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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1928. N Eastern Standard Time. New England States 560—WTIC, Hartfcrd—5 B:25—Time, news, summary of grams 8:30—Sea Gull Qinn 5—Baseball scores 9—Silent for WoAC —*Ask Me Anothor ooks." n Da Silva I—W 1 8—studio News 300—W BZ. and her —Metropotitan ¥ulo —News wspaper Nig —Hotel St y—Radio Nat 7 B—Drogram from NI B:30—Music —Kappa Ganima Time and news fusical progrim Baseball scores B0:35—Dick Newcomb ar B1:30—Time and weather 650—WNAC-WBIS, Boston—164 B—Ted and His Gaug $—Juvenile Smile :30—Leo Dreyer an Irish Serenaders Joe and Bob—Our ienc Middlesex Post vgram Program trom New York Eastern Stations Psi Hour Theodore Frecmin Dorothy Grindy Lido Vi Pat Cris 1120—WN Frank S=—=Irving | 3 fenry Davis and orchestr 30— Frank Huber, Elks Hotel orchestra [ 10:45—t and songs I, Boston—148 Leo Wood nard and orchestri Wally Roman's orchestrs 1120—WGCP, Newark—268 u—Alice from Wonderland Ja rown's orchestra Cellar Kn s 9:30—Jimmy \ 0—WF Motorist | o's Gondoli Newark—268 hariton American Legion and Mrs. other club Program S0—Musicale Shearer, songs Philadelphia—105 iladelphia program $60—WIP, Philadelphia Alex Hooven's Ramblc Roll 1. birthday list Allen Miriam Birchall, songs §—Iireside hour, mixed quartet 860—WO0O0, wdelphia—319 —Elsie Mille prano WOO Trio 1100—WP larms | ke | $:30—Chel tlantic Radio program ! @1:05—Radio forecast and program 31:10—Organ recital New York Stations B70—WNYC—526 — Market high gpots 190—Fran Gabrielle, 25~—DBaseball scores 0—Spanish lessons 30—Poli 35—Alr College 15—Frank Doblin, songs 8:30—Appreciation of music course | 9:45—Testimonial dinner to William J, Delaney 11—Police alarms 610—W B—Twilight hour 6—Waldorf-Astoria. dinner music 6:55—DBaseball scores F—Synagogus servic 4:30—Delta Upsilon Gl ley ¥ell, baritone me as WTIC 9—Correct time 9 ame as WTIC B1:30—Hal Kemp's orchestra G60—WIZ—154 nderfoot from N. Y. in Parls” | ~Eleanor Kinscy, soprano : stock market, cotton prices S Alice soprano orel concert orchestra rning to Fly” concert orchestra Hawaiian Troupe 30— Kittens dunce orchestra Dance orchestra T90—WGY, Schenectady—380 reports and news . farm school studio program weather F—a92 club, Rom- mixed quartet !Wife Liked to Drive; Hubby Had to Sit in Back Angeles, L. April 18 (P11 oman sists driving the ymobile she isn't « when her [ finan- on ngri- at livores Lolita Cabrera Guins love to a ruled a divoree Wilkin Wil- Wil- Wile: ai- me as WRZ voree f making o -Sylvania Forest their National High drove. yesterday in @ Savoy-Plaza orchestra; John nnedy, talk m. to Johi Wilkinson counter-comiplaint ted on driv- n Wilkinson, 4 his wite that s I o1 than he in insi orehiestra | Vil more ar Pulido b:30—Around the lumber mus Henry Ford Presents 'Lloyd George With Tractor 18 (P—TY lunch- Her paid fo Mr. on WHY PAY MORE? We Give 1 5% Off On EASTMAN KODAK ANSCO MADE CAMERA ARCADE STUDIO 21-HOUR SERVICE £1.00 MONTELLY TESTING PLAN Wy Eaperts New Britain Radio Service Radioe and Supplics S10—WLWI—230 elephone 6-—Rochelle College hour WILL APRIL FOOL YOU WITH AN ACCIDENT? Insure Today — Don’t Delay 373 Main Street. w York stations came in well at s last night, but when a good unber was on it came through ith too much static. WBZ and WGY came in clearly while KDKA could come in for a moment, not ind then die away. Ne¢ 0o strong Troubadours will again pre- i o'clock through Some the w stations in 1 Rollins, Laddics, a voeal trio, or v it at 8 o'clock WIZ, and a delighttul n 1 by them. sill inelude I Lost My Heart “Chick-Chick Chick- sunshine will progriom Seve or- umbers also in the ol ions will 1o 1 hits from mnd new featured <ters tonight It will be in and con cars with produc listen luctions. cvening will be 100l orchestra high 1l parts of the country v for you from Chic heard through Dyorak the New World™ number of the ) tional Higl composed of s from who will pl will t 4 o'clock From fefature hony the Music orchestra will overture to Auber Diavolo.”” Other num- Massenet's 'k 5 Grunteld’s manee.” program through WJ1Z at 11 o'clock. lnmber comes WATERBURY CIVIL - WARVET'S RECORD {1, F. Dickenson Says He Drove! ce | S, x Grant’s Coach } Waterbury, April 18 (®—The stir- ring days after Lee's surrender at Appomattox in the civil war real to Is Dickenson because, he exy 1S, drove the coach that carricd General U, 8. Grant back to Washington, Dickenson, now 8%, had nearly five years of war rvice after he enlisted t the age of 21, An injury to his hand placed him under General En- feles, chief quartermaster of the I'nion armie He drove the gen- cral’s outfit of four ho s for a Tim and then was transferred to jonother division of the Army of the | P'otomac. After his assignment to drive G t 1ck to Washington he drove the neral’s coach in Washington daily for thre s He s the reneral was 1stomed 1o take two children with him to his offic such Dickenson attributes his alth to avoidance of liquors. As 12 soldier he wa one. put in the guard house for three days, he says, beca he refused 1o take liguor with quinine as a remedy for ma- we rood rlin, April 18 (UP)-——The gov- ernment has instructed the federal state 1o issue a decree dissolving the communist militury organization known as the “red front fighters.” DENTIST Dr. Henry R. Lasch Commercial Trust Bldg. X-Ray Pyorrhea Treatmen 1t You Need Meney For Biils, Come to Us $100 LOAN javable $5 monthly, plus lauful interest. $200 LOAN payable $10 monthly, plus lawful interest. $300 LOAN payable $15 monthly, plus lawful interest. Other Amounts in Proportion Cog fixed by law. Every repay- ment reduces the cost. All loans in strict privacy. OGETY n St m o« Hgh Sts, BENEFIIAL LOAW § in- | school stu- | }ionu))lps in 1904 and 1306. | produced another famous Olympic [iu[][] BnAT EREW hampion in Ralph Craig. winner of both the 100 and 200 metre dashes (at Stockholm in 1912, | “Craig was as great an all-around | sprinter as 1 ever knew,” says the |veteran coach. “He was a bit slow off the marks but had tremendous drive. He was a good quarter-miler and, 1 believe, could have broken the 1 world's record at 300 yards if he had |tried for it. The funny thing about Craig is that he was a hurdler when he came to Michigan, but we quickly converted him.” I Tiger Rowers May Be Sensation: i of the Entire Year 18 (P— W on the Princeton, N. T, April Princeton has u varsity cr tore or less placid waters of Lake Carnegie that may turn out to be Chinese Now Want to 1928 wnd—they Have National Anthem fere—possibly Shanghai, April 18 P—A Chinese he Olym- natidnal anthem is wanted. The { Kuomintang, or nationalist party, ! It's a husky boatload, with 1ots has announced a competition with a s and power, the first | prize for the best anthem, open to in their new pocock shell | all Chinese, which is expected to ¢ afternoon is a good sam- |close on June 30. of the Tizer rowing stuff. There ! Prizes will be uwarded alse for a i< plenty of experience, 100, for sev- hymn of the Kuomintang party and it of the cight men who pulled the | an anthem also of the Chinese revo- new cedar eraft on its maiden voy- | lution. are veterans of the 1927 crew | hat broke Yale's long winning | treak. | What this outfit chiefly needs, in | the opinion of its youthful coach, Chuck” Logs, is a sensc of humor, or any lighthearted equivalent that | Will help the boys snap out of it “Its a4 good crew,” Logg readily | ut it hasn't settled down | Lit its real stride yet. Of cours 's pretty early. We haven't even time trial. Under the condi- | : boys have come along very | the varsity has been in a | in spite of nwnerous shifts, | What it needs, T think, is something {to remove the tensene ome one | to do a little back-slapping with the | |attitude of ‘come on, gang, let's row Princeton hasn't committed itself a definite program, aimed at the 2 vouts, but it is no seeret igers will make that their goal. Jeff Alison of Little . this varsity eight, if it develops in the same fashion it did last scason. will make it interesting for any other Olympic contender. whether it's Yale, Olympic winner { four years ago; California or Wash- ington. from the far west, or Co- lnmbia’s Intercollegiate champions. | The Olvmpie distance, 2,000 me- tres, or about a mile and a quarter. is made to order for Tiger crews. Princeten has always favored the shorfer distances and trained ex- {clusively for them, one reason why they have declined to enter the four. mile grind at Poughkecpsie. Their on Lake Carne the Hen a mile five-six- sensation of it softly Sami’s banner in pie regatta at Amsterdam., whisper v Unele Pwell but slump, Tr and teenths, The Tigers will be better able to weigh thelr Olympic prospects after {they have had a few races under their belts. Thev open the season st Mas<achusetts Tech April 28, Columbia and Pennsylvania on Take Carnegiec May 12 and tackle e and Cornell at Derby, Conn.. a week later. ‘Whether or not the Tige row in {the Olvmpic they may have a repre- sentative or two on the Ame track and field team at Amsterdam. { Keene Fitzpatrick, who has been | coaching since the davs when a pole vaulter who cleared ten foet was a | [record-breaker, is drilling a likely squad of sprinfers, hnurdlers and, imong others, a h jumper in B. D. Hedgers of Plainficld, N, J., who | ix clearing 6 feet 4 inche The dash men also have the bene- { fit of expert attention from Archie Hahn, the former Michiran star. who was developed by Fitzpatrick 2nd eaptured four Olympic champ- ' When In Hartford Dine at the Oldest and Best Sea Food Restaurant. Sea Food direct from the Ocean. Retail Department Connected HONISS’S 22 STATE ST., HARTFORD TUnder Grant's at least. Rs I TSk e i g MONEY FOR SPRING NEEDS We Will Loan You $10 to §300 Do you need money for repairs to the house, paint- ing, remodeling, etc.? If so, you can borrow the necessary amount here in a convenient, dignified way, and repay us in small. payments—taking up to twenty months if necessary. No endorsers required and no embarrassing investiga- tions made. You will find that you will better work Jone at a lower price if you have money on hand. Call on us without obligations. THE MUTUAL SYSTEM TELEPHONE 4-9-5-0 81 W. Main St. Opp. Capitol Theater Professional Bldg. Can be bought at a bargain! 2 family house on Lenox Place. Right in the center of the city, only 5 minutes’ walk from the post office. To be sold to settle up an estate. Camp Real Estate Co. 272 Main St. Phone 343 N. B. National Bank Bldg. YOUNG DAVIS WL GET MUCH HONEY Husband of One of Dolly Sisters| Not Cut OF by Father Montreal, Que., | Mortimer Davi | Ro: April 18 (P— Jr., husband of | ika Dolly of the famous Dolly | | Sisters dancing team, and his step- | mother, Lady Davis, are to share | in the net annual revenue of | tate of the late Sir Mortimer | Canadian financier, the will ! revealed. The estate is! estimated at $150,000,000. | At the end of 50 years—the period set by the will before the estate is (o | be settled—if his son has dicd and Lady Davis has died without issue | of his marriage with her, Sir Mar- | timer directed that the estate be di- | vided among a hospital, the Federa- | fying gloy There would have been no injuries from fly- ing glass had these cars been equipped with iplex —THE GLASS THAT WILL NOT SHATTER —$0O CANNOT FLY AND CUT TRIPLEX—Endorsed by insurance companies Two layers of fine glass and a center layer of pyralin You can crack it—but it will not shatter. Your eyesight is important—take this precaution | beneficia | betwe tion of Jewish philanthropits and | ron-sectarian charitable institutions in the Province of Quebec. When Sir Mortimer died in France last March it was rumored he had disinherited his son because of the younger Davis's runaway marriage to the dancer. It was known the two !?zld been estranged by the son’s ing the bishop at the rites were Rev, marriage, ! Bernard Donnelly, Hartford, deacon; Four specific requests of $100.000 { Rev. James Broderick, Terryville each were mnade by the will. The | syb.deacon; Rev. Joseph Rice, N ics are the Montrcal Gen- | Haven, and Rev. James Roach eral hospital, the Notre Dame hos- | Derry, acolytes and Rev. Felix Scox pital, the Federation of Jewish | jjo \Waterbury, incense bearer. Philanthropies and the Young Men's | Burial was held in St. Andrews Hebrew association. | cemetery. Father Sullivan was a The plan for the disposal of the | native of Lebanon and was in the residmary estate, provisional on his | priesthood, rars. wite dying childless, leaves 75 per- | R e R (hn\( 'lol be used to build a General FOR EUROPE ospital in Montreal. The majority i 18 B of the management must be of Jew 1&1'\’:‘11““ ,‘:’;?{fi"v ish ""“ but it is to be open to all | oo S Sl of the f ms, left by ;x{rr~ {;.';.'n.;v:;‘x;l:].s,h"whn PemAining =8 §giy st night for New York S maus whence they will sail May 5 for o anesill | Marseilles on a combination rail, water andrair jaunt through Europe. The European trip will end in July S at Amsterdam, where Fairbanks | will witness the Olympic games. FUNERAL HEL» | Ansonia, April 18 P—Tic Tuneral of Rev. Eugene L. Sullivai, pastor |of the Church of the Assumption, | who died Sunday was held this morning with a pontifical mass cele- brated by Bishop John J. Nilan of | the Hartford diocese. Those assisi- A New Feature of QOur Glass Department TRIPLEX “The Glass That Will Not Shatter” Now Ready for Immediate Installation at Rackliffe’s ' Our stock of Genuine Polished Plate Glass in the hands of thoroughly experi- enced glass experts, contin- 'ues to serve any and every The clear vision feature is another important demand of the car owner Triplex recommendation. 15 e ._1 cKLIFFE/ BROS. PARK STREET AT BIGELOW Paint — Hardware — Glass — Sash — Doors — Interior Trim Agricultural and Builders’ Supplies - TWERNT INSURED ( Q) Wiy, % LIKE TH WORK G PROFESSIOI.AL WRECKERS To » e & S %7 THE RED KENNEL HOT DOG STAND AT PECKS CORNER! WAS UPSET LAST NIGHT- THS IS THE THRD AND LAST “TIME,IN SIX WEEKS,