New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 28, 1926, Page 18

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

‘WEDNESDAY. DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME. WTIC—HARTFORD—476 | 6:30—Dinner concert, Emil Heim-| berger's Good Ship Bond in Ger-| many. a Selections from the| works of Beethoven; b. Collec-| tion of Schumann's Songs; c. Se-| lection from “Tannhauser” (Wag- ner); d. Collection of Schubert's Songs, including the famous Ave | Marla; e. Mozart Excerpts; . De- | votion (Richard Strauss g | “Traumerei (Richard Strauss); h.| Collection of German Folk Songs. | lews items, baseball scores, agricultural and police reports. 8:30—BIll Jones Capitol theater or- chestra. 8:50—"Gol,” Jack Stait, Pro. 9—The Travelers Jongleurs and the “Unknown Troubadour” in & “visit” to Holyoke, Mass: The Jongleurs, compositions by Zamecnik: a. Soiree; b. Regret; c. Dance Passion The Troubadour: program. The Jongleurs: a. Ode to Sprin b. Nydia; c. A Rustic Festival; d. | Heart o'Dreams; e. Selection, ex- cerpts from “Sinbad” (Romberg). 10—The Colt Park Municipal dance orchestra. 10:30—Emil Heimberger's Bond dance orchestra. 11—News items and weather report. WJAR—PROVIDENCE—306 §—8—Concert by the U. S. Army band. 8:30—"Davis Saxophone OC 9—Baseball scores. $—Musical program. Tabloid Musical by the W. Light Opera company. SFIELD—333 Market reports. Boston. Three Musical Mirth Makers,” | Bert Dolan’s orchestra. | Springfleld. .30—Baseball results. Springfleld. 133—Continuation of Musical Mirth | Makers. :45—M. A. Springfield. :30—Radio Nature League under the direction of Thornton W. Bur- gess. 9—The Barnstormers. Boston. .30—Max 1. Krulee and his Hotel Westminster orchestra. 10—Concert. Springfleld. 10:30—Walker Chamberlain, bari- tone; John Gruber, pianist and ac- companist. Boston. ' 11—Weather reports; missing per- sons; baseball results. Springfield WTAG—WORCESTER—515 0—Sheridan's orchestra. 7:30—U. 8. Army band. §:30—Program to be announced. —Daily news bulletin. WNAC—BOSTON—430 s—Krazy Kat Kiddies Kiub. 4—Dinner dance, broadcast from Lido Venice; Lido Venice orches- . direction Joe Herman. -ations in New England.” Program arranged Boston Broadcast, in an all request | Hotel | 10 C. Radio Forum. [} Boston Chamber staurant; organ Weir. 130—Play WNAC Players, rection Clyde McArdle. 9—Reduction Day orchestra, direc- tion Willlam F. Dodge. 10:05—Dance musie, broadcast McPeake's Shore Gardens tasket; “Jimmie” Gallag! his orchestra. WEEI—BOSTON—349 o and his orch. and business from Nan- er and —Jimmie F Lost and Found. Radio Review B. from » day and base- ball scores 7—Big Broth Tauber, pianist. Steven Hero, violinist Rabbi Bur- lowsky. nagogue stein; Cantor I di- | 8. Marine Band. WTIC, Hartford, 6:30—Emil Heimberger, German m WCAP, Washington, ish Village Band.” OPTRAS. WEAF, New York, 10—"La Pou- pee.” TALKS. WNAC, Boston, 7—'Vacations in . Army band ophone Octet. Ipana Troubadours. 30—The South Sea Islanders. Poupee,” by the WEAF Light Opera company. 11-12—Pelham Heath Inn orchestra. WJZ—NEW YORK—155 5—Financial summary. arm market reports 7:05—Madison concert orchestra. Imperial Imus 0—Stadium Philharmonic concert | 10:30—Astor Roof orchestra. WGBS—NEW YORE—316 Geebee. Williams' orchestra. 7—American Leglon. 7:10—Fess Willlams' orchestra. 7:15—Baseball and news items. y SW YORK—361 5—News, racing and baseball. 5:10—Billy Burkes, Matty Levino, songs. 25—News, racing and baseball. 7—Arthur Calace, violinist; Milton L. Mayer, pianis 7:15—Bob Langston, SOnNgs. 7:30—Loew’s theater organ recital. 3—“Cookle,” the California songbird §:15—Joseph Richter, violinist; Ar- thur Kuester, planist. 3:35—Belle Osborne, contralto. 8:45—Eddie Gillls, baritone. 9—Loew's theater orchestra. 9:30—Loew’s Seventh Avenue the- ater concert. 10—Roseland dance orchestra. 10:30—Schenck Brothers' orch. 11:30—Silver Slipper orchestra. WHAP—NEW YORK—31 6:30—Holmes' string ensemble. th Montgomery, S0prano. 7:30—Winifred Bauer, piano. §—WHAP madrigal singers. 3:15—News digest. 8:35—Dorothy Hoyle, violinist; Earl Palmer, tenor. 9:10—Hickman Price, “Idols.” 9:30—Augusta Stetson, readings. 10:15—June Warren Erb, organ re- cital. WNYC—NEW YORE—526 :10—Plano selections. :20—Market high spots. §:30—Elementary _Spanish lessons, . Harrison-Berlitz. A jessons, by V. i Ruth Marr, Harrison-Berlitz. 1:30—Police alarms. Ik by Winter Russell. all results, major, Int ern league: gh lights on Yankees, Giants and Brooklyn games. Joseph Pantano, Lucy Ambrogio, sopran Giovanni, guitarist. 71st Regiment *Military band girect wire from the Mall, Cen- tral Park, New York city. 10:30—Police alarms and weather forecasts. WNJ—NEWARK—340 . | 5:30—Tivoli theater symphony orchi. 9:30—Max Hitrig, sonss. WODA—PATERSON—224 News of the day. 50—S8port talk. G—Dinner music. W1P—PHILADELPHIA—508 6:50—Department of Agriculture. Roll call and birthday list. WFI—PHILADELPHIA—305 §:45—Johnny Johnson's orchestra WOO—PHILADELPHIA—508 7:30—Dinner dance music. $:30—Davis Saxophone Octette _Ipana Hour. 9:30—The Four Aces. 10—Fox thedter studio program. 10:30—Johnny Johnson's orchest mandolinist; o0; Charles SHAVING IRRITATION INSTANTLY RELIEVED BY The Final Word in a Car For the Man Whose Wordis Final! The President INAUGURAL DATE — MONDAY, AUGUST 2nd STUDE 11—Dance program. | WLIT—PHILADELPHIA—395 | 7:30—Dream Daddy. | $—8tudio program | §:30—Progress Paint company. 9—E. A. White company entertain- | ers. | 10—Dance orchestra. WCAU—PHILADELPHIA—278 7:30—Recital by N. Snellenburg Penunsylvania or hestra. Miller Plano Period. ~Lipschutz and Mazet, S0ngs 30—Charles Borrelli, songs. 5—Senator Hazzenpfeffer. )—Maurice Patton, tenor; Reudy, baritone. BAKER NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1926. ong’s Cheer-Up club. WGR—BUFFALO—319 *. §. Army band; Davis Saxo- Octette; Ipana Trouba- South Sea Islanders. —Joseph Faircloth, tenor soloist, and friend. WMAK—BUFFALO—266 7:30—Daily news items. :30-8:15—Program from stage of Eastman theater. 15-9—Program from WHAM 9-10—Mausical program. WHAM—ROCHESTER—278 —Baseball scores. >rogram from the stman theater :15—Program by the WHAM orch. WCAP—WASHINGTON—169 rt by the U. S. Army studlo of stage of nd. —Davis Saxophone Octette. 9—Ipana Troubadours. —=8tudio program. t opera from New York. band WOAE—PITTSBURGH—461 —Dinner concert. §—Shinola Merrymakers. $:30—Davis Saxophone Octette. 9—Program of dance music. WGY—SCHENECTADY—379 §—Stock reports, news items and baseball scores. :30—Children’s bedtime 7—"Book of Knowledge” —Baseball scores theater orchestra., Y., also broadcast 3 program. WHAM, :15—Prograi from WHAM Studio, | ochester, N. Y. KDKA—PITTSBURGH—309 30—Dinner concert from the 7lo- tilla club; Etzi Covato and his or- | chestra. } 1 | 7:15—Baseball scores. §—Program of games for the chil- dren, through the courtesy of the Hermes-Grove Dairy company. §:40—Stockman-Farmer news andj market period with reports en all| important livestock, grain, wool, cotton and produce markets. _McKeesport health builders' con- test. 5—Time signals forecast. Baseball and weather | scores. : Through the Static | Last night was pretty fair, for a| fact. There was no static at all, that we could find, although there was considerable fading, especially later | in the evening on the low wave-| lengths. Volume was excellent and Chicago stations seemed to be rath-| er bashful until about midnight, | when they came breezing in, not| with any great fanfare of (rumpc(s,i but breezing in, neve heless. There | was considerable urbance. ‘l . “Song of India,” that plaintive air | bearing the stamp of the Orient, was | presented as a violin solo from WBZ, Springfield, and lucky we! were to tune in when we did. John Howard was the violinist and his in- terpretation was excellent and un- usual. “"Song of India” proved hly popular, but it is not Ofi(-n‘ uded in radio programs. When sta to set class- ons to dance timé and to write fox trot orchestrations around them, you remember, “Song of In-| dia” was the first number he picked. | PR [ KDKA's announcer, during the| Sacred Song period, was so affected | by the music that he forgot to an- nounce the call letters of the station for 12 and 20 minutes at a time, and | when he announced the names of | the artists they were o0 jumbled | t it was impossible to make head | or tail of them. It seems to us that | the least stations could do would be {to see the names of artists get on| air straight, si most radio | performers do their work gratis and really should get some results even | li¢ 1t comes in the form of praise| from those Wl re listening in. Among the selections were contralto | solos of “Face to Face” and “Tell| Mother I'll Be There” and a bari- tone solos by Will Rose, “Hold Thou My Hands.” fcal selec e . From WBAL, Baltimore, came a| concert by the Municipal band, loud | and clear and deep. The program | opened with the Baltimore anthem, “Baltimore, Our DBaltimore.” Then came a Sousa march and finally the | “Poet and Peasant” overture. There tatic and we were bothered only siightly by local noises. e KYW, Chicago, and WOC, Daven- port came through fairly loud. From the former we heard “Ting-a-Ling” nd “Rough and Reary,” two piano tions which were drowned by code a large part of the time. We did not hear themame of the artis A program of piano selections was coming through from WOC, Miss Pauline Morgan furnishing the group We heard part of WEAF's Mo- ment Musicale from WTAM, land. A two-piano interpretation of “valencia” came through. We heard part of it from ( leveland and then we went to WEEIL Boston, to finish it out. . Yesterday noon we happened to tune in on WEAN, Providence, and a very pleasant luncheon hour we spent, too. The station was not up to its usual standard as far as volume went and there was considerable racket of a local electrical nature to be contended with. In spite of these two faults we were able to hear & varfety of the local popular num- bers, phonographically, but what of Ted Lewis and His Band. played “My Own Tone” and “I Wish 1 was In Peoria,” while well lers presented cia” and Biue Room.” These selections were not over loud, due, to the fact that the ma- as at a considerable di 1 the microphone. The Colonial concert orchestra upheld its part of the entertainment with & spritely and popular program, dis- arging the duties of a dance chestra nicely. Of curse, there no b trombones or saxes, this organiza- tion being confined to strings. How- ever, the tempo and interpretation were | being played. | 1eave, | getting ready to go on the air. { radio manufacturers. i ‘ per week to his wife, | steady WCAC, Storrs, comes through, now-a-days? And do you remember W er the acme of distortion? Well, yes- terday noon we hit into that station while egg market reports were be- ing given. We were not especially interested in them, nor were we interested in the poultry but we were interested in the great im- provement the present transmission | is over that of a few mon ago. One would never think it was the same station. . There's another feature should appeal to you folks and that is the evening organ recital from WPG, Atlantic City, which takes place each night promptly at 6:45 o'clock. This station, with its mar- velous clarity and its great power, pounds through with never a grunt or a groan to stop it, except when WMSG, New York, oversteps . its bounds - slightly and squeezes in for a second or two. No, We Were wrong. | We were just listening' to that inter- ference and It is not a voice on a conflicting wave, i is code, but it doesn't bother any. The full tone of the organ certainly comes through right slick. Just a minute until they announce the name of the number It was an inprovisa- tion by Arthur Scott Brook. As we the Hotel Morton quartet is May Breen and Peter De Rose, known very, verys well to members | of the radio audience, offered a pro- | gram of ukulele and plano numbers | from WJZ. Miss Breen with her | uke and Mr. De Rose, accompany-| ing on the piano, offered an excel- | lent program which was well| ndled by the R. C. A. station. A group of vocal duets with ukulele accompaniment proved to be brigh | spots on the program. Among them | were “My Own, Tone.” You Knows How to Love,” and Sce You Some More in Samod, composition of Miss Breen. . . That's all for today, thanks! —P. E. L. RADID SENDS NEWS 10 FLORIDA CITIES Wires Down But People With Sets Hear All Atlanta, July 28 (P—News dis- patches of the Assoclated Press broadcast from two powerful mem- ber newspaper radio broadcasting statlons told the story of happenings last night in the outside world to | hurricane bound cities of the Flor- ida east coast and Cuba. With wire and cable service to Miaml, Palm Beach, West Palm | Beach, Havana, Cuba and other cit- ies paralyzed on account of storms, stations WMC of the Memphis Com- merclal Appeal, and WSB of the At- lanta Journal broadcast news dis- patches at regular intervals to mem- ber newspapers in the storm terri- tory. When advised that the Assoclated Press had lost its wire connection into the hurricane-swept area, C. P. J. Mooney, publisher of the Memphis Commercial Appeal and Major John F. Cohen of the Atlanta Journal, fm- mediately placed their powerful broadcasting stations at the disposal of the Associated Pres Reception of the news was made in Miami by means of six powerful recelving sets located in the offices of the Miami Herald. From Miami news was relayed by radio tele- graph to member newspapers in Ha- vana. The Western. I'nion Telegraph{ company had been able to maintain | the only wire into Miami tonight. | This was reserved for emergency | and message communications All of | which were subject to indefinite de- lay. A message through thfs chan- nel reported the reception of news dispatches broadcast from station WSB. Two Radio Dealers Are To Fight Air Piracy New York, July 28 ()—Organiz- ed opposition to “piracy of the air” is announced by two associations of The radio apparatus section of the aseociated manufacturers of electri- | cal supplies issued a call for a gen- | eral convention to designate a radio | protective committee. At the same tim ufacturers’ association sent out notices for a meeting of directors | and other trade leaders to be held |at Cleveland August 6 to consider { measures for the protection of radio audiences. Piracy of unallotted wave lengths will also occupy the atten- tion of the radio world's fair at Madison Square Garden, September 13 to 18. Many stations recently jumped to higher wave lengths after a ruling that the department of commerce had no rightful control over such matters. the radio man- MORE TROUBLE IN MEXICO Mexico City, July 28 (P—In addi- {tion to Mexico's religious turmoil, |another disturbing situation has de- veloped. It culminated in a detach- Iment of federal troops being ordered |to guard the chamber of deputies, with the purpose of preventing clashes which are feared between rival political groups which are bit- {terly contesting control of the next congress. MUST PAY TLos Angeles, July (»—Adolph Menjou, screen actor, was ordered by the superior court here yesterday | to pay temporary alimony of $500 Kathryn, pend- ing trial of a divorce action filed by | the actor some time ago. The suit | was set for trial October.15. Mrs. Menjou testificd her husband earn- '(‘d “over 000 D week." NUNS REACH HAVANA Hatana, July 28 (P)— nuns and six monks who arrived here from Mexico on board the Spanish steamer Marla Cristina 500 A WE! hen that station’s wave approach- ! n which | REGALLS CAMPAIGN 1N PACIFIG ISLES {Johnson Tells of Drive to Gap- ture Aguinaldo The marbie interlor of a bank is ot the best place to create an at- [mosphere when one s ftelling & story, the formality of the place is apt to cast a damper over the tale, but yesterday Theodore C. Johnson at the New Britain National Bank told the story so vividly as to make the marble walls meit into bamboo thickets and the clatter of tybe- criters dissolve into the swish of and the bark of Krag-Jorgen- He told us zbcut his serv- Philippines, the bardships that the American troops encounter- ¢d, and the hum-drum, everyday things dlsappeared and in their stead came cencs of his story and the characters that moved in them. “Aguinaldo, Emilio Aguinaldo, caused the whola affair,” said Mr. | Johnson. “He recrufted 12,000 Fili- | pinos, mostly from the northern sec- | tion o. the Islands and when the Spaniards had been defeated by our | forces, Aguinaldo was left to deal with — Aguinaldo with his 12,000 | hard fighting Tilipinos equipped with German rifles and a few field pleces and an exact knowledge as to the method of fighting in this land. | ston he toes. This was mixed with water and gulped down — it was horrible stuff, but it filled us up when we were had hardtack and tinned beef but almost no fresh meat or vegetabldh had led many of us into the hos- pital. “I was sent to the Manila hos- pital just before the close of the whole affair, and conditions there were pretty bad. There was a short- age of medical help and oftentimes I have seen base hospitals with no doctors attending but merely an in- terne and his assistant, I developed typhoid fever and was soon shipped to the Presidio hospital in San Francisco. That was. the end of my service.” Johnson spoke of Aguinaldo with a high degree of respect, and he was asked if 1t were true that he entertained such good feelings to- wards the man who had led him into a good many stubborn battles. “Yes,” replied Johnson, emphati- cally. “At no tlme did we feel other than that we had a worthy opponent in the man. He Was not unnecessarily cruel other than is e pected in any war — he was bri liant and courageous and he was fighting against great odds and giv- ing back blow for blow. When he finally surrendered to General Fun- was imprisoned in his palace at Manila and treated wih | all the courtesy that a surrendered | hungry, which was quite often. We | and the continued diet of what we | general is entitled to. His men still continued to give trouble, his’offi- | cers carried on the hopeless fight, | but for the most part, the move- ment died Awith his surfender, the | Fillpinos were without a real lead- er.” | Aguinaldo was a wealthy Filipino, educated in Spain Wwith the degree | of a lawyer. With the financlal aid of a good many wealthy Filipinos | he had recruited his men—that was no feat, they poured into his camp | to join his ranks. ! “Then, in a temperature that stay- | ed around 115, we followed him | through the jungle, the bamboo thickets necessitaring crowing on our hands and Lnees through the tangle. No roads were cut through | that country, the natural brush | made it extremely difficult to trans- | port rations and field pieces, we were | cut off from base time a again | with, every once in a while, a skir- | mish with the encmy that we very seldom saw. Agulaaldo was a wise | general, he knew that the country was his strongest ally and he looked for the heat and natural difficulties to defeat the American troops. One thing He overlooked, that was the bulldog tenacity that kept our men | moving slowly after him, hacking thelr way through the thickets and | camping under the stars, but con- | tinuously dogging him. | Then Came the Rain “The heat left and the rainy sea- son was upon us, November and De- | cember were two months of contin- uwous rainfail, hard driving, soaking ralns that chilled and brought malaria. We needed every outside | aid we could find to help us cut our | way through to the waiting Aguin- aldo, and there we were thankful for a friendly t¥be. These Filipinos were from the rorthern part of the islands, who had been educated and had thrown their lot with the Amer- jcan forces, They were trustworthy and hard fighters but their equip- ment was appallingly neglected and the rebels took great delight in ending on their divisions and | \g them wholesale, Finally were properly equipped, cap- tained by American officers until they learned the rudiments of mod- ern warfare and then had officers from their own ranks who led them into many a vicious skirmish. “That was the whole thing— bushwhacking. We would go on for days without a sign of the enemy and then suddenly the crack of a Mauser or the thud of a bolo would tell us that they were with us again. There would be a few scattered shots exchanged and a few men would drop—then silence and they were gone for another week or more. | Oftentimes we did not see them, but shot into the places we knew they were and after the scrimmage we could generally find a few of them still in the places we had shot at— fthat was our warfare. Chict Food Mysterious Mixture “Feeding our men was the biggest problem as rations could not be Kept up with the advance of the troops. A sort of emergency ration was is- wued to us, a few bars of chocolate and a mysterious mixture that looked and tasted like sawdust but which was rumored to be a ground mixture of meat, bread and pota- s sl AUBURN 1 PHONE 611 ______..___————/ PAINTERS AND DECORATORS Estimates Cheerfully Given on All Jobs — Tel. 2913 TAXI CROWLEY BROS. INC. 267 Chapman Street ——— —_—— Patronize Merchants Who Deliver Your Purchases by AUBURN Parcel Delivery Service Auburn Transportation Co. (1nc.) Phone 611 Chowder, Clams, Steaming Clams, Soft Shell Crabs, Lobsters, Crab Meat, Shrimps THE HONISS OYSTER HOUSE have come ashore. Other religious workers deported from Mexico on the steamer will proceed on board to Europe. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS “At the Natlonal Convention of | Veterans of the Spanish-American | War in 1924, there was a telegram | read from the platform from this | same Aguinaldo that we had pursued | those many weary days, offering his | ssistance as a recruiting officer for the organization. He is an honorary | member of this organization and is | very much respected here and | abroad. When he was in captivity in his palace in Manila, there were two lines of guards, one inside and | another on.the outside of the walls | to the place. Also there was an of- | ficer detailed to eat and sleep with | him. We weren't taking any chances | of his escaping us after all the trouble we had expended in captur- ing him. He was a great opponent.” Jonnson was rejected for enlist- ment once befors he finally joined the Fifth cavalry in New Haven under Captain Foster in 1899. From there he was transferred to the Third cavalry under Capt. Frank Barton and was sent to the Philip- pines under the command of General Schaeffer who had command of the forces in that country. Major Gen- | eral Leonard Wood was second inj command at that time and Willlam | H. Taft, now chief justice, govern- | or general of the islands. i Couldn’t Trust Natives | Johnson gave an instance of the | trickery that the Filipinos employed against the American forces. Auto Electric Service C. A. ABETZ TEL. 4185 114 FRANKLIN $Q. New Britain Sign Co. “DOING BETTER WHAT MANY DO WELL” 34 CHURCH STREET Telephone 894 DRIVE YOURSELF— EW CARS TO RENT c an honr——10c. a mile. SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS 25c. an hour—15c. a mile. Special rates for long trips. You-Drive Auto Renting Co. Cor, Seymour and Elm “We were encamped in a place called Temiy and we had around the place a native that washed for us. He was a hard worker and very obliging and we rejoiced that we jpad found an honest Filipino until somebody. tore up the floor of his bamboo house and found enough stolen ¥uns ang ammunition to sup- ply Aguinaldo for months. That end- ed us on the subject of trusting them. They had some clever tricks in the warfare game, too. They had one for stampeding horses. They would transport water buffalo up into the hills Where the beasts would go mad for the lack of water. Then they would blindly run into the tethered horses, terrifying them into stampeding. It was useless to shoot at them. They didn’t heed bullets unless the shots landed behind their ears and it was quite a difficult stunt to shoot a running water buf- falo behind the ear. “It all ended in 1901. The Moros, the ignorant class of Filipines, are still raising trouble every once in a while but for the most part, with the introduction of schools and mis- sionary teachers, the natives are sat- isfied with the present state of gov ernment now in effect Customs Officials Warned Of So-Called Antiques Washington, July 28 UP) — The weakness of Americans for purchas- ing antiques or anything labelled “antique” has aroused the interest of the government and consequent investigation resulted today in a warning to customs agents to be more wary in designating “an- tiques” which are allowed free en- try. Two recent investigations reveal- | ed that the signer of a certificate of| antiquity on an article in Japan, “knew nothing whatever about the particular merchandise nor about the general subject of artlstic an- tique.”” J. D. Nevius, acting director, of customs, ordered closer scrutiny heteafter. Mary, it is sald, is the most popu- lar name among actresses. Next come contractions of Eleanor. WEST END 3-Family House, al.l improvements, 5 rooms to each tenement. Price $13,500. Small cash payment required. This is the best buy in the city so step lively. LINCOLN ST. 2-Family House, 12 rooms, all improvements, 2 car garage. Price reasonable. Very little cash requirgd to make you the owner of this fine home in one of the nicest sections of the city. Schultz & Costello, Inc. 242 Main Street ’Phone 24 Let us quote you an allowance on your present car for a new Oldsmobile, Lexington or Locomobile. The new Locomobile Straight .8 now delivers $1885 to $2485. Karon G. Cohen, Inc. Est. 1910 185 Park Street—Open Evenings—Hartford, Conn. TWO-FAMILY HOUSE WITH LARGE LOT ON CHERRY STREET Very good central location Price $11,000; $2,500 cash will buy Camp Real Estate Co. 272 Main Street; Phone 343 TO RENT—98 Rooms 305-6, Bank Bldg. Arch St., Store suitable for Auto Show Room and adjoining garage. Inquire Harry Alex, 96 Arch St Tel 308 22 STATE ST. HARTFORD Under rGant’s Department Store 27 % [ MARSHAL OTEY WALKERS NEW SHOES SQUEAK SO LOUD THAT EVIL DOERS HAVE AT LEAST A TEN MINUTE ADVANCE WARNING OF HIS APPROACH — AW WHATS TH. HURRY4 OTEYS JUST CROSSIN ’ NI &y vy SSTI SETTETETITRLTN W 72

Other pages from this issue: