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TR T IR Ry T —— THE AIR FRIDAY. ! Eastern Daylight Saving Time. Noto—Asterisks ( *) Indicate Pick of the programs. New. England Stations 630—WTIC, Hartford—176 6:20—Road report 6:30—Dinner concert, Hotel Bond Emil Heimberger, director News and baseball scores Dinner concert continued —Piano recital: a. Mazurka (Moszkowski): b. Serenade Berge) c. Perpetual Motion (von Weber); | Laura C. Gaudet, staff pianist 7:30—The Bonderillos and Torea- | dor: | 9—Arthur The Banderillos: a. E! Banderill (Bara); b. Fleurctte (wi from ballet) (Mertz) Toreador: Tell Her in the Moon- light Banderillos: a. Swing Along (Bru- nover); b. Cest Vous (It's You) Toreador: Down the Lane The Banderillos: a. Dark Blue Blues (Moyer); b. When Day is Done (Katscher) Toreador: Nesting Time The Banderillos: a. La Sorella (Borel-Clere); h. El Banderillo *8—Citles Service concert orch and the Cities Service Cavalier from WEAF March (Bourdon), orchestra; Yes- terthought (Victor Herbert); Pun- chinello (Victor Herbert), orches- tra; Everytime I Feel the Spirit (Hardesty Johnson); Old Dog | Tray (Foster), Cavalicrs; Love | Everlasting riml), orchestra; | Pirouette (Finck), orchestra; | Hunt in the Black Forest (Vroel- ker), orchestra; On Wings of Song (Mendelssohn), Cavallers; Alma De Dios (Serrano), orches- 3 Solo; *Chocolate Sol- ~ction (Straus), orches- | Reve (The Dream) violin-cello-plano; Lit- House, “Honeymoon (Dowling-Hanley), or- In the Time of Rose (Relchardt), orchestra with Cav- allers 9—Musical Miniatures, from WEAF: Woodland Pictures (Fletcher); From a By Gone Day (Osgood): Male Quartet; Nearest and Dear- | est (Tuscan Folk Song), soprano | and alto; Woodland Pictures (Fletcher); How Can 1 Leave Thee (Thuringian Folk Song), €o- prano and tenor; See By the Pale Moonlight (Campana); €oprano and tenor; Irish Country Songs, Ballynure Ballad, Molly Branni- gan, tenor; Bean Feast (Fletcher) orchestra :30—Soprano and contralto re- cital with Jessie Wirth Ebbs and Loutse Turkington; Laura C. Gau- det, accompanist: Duet: When the Dalsy Opens Her | Lyes (Wood), Mrs. Ebbs and | Miss Turkington Trees (Rasbach); b. olet (Grieg); c¢. On| the Wild Rose Tree (Rotoli); d. Jean (Burleigh); Miss Turking- ton Duets: a. Mistress Mary (Salter); b. Laughter Wears a Lilled Gown (Brancombe); Mrs. Ebbs and M Turkington _Soprano: a. I Wonder (Fenner); b. Sundown (Woodman); c. T! Night Wind (Ball); Mrs. Eb Duet: Barcarolle from “The Tales of Hoffman" (Offenbach); Mrs. | Ebbs and Miss Turkington | 10—Hotel Bond orchestra; Heimberger, director 11—News and weather 1120—~WDRC, New Haven—268 6:45—Weather; news —Bernie Disken orchestra 8—Vocal selections 8:30—Piano and voca 9—The Blue Birds 10—Weather 1400—WICC, Bridgeport—214 :05—Story tellers 8:30—Studio program 9—Hour of music 900—WBZ, Springlicld—353 Markets and baseball ncent Breglio and his Solo orchestra list 17:45-8 |10—Columbia Park musie | 6—"The Happy Boys" Emil |9: 7—Baseball :03—Mrs. Irene Simpson Rommel pianist :30—Joseph Spring, Hawalian gui- Hsworth, ukulele W tar, and Georg: :45—Program oner, violinist; Mrs Corrienne Mr: Pro- baritone; Burton Yaw, accompanist. gram 1 — If Harsh Decree (Jacque: (Katie Moss) (Geoffrey | O'Hara) 30—Orchestra, contralto prano, from WJZ: Clost Heart (foxtrot); Spring, Bea Spring S vocal cho Blues A Ropert ryi (duet); You're In Lo and 1tiful &t Kiss My The Wor. > With Me, contral- to solo; Just a Cottage Small, gui- tar and v phone; Ain't That Kind of a 1 3 s; I'm Back in Love ag chorus presenting Harrison, tenor; instru- Orchest Mareh; G : phire (Bloom); tenor Sorta Mies You, miri Song; Dance Group: a b. The Same Silver Moon Like a Butt No houette, flute Cinguantaine, Merle Johnson; Charles Harr ra Serer T Harrison, a b. Kast sux0f Cecil Wagoner, | to Your | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 1927. MONTH OF AUGUST IN SKIES n Tymkevich, violinist $:30—"Direct Primaries,” Debating League 9—Program 10—Great Notch orchestra Four Towers orchestra Hollywood theater organ 1020—WODA, Paterson—294 6—Frankie Paganea Californians —Talk 15—Studio progras §—Mooney Brothers, songs 1070—WNJ, Newark—280 it 9:03—Long Branch program New York Stations 0—Madeline Freeman and Frank AZ€r, SONngs 10—Selzer-Thomas Hartnett 10:30—Will Koerner's Madcaps 1070—WGCP, Newark—280 —Heidelberg Students McQuade, soprano arden and Its Care” Mort Van, songs +5—George and Flossie S—Bert Norman's orchestra, ue Entertainers 8:30—Bert Norman’s orchestra 1100—WHAR, Atlantic City—273 {7:45—Sport talk 830—WDWM, Asbury Park—361 —Dinner music Al Daley, tenor 8:15—Vivian Sherwood, contralto $:30—Pryor’s band io program r's band y-Carlton orchestra 7:30—The Lady of the Ivories, talk $—Down East Quintet 8:30—Musical program 9—EIlks' Pops concert 10:05—Leo Reisman and his orch. 560—WNYC—3536 French lessons —Police alar —Baseball resuits S. Cusenza, mandolinist 0—Roland Meyer, violinist, turer N | lec- 1ydam, recital Hayes, arks of plano 9:20—Harry John Cuft 10—Song 10:15—LeMar and Reld, guitars 10:30—Police alarms; weather 610—\WEAF—192 orchestra dway —Hindermeyer and Tuckerman, |9 songs 3—Cities Serviece 9—Correct ti orcl a Girt orchestra 0—WAAT, Jersey City—246 Quartet foon Magic Hagan's orchestra, 30—Frank Farrell's orchestra 660—WJZ—154 30—Baseball scores 7:35—Market quotations 3:40—Financial summary 50—Cotton quotations 6—Agricultural reports 50—Basebail scores 7—Correct time Al Fricdman's orchestra §—Yesterthots 8:30—Royal Stenographers 9—Philco hour 10—Correct time 10—Morse and Rogers Bonnie Lad- dies 10:30—Pennsylvania orchestra 760—WHN—395 6:45—Banjo Buddy, songs —Cotton orchestra 30—Thomas Wilson, tenor Martha Kovac, violinist $:30-9—Dance orchestra vaudeville period orchestra 740—WLIT, Philadelphia—405 —Arcadia concert orche §—Concert orchestra 02—Musical miniatures France orchestra 590—WIP, Philadelphia—508 10—Nat Lanin's orchestra 3:45—De of Agriculture Bedtime story 590—WO0O, Philadelphia—508 —Dinner music by WOO trio ence service talk —Continuation of dinner music 3—Organ recital Todern dance orchestra 740—WF1, Philadelphia—105 rnie Holst's orchestra 790—WGY, Schencctady—380 6—Stock reports; news :30—Musical program —WGY studio -al program L program Al program 0—Dance program 950—KDKA, Pittsburgh—316 ores; dinner concert 30—Lorna Lincoln, organist 11:45—Vaudeville period 12 mid.—Silver Slipper o 810—W. hestra 8 rom WJZ 1 11:30—Pittsburgh gram 610—WRC, songs : s 30—Ernie Golden's orchestra —"Home Adornment,” talk 10—Ernie Golden's orchestra s 30—John Meyer, baritone; Henry | Moller, tenor : Post dance pro- Washington—169 & A. Quartet Calvert ensemble From WEAF 50—W BAL, Baltimorc—286 on orchestra nner orchestra 1 concert 11 band Boston—118 —Positions wanted; lost and found 10:45—Manhattan Serenaders 860—WGBS—349 6:10—Devon Park orchestra 8:30—Lucky Robert's Entertainers market and | 15-—Down on the Old Plantation Brothers 5—Opr'y House Tonight 10—Harold Leonard’s orchestra 11—Weather forecast 970—WRNY—309 Baseball and sports results 5—"Investment Question Box" Music Masters Patent” $—Roosevelt concert ensemble :30—Have You Heard? :40—Helena Garloft, contralto Robert Langston, fenor dy Brown string quartet ward Kreiner, viola 9:25—Christian Thaulow, violin s Shuk, ‘cello Loretto O'Connell, pianist 10—Johnny Johnson's orchestra 11—Kew Gardens Night 1020—WGL—291 9—Woman's Clubdom _Rabbi Bretton's Syr oat ensemble Chamber Music Episode Bill Rietz, banjo buddy, Milkmen ew York Dutch Girls quintet 9:30—Piantst by Frank Ste- ey and weather Boston—265 financial sum- io forecast 1130—WBE Events; baseball; nary Piano recital 7:45—Talk about thors §—Coty and Gershon, popular songs — Lyric eoprano oint recital, basso, pianist n books and au-| music ‘orrect time Dartmonth—428 WOR 10— 10:3 10:45 songs & 620—WJAR, Providence—185 Musical program 1270—WMSG—230 Franklyn Howe orcheetra —Kathryn Connolly, soprano 15—Willy White, pianist 30—Bill Rietz, composer 7:45—Muriel Ellis, recitationa Warren Nash, “Automobils 15—Anton Civorn pupils’ recital 1270—WRBNY— 5—Rook review —Dixie Banjoists Herman Danofeks Four VoDoz —Vaudeville Wilde, soprano; Daniel i b | Brown, baritone | { announcements Lost and found; news :45—Dirigo period | s—Chipman hour » hunters aldwin concert; rded a § who, after nine invented food act Weinstein, violinist —1d . contralto Oldtime songs - Martin's Guitar solo music Napolcon aw {0 Francois Appert, vears of experimenting, Ithe process of preserving orchestra Eastern Stations OR, Newark—122 Tails of the North" T1I0—W S Tacq Baseball scores ¢s Jacobs' cnsemble and | carth the meteors plunge downward | | luminous streak that winking Demon Star. | 00 prize in | Urbana, IIl., Aug. 5 (A — Augn!ti is the best time to look for “shoot- ing stars.” During this month the Perselds or August metcors put on their annual display. It will not be a brilliant | spectacle, but if the sky is watched | attentively for a few minutes on al ar evening when the moon is not | one or several Perseids hly appear. Meteors are stony and metallic fragments of unknown origin. Most of them are no larger than the head of a pin. They travel in great swarms around the sun in elongated orbits like those of comets. Ordinarily they are invisible, But whenever a swarm encounters the through our atmosphere, are heated intensely by friction with it and are consumed by their own fury before they can reach the ground. Each we call a shooting star marks the annihilation of a celestial bullet. Protected as we are by the at- mosphere, we do not often think of the deadly bombardment going on overhead. At least 20,000,000 mete- ors collide with the earth every day, striking with the average speed of 26 miles a second. Imaginative anthors who write of voyages to the moon often fail to take into account his hazard to any expedition outside the protecting blanket of our at- mosphere. The Perseids which appear in August are so named because they m to come from a point in the constellation Perseus. It is an il- lusion. Just as the rails of a track appear to converge in the distance, so the meteors apparently radiate from a poirt. Actually they move in parallel paths. in the northeast at| 11 p. m. on August 1 at 10 o'clock on the 15th and at 9 near the end f the month. This constellation | in the Milky Way as a great arrow of stars pointing up- ward to Cassiopeia’s Chair. Its most notable star is Algol, the| The path of the August meteors long ellipse which stretches from the earth’s orbit far out be- yond the planet Neptune. The members of the swarm are well scattered around the orbit. Con- | is a e Toneglect quality in even one of your tubes—thenervecen- ter of your receiver —is to endanger the over-all per- formance of your set. Equi) throughout with Cunninghat Radio T ube. Standard for all Sets sequently it Is safe to shower of metcors whenever the carth crosses this orbit, which oc- Some metcor swarms are so com- pact that, although we cross their paths annually, they produce show- curs always in August. ers at longer intervals. Of this kind is the Leonid swarm, which caused the spectacular showers of 1833 and 1866. Occasionally the earth encoun- ters a metcor 50 much larger than usual that it is only partly con- sumed in its fiight through the air and falls to the ground. The largest known example is the great iron meteorite in the Natural History Museum in New York. It weighs 36 tons. A much greater one is sup- posed to lie under the edge of Meteor Crater in Arizona. Fortun- ately for us, the very large meteors are rare. predict a FOR RESULTS Agfa The Imported All Weather Film KODAKS $5.00 and up Ansco Cameras at 159 off Arcade Studio OOKED Food Shop 118 MAIN STREET SPECIALS AMPBELL'S BEANS 3 cans 25¢ LARGE DILL PICKLES 3 for 10c WALNUT MEATS 1b. 85¢ Meat Dept. LEGS SPRING LAMB 1b. 35¢ FRESH KILLED BROILERS 1h. 39¢ FRESH KILLED FOWL 1b. 39¢ DENTIST Dr. Henry R. Lasch 353 Main St. Pyorrhea Treatments VALSPAR I'wo Wonderful Products For Home Use DUCO Dries Quickly VALSPAR Water Proof Tsed in “Lindy's” Plane Cardinal Male Quartet §:15—Themes and h—The 9:30—\Mabelanna orchestra es—395 We also sell $60—WAAM, Newark Fellmeth, Gene Ingrak Whi Anita Gran Stage Announcing the Opening of THE PET SHOP AT 6 MYRTLE STREET Special for opening week, $2.00 and Special Round Br: ss Cage Stand and Singer for .. Parrots Young and Tame, Guaranteed Talkers . . . Young Imported Canaries $3.00 each . $8.98 .. $7.98 GIANT BOMBER T0 BE TESTED SOON Krmy Plane Will Take to Air Wednesday New York, Aug. 5 (—The third giant bomber to be secretly structed recently for the U. 8. army. larger and heavier than the pre- vious two, and employing a unique tubular steel wing construction which has been under development for five years, will be tested by the Keystone Aircraft corporation, Bristol, Pa., next Wednesday, the corporation announced through its press representatives here today. The Keystone plane will known as a “super cyclops,” and will carry four tons of military load including a one-ton” bomb, in addi- tlon to six, possibly ten machine guns. It will be driven by two 550- horsepower Packard motors and will weigh eight tons when loaded It has been secretly under devel opment for the past two and a half years, Richard Blythe, represent- ative of the Keystone company, re- vealed. The first two giant battle plan > | The Acid Test Every single item offered to. the pub- lic by Rackliffe must be the very best in sell it. con- | be | recently after secret were the Fokker the Curtiss Condor, six machine [to be tested | construction bomber and each equipped with guns. | The super-cyclops will be larger |in dimensions than the Fokker and | heaiver than the Condor. It is said to be the mightiest plano yet con- |structed in the United States and is belleved to be the mightiest in |the world. Like the Condor it is a | biplane, while the Fokker is a | monoplane. | The all-metal steel wing is the |development of Prof. C. Tablot | Porter of the Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology. Unlike other | wings, it will not deteriorate with |y age, and in war time may be built | by the hundred and stored for use| in the tropics or the arctic, as it is | constructed of the strongest stcel available and is impervious to the clements, sald Mr. Blythe. While the machine thus far is| cquipped with but six machine guns, | provision has been made for a dis- | appearing turret in the center car-! rying four more guns. should the war department desire that feature. | Twelve hundred blind persons ' carn their living as usicians in France. Many are players of note, eight being organists in Parls churches, including Notre Dame. | Several conductors and composers are blind. YETERAN KILLED IN' MOTORCYCLE ACCIDENT Mcmber of Jersey State Police Force Was Former Resident —Funeral Here News reached this city today that Joseph A. 8mith of 922 Corbin avenue, a World War veteran and a member of the New Jersey State Police force, was killed in a motor- cycle accident in Trenton, N. J., | yesterday. He was 34 years old. Mr. Smith was born in Brooklyn. N.Y., and was in the service during the war. He had been wounded and while he was in the hospital, the late Mrs. Adeline J. Smith of Corbin avenue this city communicated with him. She later adopted him as her son. He lived in this city for a time after the close of the war. Mrs. Smith died five years ago. Surviving him is his foster sister, Mrs. Evelyn Jones of 253 Corbin avenue. Funeral services will take place !in this city tomorrom afternoon at 3 o'clock at B. C. Porter Sons. Rev. William L. Ress, pastor of the First Baptist church, will officiate. Inter- ment will be in Fairview cemetery. Herald clasified ads are jumping | ahead rapidly. that particular line or Rackliffe will not In quality, in reliability, in economy ---1it must stand the test of time. When it 1s sold here It’s Right From Rackliffe’s f@g@mm_ Paint — Hardware — Glass — Sash — Doors — Interior Trim Agricultural and Builders’ Supplies PARK STREET — TEL. 5000 — BIGELOW STREET CROWLEY BROS. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS Estimates Cheerfully Given on obs — Tel. 2918 267 Chapman Street Frank E. Goodwin 327 MAIN STREET Genuine 0ld Company’s Lehigh The SHURBERG COAL CO. Phone 2230 55 Franklin Street " THE OLD HOME TOWN WAS ST GOIN” To SAY~ LOOK ouT FoR on, | ”‘r"’;j’i “WHEN HARTFORD a1 D6, 0 | DINE WITH US.” | (rimly . | Everything we serve is the! very best, |Q the n | If you don’t believe it come in | Handy Hardware for a test. . Store "® Wholesale and Retail Depart- ment in Connection, i 336 MAIN ST. tenor: a. Sunrise and You, a Smil nce Group: a. Ballet (Herbert), b. 'Der March Carnavales Orchestr: a. Chasing Around, b. So Blue 10—HBert Lowe's orchestra 10:20—Baseball, weathe:, is sons 1010—WTAG, Worcester: 7:30-—Baseball; story; news :30—Musicala me as WEAF 50—Studio program 0—Same as WEAF; news 850—\WNAC. Boston—3538 6333—Dinner dance ( rs Tmitate Known Products One family house on Lincoln street, with extra large lot in a most desirable location. % i \ NS ED WDRGLER, WHO DELIVERS WASHINGS FOR Also one family house on Lenox Place for sale. HIS WIFE, BUILT A SIDE CAR To SPEED LP HIS WORK —AFTER THE FIRST TRIR ITIS Camp Real Estate Co. : THOVGAT MRS WURGLER WILL OBJECT To 272 Main St. Phone 343 N. B. National Bank | ANY FURTHER USE OF THE CONTRAPTION. |} R i i 5-27.) 288 THE HONISS | OYSTER HOUSE s 9 9 1 22 State St. Under Grant’s RARTFORD 2 W, Blanley, 1927, Johnion Features, Ine.