi- | which the subsecriptions were nearly | government, which tends to be grad- declared Mr. Coolidge, “has|four times the amount of the offer- {ually weakened and undermined by Of £130.000,000 of decrease in | this eneroachment iterest payments between 1921 and It has been successful. Taxes|1625, part of fhe saving came. be- People Hold Cure “The cure for this is net in our Watch the Sky! he Bennett Motor Sales Co. responsibility, 1t will come when they realize that the laws under which the federal government Lands |out contributions to the states 18 x x x The ‘Iy management of our flscal affalrs. | placing upon them a double burden of taxation-~federa! taxation in the | first Instance to raise the mone; | which the government donates to | the states, and state taxation in the isecond instance to meet the extr: gances of state expenditures which mpted by the federal donas The president, expressing the opinion that “greater ultimate econ- omy in federal expenditur can ‘nual outlays on some of our exist- ing projects,” said that in_some in- nees it can be attained By undere g new projects. o not advocate the withhold- ing of additiona) outlays on projects essentlal to the best interests of the "mvnrnmnp'," he added, "but our present objective is the rellef of the taxpayers of today, and any pro- | posed increase of annual outlay en | existing projects or any undertaking |of new projects should be scrutin- fzed with this objective in mind, and | every doubt ehould be resolved in | favor of the taxpayer of today wh |is carrying the hurden of war taxes." | Pointing out that the number of employes in the cutive clvil serv. fce totaled 554,986 June 30, 1924, a8 | compared with 440 000 nine years before, the president emphasized that every effort ba made to prevent lany surplus in personnel, although he did “not advocate an under. manned publie service,” feeling “this would he false economy and disas- trous in its results.” CITY COURT ASSIGNMENTS Cases were assigned follows by Judge B, W. Alling in city court yes- terday afternoon: Besse Leland Company ve. Frank | Boardman June 23 at 10 a. m. Sex- ton for plaintiff, Mangan for defen- dant. Links and Company vs. € B. Pera, June 24 at 10 a, m, Nair and Nair for plaintiff, Sexton for defen- TOMORROW NIGHT Y 3000 feet in the sky. OU will be thrilled by a hazardous, breath- taking parachute plunge from an airplane From This Perilous Height Walter P.Chrysler WILL DROP H HUMAN MESSENGER, BY PARACHUTE, INTO WALNUT HILL PARK WITH A PERSONAL MESSAGE TO YOU ABOUT HIS LATEST ACHIEVEMENT, THE NEW CHRYSLER FOUR This Great Performance Takes Place At 7:15 O’clock, (D. S. T.) At Walnut Hill Park Tomorrow Night 230 ARCH ST. (Opp. Grand) - dant. Jacob Ealte vi? Nicholds Chers pack, June 25 at 10 &. m, Dun Td, MeDonough for plaintiff, Mangan for" defendant, Colman Levin Company va, K, Rogoslawskl, June*25 ut 10 & m. Roche and Cabelus for plain- U, D. Gaftney for defendunt, D. Sokolsky va, 1. Resnick, June 30 at 10 a. m. Nair and Nair for plaintit, D, Gaftney for defendant. A M. Koppel va, Frank Jasinskl, July 1 at 10 u. m. Nalr and Nair for plaintiff, Mangan for defendant, Concetla Lucco va. Carroll W.. Holland, July 2 at 10 a. m, Woods for _plaintiff, T, ¥. McDonough for defendant. A. M. Dressel va, Jullan Lfs, July 2 at 10 a,m. Roche and Cabelus for plain- tiff, Mangan for defendant. John Bkarmulls et al va Simon R. Schue- fer et al, July 2 at 10 a. m. Roche and Cabelus for plaintiff, Hunger- ford and Sax: for defendant, Salem Trading and Finance Company V& Eugene Paquetto, July 2 at 10 &, m, Nair and Nair for plaintift, D. Gaff- ney for defendant. Jury Henry Foir- en vs, Willlam Fagan, July § at 10 a. m.- Ginsburg for plaintiff, Kictt for defendant. Jantes E. Andrews et a1 vs. Peter Rutkowski, July 8 at 10 a. m. Kirkham, Cooper, Hunger- ford and Camp for plaintiff, Wasko- witz for defendant. Cormello Fazzina |vs, Louls Landau et al, July 6 at 30 p. m. Casale for plaintiff, Gins- burg for Landau, LeWitt for City Hardware Company. Meyer and Danziger vs. Max Zucker, July § at 2:40 p. m, Kirkham, Cooper Hung- erford and Camp for plaintiff, Klett for defendant. In one minute—just that ‘ends. Ne 0 oot snd et wrety e Dz Scholl’s - Zino-pads =t h== hl= TEL. 2932