New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 5, 1928, Page 18

Page views left: 5
Text content (automatically generated)

18 AN SN MONDAY. Lastern standard Time. NOTE — Astel rams sk~ Denote Best Pro- the day. New En;lénd States i In ) Forum Poultry orchest John Gruber. pianist violit orchesira — W\ AC-WBIS, Boston—164 1 and hi : smiilers, piloted by cr dance, Joe Rines and Hotel orehestra Ienard and his orch the lvories ice talk I Boston Ty —Moder Lo— Iy WOR from Love Stories, Performance [ Hou Buccancers, from WOR Gallagher's orch. . Boston—508 wvant The “Jimmie” S90—W1 Position s; lost and found rom New York Cews dispatehes Big Brother clut Minstrels t and Air llis' orchestra ews dispatehes cast and weather > orchestra an Neuman, pianist 10—Market high spots ura Mollenaner, songs ons alarms oge, “Philosophy,” Dr. Air College, “Painters, h Glasseold N130—"Supreme Cour swered,” Seymour Quel ~Herman Neuman, pis Shaw and Barr —Huey Charlton 3 New York's Municipal Ref- wrence Library” v Hughes, nt songs of Heulth talk wes Departi Police 610—W Sob Pallon’ & quartet Iure prince “iistory itor and Merrimac Corr 1 W 2's orchestra T60—WEPAP—: 1o "l 24-HOUR SERVICE £1.00 MONTLIY TESTING PLAN By Eaperts New Britain Radio Service Radios and Supplies Telephone 5168, 1o heator jok, “Arabian |y SO0AYSRADIO “MeAlpineers mid.—Manhattan s S60—W Kihn, orch. ‘naders S—319 N0 compositions 11- 12 ukulely Tollic nzweig, soprano —Goldrn City Five roslavsky, Kussiun songs 5—Wilbur and Perry —Rert Alex Dell i~ Harris L. Long | makers hour; rz home rantman’s hony and talent $0——Orchestra “Heigh-ho honr —WGH—281 Muriel Ell ewish sym- ernment n Wars lonovelty or- Radio Echo™ Steiner, syncopation 236 stral concert James Hyndman, Music anklin ugusta 2 i ibyl Huse, speaker 1270—WMSG -day bicycle om Hackett, soloist —Miss N songs Avi Ws Zoller Xylophonists Joseph Martinson, talk : Gillis, baritone oller Xylophonists Eastern Stations spraker Ford, speaker Stotson, readings )—WODA, Paterson—294 sport talk talk i:10-—Dodge Victory Plays worth while Jimmy Love's music ssociated Merchants Six T M. L. :10—Lorenzo Hodson, baritone :30—Normal School Players 1120—WNJ, Newark—268 61-—Rendezvous orchestra —Henry Burbig Andrews, tenor Studio program 20—WGCP, Newark—208 —Merchants' program 30—Alice from Wonderland Krickett orchestra nnyside program mperial Imps —Holly Park I t Notch orchestra —Strand organ recital 0—WAAT, dersey Clty—2146 r c orts resume L hour arshall, songs Andrews, tenor Sunset Banjo Boys ~WAAT Nut Club 830—WIP, Philadelphin—349 orchestra toll call, \day list, dane 860—WOO, PPhiladciphia—340 30-—WOO Trio Dr. Fiske Kimball Dr. Dager nd organ recital ater orchestra and con- program Pennsylvania Male quartet Philadelphia—305 Adelphia Whispering orch. WLIT. Philadelphia—405 Sylvania orches Moments in History s WTIC JANES \ECIPES can be heard TULZSDAY MORNING at 11 o’clock through WTIC Asiif her priceless recipes were not enough, this dean of New England housewives will ofier you a generous SAMPLE of a delicious product. Tune ia for the details. This program is spon- sored by the liams & Carleton Co. East Martford, Conn. Packers for 100 years of Will:ams’ Pure Food Products “For Sale TWC-FAMILY HOUSE on Lawlor St. ar garege; extra large lot; 10 minutes walk from Main St. COX & DUNN 2 MAIN STREET 27 DENTIST X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEMN Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D.S. Dr. T. R. Johnson. D.D.S. NAT. BANK BLDG. 3 ing | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1928, T R e T dentner's dance orchestra 11:30—Smith's Symphonic orchestra 1100—WPG, Atlantic City—273 5—Organ recital Dinner dance orchestra 5—Studio program Ambassador concert orchestra Monticello Mu: —Dance orche: 390—WOKO, Peckskill—216 —Studio program —Jewish Hour or Dance music henectady—380 news Farm School i:30—Dinner music T:30—Orchestra and soloist vigu-11—Same as WTIC ay nothing of the many other peo- ple who contributed to the of the program. The guest speaker was Miss Anne Mo who talled s Work and the new club in New York. The eifec talk was somewhat fact that spoke was in- person of I of the British who is almost In a short talk he suceess too fu ot O'Connor, House of N0 years of age spoke Music ber Commons, ahout Capite i also heard WSM, Nashville, numbers on 11 )1 Fumily program cam. :00d shape from WTIC, part of it from One of the last un was “After My ' sung by lady with e Through the Static | ? Thut's 4ll for today, thanks! CALOUTTA CITY OF GREAT COMMERCE Also Modern With Up to Date Radio Station M world's Lar uring wed heard when can tune A fairly 11 conducted wee h plenty of volume, but lo ackling. There some static, but it didn’t bother thing deal. It started to cut up a bit last night at about 11 o’clock, but p 1o hat time we heard httle of it 1ere fading and crackling on nings, k-¢ was botl both We didi't spend a gr time with the radio over th k- nd. W with this and that hap ning and no coal in the cellar liad to keep hustling. We noticed that the bloopers were wide aw and shouting for all they wern vorth. No matter what time we tuned in, they're always on the joi furnishing little counter-melodiv scintillating runs up and down We love ‘em. o o deal o Wi I'rogr the nte and tea center, Hindu music, may American radio i the new br station = cutta, India," bulletin from the Washington, D. €., headquarters of the National Geographic Society. ron: o scale, saye WEATR, at night, docs a ot ading and twisting and turning. W ned in on the High Jinkers aturday night, managing to car a good share of it. We would have heard more if the station had ‘haved itself. A soprano soloist imused herself singing ¢ character songs while we were tening in, “Caleutta §s one of the most pro- gressive cities of the cast, with all the modern vices to handle its tremendous commieree and entertain its native and forcign population. In less than 230 years it has become the largest city in India and sccond to London in the Bri by mic lis- ol iaid iy only pire “Kalikuta” an Old Tra “When Job Charnock of U [ndia Compuny st up a trading sta- tion at Kalikuta in 1690 the insig- nificant native village occupied a narrow streteh of ry land on the bank of the mud-laden Hooghly with fover-infested s ounding it on the thr contin- ues the bulletin g nock knew the products of the rich Gan and imaputra Valleys could be routed through Kali kuta and the swamps would pratet his station from unfriendly Indian neighbors, but his wildest imagina- tion, perl did ot lead him to vision the Caleutta of the twentieth | century. | : Andrew Jackson Lotel orches- tra burst out in all its glory froni WSM, Nashville, the stution defeat ing all opponents shortly before o'clock Saturday night. We stayed there until the Walter Damrosch | program was announced at 8§ loelock and reception was as satis- factory from that point as from several stations much | home. S wiis sur arer it = other sides, . bert's light opera, “Sweetheart: was pleasingly pre- sented in tabloid form over V and WTIC. “The Old Stager” added his interesting prescnce to the af- | fair, deseribing the scenes and the | action’ theroof, besides introducing }Vhl‘ songs and the characters of the production. The serics of light operas is one of the most pleasing featurcs on the air, to our way of thinking |and Jessica Dragonectte and Colin O'More are well suited to grace the leading roles. . | Victor He: three fmportant at Caleutta. The tr ous shifty channel of the Hooghly ground for commercial flying flags of f mod- , cquip- receive all sizes, the world. Nearly ten miles ern wh ves and warehous ped with all modern devices, and export many millions of do! worth of jute, tea, hides, oil seed, WLS, Chicago, with Dance feature, offered under the sun, making | tional variety all evening. | was also loud. Barn rything for cxcep- WBBM the ev of Bengal And many acres of old swamp land have been reclyimed, forming beau- < and sites fc no signs of fading from WEAF yesterday * afternoon, the station coming through str and clear. But just as soon as {ness fell, bang! along came the ! €8, There were nous Tree Has 600 Roots, 0 the traveler who approach Caleutta by water, its growih is a At the mouth of the the indigo blue water of of Bengal turns to a dirty For much of the So-mile trip mud flats and water-logged | forests form the river. 1o e nery With no evidence of civilization save for the commercial craft nlying the river. Only the most skilled pilot n steer a vesscl up - the shifty nannel. “When almost within sight of Cal- cutta, the smoke stack of a jute mill and here and there groups of native thatched huts break the monotony | { Hymn Time | nati, o until I, Cincin- o'clock, was enjoyed 7:45 o'clock. The presentation consisted of many old time hymns, effectively offered. At T:45 o'clock a heavy crackling started up, marring ception to a large extent Fortu- | nately it didn’t last more than five hours. from W mystery. Hooghly, the Bay brown. DY dramatizations, through Music, stories, talks and dlalog from WJZ-WRZ at 8:1 lock last night and we spent a pleasant hour with the Editor and Uncle Henry, to | FOR ONEWEEK ONLY | March 5th to 10th i These Special Prices On Onyx Pointex Silk Stockings Regular Price For Onyx Pointex Week Only 1.19 “1.35 ‘149 Siyle 155 Service-Sheer. Silk with cotton topsand feet. . . . . . .$150 s Chiffon. Silk to the hem— cotton feet . $1.65 | \ | 541 Service-Sheer. Silk to the hem —cotton feet . $1.85 o e e e o Service Weight. Silk to the hem —cotton feet . . . . . $1.95 Chiffon. Silk from top to toe $1.95 ars | | every morning! stomach, dizzy spells. | This good old reliable medicine has | lace, cotton, coal and other products | nd surrounding provinces | Renier, Pickherdt & Dunn 127 MAIN ST B (Opp. Arch) b PHONE 1409 Very Fine Apartment, To Rent, On South High ished, Two Minutes From Post & Street. Heat Furn Office. Camp Real Estate Co. 272 Main St. Phone 343 N. B. National Bank Bldg. | | of the j and then, rounding a | bend, the great Indian port appears. | athing ghats on hoth banks now are filled with Hindus. One the popular ghats is at the Bo- tanical Gardens where grows the fa- mous Calcutta Banyan tree, Tt cov- | crs nearly two acres and has about 0 trunks. A short distance beyond | perspiring natives loading and un- | loading occan-going vessels solve the | sceret of Caleutta’s development— | commerce. Small boats resembling the Chinese sampans clustered about | the wharves or floating le | «nd from Howrah, Calcutta's manu- | facturing district on the other side of the Hooghly, handle much of the local small freight. A fifteen-hun- dred-toot floating bridge also con- nects the two river bank is Calcutta’s “Mall.” s citics, Caleutta has 1alid houses of mud ind sometimes brick, | ida ke all I its slums with ind thateh, Jordering n inhabited by nalf-starved, unkempt | stion in this district is | \rust 1o the greater | of the city where wide streets and numerous open spuaces, beautified by gardens are | 4 Ly moder shops. hotels | magniticent temples, palatial resi- lences and government and private | ngs that would do honor to| - western city. The presence of | d. unkempt beg ! however, is constantly sugges- | of India i . Square, a few blocks | Hooghly 1s an attractive | The post office, which | s its lake, bears a tablet desig- | nating (he vicinity of the famous | Caleutta Black Hole episode. | “The Maidan, Calcutta’s ‘Mnll,‘} sharp portion Lords turn s “Dalhous the parkway from with its race tr: cricket fields and gardens, is tae rendezvous for sport love nd promenaders. Inl 1he evening the ‘who’s who' of Cal- | Watch Tongue ' For Signs of Illness : Your tongue is nothing more | than the upper end of your stomach and intestines. It is the first thing | vour doctor looks at. It tells at a ! glance the condition of your diges- | tive system-—and physicians say | that 90 per cent of all sicknesses | start with stomach and bowel | trouble. iy Look at your TONGUE A white or yellow- ish coating on your tongue is a danger signal of those diges- tive disorders, It tells you why the least ex- ertion tires you out; why you have pains in the bowels, gas, sour And it's a sign you need Tanlac. | helped thousands who were thy: cal wrecks. See how the first bot- | tle helps you. | Tanlac contains no mineral | drugs; it is made of barks, herbs and roots—nature’s own medicines for the sick. Get a bottle from your druggist today. Your money back if it doesn’t help you. Tanlac 52 MILLION BOTTLES USED DENTIST Dr. Henry R. Lasch Commeicial Trust Bldg. X-Ray Pyorrhca Treatments Free Examination HEART and LUNGS Tucsday and Friday Afternoons NEW BRITAIN CLINIC Booth Block | | WE ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR Shell Fish Such as | S — CLAMS — LOBSTER- IMP — CRAB MEAT and SCALLOPS, SHRI Our Crackers are Always Fresh VISIT OUR DINING ROOM | Open Until Eight | HONISS'S | 22 State St. Hartford “Under Grants™ | BARE radiators send the heat up- war !, wasting itand discoloring the walls. But when your radi- stors are covered with H. & C. Enclo. sures, the walls re- main clean and heat is thrown out ioto the room. For Full Information | Phone 3260 | Hart & Cooley Mfg. Co. | ew Britain, Conn. READ HERALD CLA! TED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS dirty streets and | | cutta are there. costume, wealthy natives ernment officials, both Bri Indian, rub elhow on the swiftly pass in their uniforms represent and colors of the cast by are the Eden gardens. southeast corner Queen Victoria has been memorialized by a magnificent urely to { building in Italian renaissance. 1 central dome of pure whit came from the same quarries from which the marble for the Taj Mahal The white marble palace of the governor of Bengal, overlook- ing the Maldan from the north, was the residence of the Viceroy before was hewn, the capital was removed to 1912, This and *he palat dences, clubs and public ong the Maidan's east gave to Caleutta the name “The City | of Palac OUR MARCH SPECIAL Six Buff 4x6 Easels Reg. Price §5 ARCADE STUDIO Only $3.00 @ri ve Colorful Indian ‘rajahs with their servants foreign cars with chauffeurs whose costumes and myriad styles | and west. “Fort William occupies much of ; v _ bers ends. the river side of the Maidan. | g niengs . in native Clty ltems candidates at the regular and gov- | itish and walks or| New Britain Assembly, ) der of the Rainbow for Girls, will | hold its regular meeting tomorrow | night at 7:30 o'clock in Masonic {hull. There will be a social in the afternoon at 2 o'clock for mem- at 6:30, t 7:30 o’clock. for Colds, Q@rip, Influ- Near- ar- | In the| A Nash Co. Spring line Suit, Tux | edos, $22.90. oJe Ryan. Tel. 2909, —advt, | Miss Lillian Adler of Rhodes| | street entertained at bridge Sunday | afternoon in honor of the Misses | | Pearle Chaimson and Dorothy Wein- | | berg, who were her house guests for | |the weck-end. Prizes were won by | | Misses Rose Swarsky and Helen | Keimowitz. | There will be a meeting of the| Delhi in | Catholic Women's Benevolent Le ial resi- | gion Tuesday evening at 7:30 o'clock. buildings ion of officers will take place ern side, | and whist will follow the meeting. Rev. William A. Harty branch, A. 0. H., will meet in Judd's hall to- | morrow evening at 8 o'clock. The | committee in charge of the annual | ball to held on March 16 will | | make final plans at a meeting at [ 7:30 o'clock. | Camp Clara, R. N. of A. will hold | ;n meeting tonight at § o'clock at St. Jean de Baptiste hall | Martha Chapter, No. 21, 0. e marble Price 30c. The box bears this signature G. % Firore -Proven Merit since 18 F. O. B. FACTORY Amazing NAsH price reductions— A But to anyone ceptional manufacturing ability of C. W. Nash, this achievement in value is not surprising. Itisanother striking indication of his determination Jiner motoring cost. There are 24 Nash models, six of them now priced under a thousand dollars f. 0. b. the factory, every one of them super-powered by the very smooth, 58 Elm A FULL 5-passenger 7-bearing Nash Six Sedan at such an amazingly low price seems almost incredible. Effective Feb. 1st very quiet, very powerful Nash-type 7-bearing motor. And every one of the 24, a finer mode of motoring, with such Nash perform« ance advautages as the Nash straight line drive, Nash tubular trussed frame, Nash 2-way $-wheel brakes, Nashalloy- steel springs, shock absorbers, front and rear— —And among them, 39 alluring color effects, from which to pick the color of your car. . familiar with the ex- to give Nash owners at the lowest possible Drive a Nash, today, and you’ll know why Nash leads the world in motor car value. A. G. HAWKER Tel. 2456 John B. Moran, 313%; Church St. St. ssociate Dealer: THAD PITCHER, W | GUESS' YOUNG | FELLER “ou DIDNT —AFTER SITTING LP THREE NIGHTS WITH A BolL ON PEPPERGRASS Bc PITCHER REAL ESTATE WILLS S FiIRST MORTGAGE'S e A oo | HING THAT BABY WASNT WERE LAST SPRING. WHEN THAD HAD FOLR BOILES/. HO HAS BEEN UNDER THE WEATHER. FOR SEVERAL DAYS, WAS GREATL RELIEVED TODAY, AFTER. A Book AGENT VISITED HIS OFFICE cENTRAC PRESS will confer the degrees on a class of meeting Thursday evening. A social will be- gin at 2:30 o'clock in the afternoon and a Lenten supper will be served The chapter will be called Long scrious illness and complicati | | ofen follow Colds, Grip and Tatlucnes. Guard your health agginst this danges.

Other pages from this issue: