Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Eastern Daylight Saving Time New England States 580—WTIC, Hartford—! 0—Summary of program news :25—Sportograms )—Waldor:-Astoria and| 0—Program frc $—Insilco club orchest $:30—Program from NBC Studios Colt Park dance orchestra 3:30—Studio yprogram 10—Paul Whiteman and orch . 11—Time; program from NBU Stu-! dios organ 11:30—Strand thea 1 ews and we 500—WDRC, New Haven—268 ather and theater | 7—Time; :15=Freda Swirsky, pianist 45—To be announced —Recital by Pupils of Prof. casano $:30—To be announ a—Time 1130—WICC, Bridgeport—260 | 6—Merchants’ Hour | 16 progrim 7:15—Piano recital 7:30—The Question Box lorence Goulden s— Midshipmen orchestra 5:30—Ritz Ballroom orchestra 9—Ernest W. Henckel and Al Mar- | tin * 8.30—Dorothy O'Bricn n:45—Baseball scors 2:55—News; Ritz Ballroom orch 900—WBZ, Springfield—333 5—Hotel Statler orchestra 6—Weather; Junior Troupadours #:55—Baseball scores 7—MacDowell Trio 7:30—8tring E mble S—Program from NBC 10:15—Baseball scores 10:21—Dusk in Dixie 11:15—=Time and w 650—WNAC-WBIS, 5—Ted and His Gang §—Juvenile §milers {enmore Restaurant”orch Mar- 4 er Boston—461 7:30—Organ recital, Del Castillo T 5—Op'ry House Tonight des i g—Program from New York Bl g MEHL Ll 2D LTS =N s William Collier, Lester Allen, 11:15—State Ballroom orchestra Dorothy San erliog * Hollo- E90—WE Boston—508 ‘ way, Martin's 1, Singing Wai- % Nai swspaper Side-| 1978 6 fxa;m: ws and newspaper Side-| srbilt concert quartet 6.43—Chimes and Juvenile Gems 13 —Giolden Age Quintel 45—Big Brother club 30—Program from New York 8—The Pilgrims 9—Program from New York 10:31—Radio forecast and weather 1:35—News e New York | 570—WNYC—526 orrect time —Market high spots —Constance Veitch, cello —Baseball scores 0—Ttalian, V. H. Berlitz rrect tim: :31—Police al —Helen Ri 10 c nd concert ttizen’s Trair Camps and National Defense—Colonel I 1 Devereaux 10:10—>Milton Schrednik, 9:30—Correct t 1n olic al piano 31— tides 610—WEAF—192 b —Chambse Bill a Waldor! Tubes are the nerve center of your radio and require intelli- gent care. B lacing old tubes with new Cm hufi Tubes throughout, vouwillexperience anew thrillin pure, true tone from your radio. 4 AN oint: of Comtacts 292242 ROG N0y, 7 John E. Wewitt operatic concer nber music TO—WOR—122 5 o study period 15—Shelton ensemble diers quartet 1 scores nite Boys Sketei Dy coancers Fair weather nount orch American Hour Broadeast | ! 1 MeCurdy., T60—WEPAP: 5—Mr. and Mrs Wood, S1O—WLWI fh—Casticton Instrun 5l ithleen 1obi 16:45—Talk Paulist League hour E Artist recit or J. Martueci, organ T J. Menendez —Opera S10—WMCA— clhert Fursters Blueberries Chat udio program bia conce 20—WPCH—326 —Industrial chat 970—WABC—300, I's orchestra Ella Datis, sopr 6 uet time 6 ne— Se W. L. Love fore con Glasser, violin orton Lange, piano Jin Timmins, ukulel 15—Law—>M. Chopnick ~Barclay orche Porum says Eastern 1020—WODA, cola Park musi T10—W L Philadeiph TI0—W LT, Phils S0—W I 666 Mataria and quickly relieves Healdaches and Dizad- nees due to temporary Constipation Mads in inz Toxins and is Wighiy estecmed for producing copi- OGS waters evacuations. Cures el EAFLlS B ANy DEA_ER s xSt wew pairan Man— NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 1928 are treat 1 tore tor th | tor liour's music ponent of yuzz, Paul tenia program has © termed tinutes With Paul Whiten 1 w il b Oudeast t ouly in Awmer- 1 but also in Euroj This un- stten through WEAL, Wi or WGY at 10 o'cloc Maine li- big | Ax tiie 1sical ougli WEAF and WTIC at 8:30 for the henetit of the {bushtul nillions whose the prog Sunset” @ 1. meindy ctions from Domizetti's “Elisir Amonr,” the Tentriacts ey “Naughty | Marietta” and Brow “Dream ’!.\ r | program of special portance voter will be broadcast dur- regular Voters' Service per- jod which goes on the air at 7 |o'clock through WEAF and WTIC ynizht's program will contain & re- of the highlights in important |the republican national - convention land a pre-view of the democratic convention which will be held nest uesday at Houston, Texas Russian folk music will he pre |sented during the “Musical Minia i'v:rv‘,\ program which will be broad- least through WEAF at 8 o'clock |Tms program will open with :’Hm)«u< ‘Don’t Tempt Me" which | will be followed by “The Llark, a | composition by the same author. An interesting Russie’s number haikowsky, greatest composer P which is litt known s in- {cluded in the program. The name of the composition 1s “Tcher hky." I which me The Little Shppers™ | & | 014 favorites of other davs wil | be presented during a program to I brosdeast through WJZ and WBZ {at 8 o'clock including "he Bull {Dog on the Bank,” a favorite old part song of male guartet of other Godfrey Ludlow wviolinist as soloist during this and will play “Long. Long will app program lAgo" Other selections include “Ole I'nele Moon Nellie Was a Lady” and In the Cold, Cold Ground.” The Goldman concert band =il present a program of avias from the known operas during a pro- which will be broadcs h Wiz at 8:30. W to “Rienzi,” excerpts from intermezzo from best gram gne overt | Verdi's ¢ |Leoncavallo's “1 Pa to Act 11T from “La Gioconda” and the proc from Gounod's “Queen of | tina somie of the numbers on n | The opening number in the Siurm- r Music program for tonight will be the overture to Bellint’s opem “Norma." This program will be iroadeast at 11 o'clock through WJZ and will include among other numbers Massenet’s Meditation from hate,"" the first movement from cthoven's “Moonlight Son- Raff's “The Mill” and Sinding's i che Grotesque.’ | LG t of Patents Issued i To Connecticut People | Patents tssued by the U, 8. Patent Jur 1628 16 Connecticut ntors. (List compiled weekly {trom the Official Guzette by the ¢ of Harold G. Manning, Man- Bros n street, Britain ) Georze 11 Berry clton, as to International er Co M Cigarette holder or sin Robert 8 Brow Britain or 1 ritain Co. tting tool {1, asagior ) Treatin | Simple Home Treatment That iivercd to the contractor awarde Joho H. Dowd, Hartford, - or to The Lillings & Spencer Co Adjustable socket wreneh. s B, Ereysinger, New Britain ssignor to North & Judd Mfg. Co (2 patents). Flexible closure. George L Howard, Butler, Pa gnor 1o Hartford-Empire Hartford Blowing glassw Willizn ¥ Johnston and A, W Keen, No Y. No Y., assignors o Th Naugatuck Cliemical Co., Nanga tuck. Mcthod of and apparatus for tresting solut and products. icorge M. Kelley, Lowell, Mass assignor, by miesr ssignments, to | Winchester Repeating Arms <o Haven Heat-inter-change 1 H i - Lewis, Bridggport, Hull, N w Bridgeport, assign to Generdl Eleetrie Co. Non- tallic sheathed multiple-conduc- abile Sylvanus D, Locke, Bridgeport As v and receiver and support th ©s N, Macrae, Stamtord, as or to Petroleum Heat and Pow- ¢r Co., N. Y., N. Y. Oil burner. Martin L. Martus, Woodbury, and . 1. Becker, Waterbury Primary cell Hiram H. Maxim. Hartford, as <ignor 1o The Maxim Silencer Co. Controlling the exhaust of inter combustion «ngin embert H. Moulthrop, Norwalk, Electric-attachment cap. Tzador Novak, Bridgeport sigyor to The Rayhbestos Co. sheet and producing the same. Kurl E. Peiler, West Hartford, ns- sgnor to Hartford-Empire Co, Hartford Ring splice for woven- wire fabries, South plug as- Plied Lidwig Reichold, Winsted, assign- or to The Fitzgerald Mig. Co., Tor- rington. Electric iron. Trade-Marks Registered The Collins Co., Collinsville. (2 strations) Plows and parts wreof; and Tools Fastern Conn. Poultry Producers, Ine, Willimantic. Eggs Angus D, MacFarlane, Hartfor: Electrie lamps for automobiles and other vehicles rving 1, Mann. Bridgeport, doing husiness as Er Mann Laboratories Depilatoris. North & Judd Mfg Co, New Brit- amn. (4 registrations). Buckles, snape, grommets, and washers, ete; D rings, Harness rings: Spurs, bits: and stirrups The Sterling Novelty Mfg. Co Waterbury, Slider-controlled separ- able fasteners. The B. Willlams Co., Glaston- bury. Shaving sticks Trade-Mark Applicant Aftex Laboratories, Inc. New Ha- ). Liqud mouth wash, mouth- vash powder, ete The Black-Arrow Knitting Co., New Britain, Hoslery McKesson & Robbing, Ine, Bridge- port. (32 applications) & for nose and throat spray and gargle; 5 for cintment; 2 for general tonic; 3 for hampoo; 3 for magnesium hvdrox- | ide; 1 for preparation for the relfef ot indigestion; 3 for alternative gen- cral tonics and laxatives; 2 for eye- wash: 1 for antiseptic ointment; 3 for tooth paste; 3 for deodorant: and 1 for shaving soap, Morris Noveck. doing business as Dermatox Chemical Co., ain. Skin lotion and an antiseptic toilet ercam. Varicose Veins Reduced Or Money Back Is Giving Amazing Results, ou have varl veins or bunches an start today to bring them back mal and if you a1 wiso you do w0 Just et app! the enlarged o and Afrer any dispensing pharma- it night #nd morning to 1t 1s very powerful daye treatment the vei 1 to grow smaller and by regu- | reduce to norma to reduce varicose of eczoma, ulcers. or Nesitate e such a antiseptie ofl that lo laste a long time. Any 1 supply you. The Fair Drug tle ot once. It DR. KEITH If You Want * RELIABLE DENTISTRY at MODERATE PRICES 338 MAIN ST. Wednesday Specials Heavy Rochester Garbage Cans Medium size. White Enamel Refrigerator Dish Set 1.0K .. of 2. Refrigers Regular &) Regular 79¢ tor Pans. Heavy Galvanized. SECOND HAND GAS RANGES $5.00 UP. A. A. Mills Plumbing — Heating — Sheet Metal Work 66 WEST MAIN PHONES 51005101 New Brit- | an origial bottle of Moone's | KENTUSKY COAST GUARD 1S UNIQUE Is Only Inland Crew in United States ‘ Louisville, Ky. June 19 (P roi 1917, of crew of the stcamer Queen which sank in the local while bound from Pittsbureh with a | nati holiday crowd for the New Orleans | bel Mardi Gras [tem Records of the station show that |ster lives have be City, h saved, 0 bodies recovered and approxi- | the mately $6.500,000 in property sal- | way vaged during its existenee, ture out depression marked the abiding pl harbor [of a giant meteorite. Careful eximi- some | though drills succ 15 passengers and lu geologist decided that the nllgh']{li digging conditions ar | tavorable, NEW ROTARY HOME ons of the crater confirmed his| Minncapolis, June 19 P—A pro- of. Then came numerous at- [posal for a building to hou IS to salvage the hidden mon- |quarters and be a monum for its iron and nickel, but al- e head- nt to the rowth of Rotary Tnternational was e | ecded in reaching [ made at the annual conyvention ¥ mass further progress was al- | terday. s impossible. The present ven- | The plan was presented by C. R. , its buckers say, is “un out and | Perry of Chicago, secretary, who samble drafted a resolution for presentation Samples of oxidized materials un- {10 delegites here from all parts of liha: warla The building would be the s mak | it ected in mast coust guardsmen storms, sleet worth about $85 a ton at current |Chicago, present headquarters, it is and gales mean constant danger, prices, the ion reports. An |understood. but there remains a single detach- | |average ton per cent iron = == {ment of the service for which | land 5.9 per it nickel, while| APPEAL FROM ( cony balmy June weather and calm sum- | smaller quantitics of platinum and | Richard Vogel and William G. "m.\ days bring the chief threat of Bm Pm 0SS Is Made m Ar] iridium arc also present. Metallur- |Dunn, - co-defendants in - a suit disaster, gr ® gists think it will not be difficult {SWit brought by the Suvings Bank of | oot Gataahment acated 2t ihe| lto tuecaver = large percents of | New Britain against William Darrow [ brink of the Ohio river falls on 1I|~'! zona sffl]’(}h [ these metals. jand others, appealed to the superior Louisville water front, constitutes! X6 | A shaft now is being sunk to a |€OUrt a decision rendered in city {the only inland U. §. coast {depth of 1000 fect at a point south |COUTt 1ast Saturday by Judge Morris stution in the service. The “busy| New York, June 19 P—Geolo- | of the crater, and from the bottom |2: S48 in which w resale of. proper- scason” for these men is during | gists and mining engineers just|or this hole a cross cut will be 1Y Was ordered. The appeal was {the time when summer boating is| oLt Hariven to the supposed location of made through Judge R Gaftney [best, but in the winter they are of- | 2081 0 B LT OO S e mass. 1t s expeeted 1his work 1 s returnable in superior court [ten pressed inte guty when the| F%9ER NN B N O ounted o can b tompleted in fifteen months (Of HArtford on the first Tuesday in }14 vee becomes ice-coated and ve- | [m_”‘\ September. hicles skid down the steep inctine [T L ) {into the river. During one day| T e T NG dow y’] jthey have recovered alxteen trucks] o "0 oLl R 3 |and motor cars trom the waters. |2 S0 SRR 0 8 T baiteved | More than 50 years ago the toll |, =\ [ 5 Ch g ‘.‘O{“ 55 |congress. by special act. as well as| oo T B |of life and property taken by the| JO0T WICC RN RO falls of the QOhio river and the|fhnt 56" FEOW 18 ML OF |t crous rapids below inspired | o ’H" b I“w‘m e [the formation of a volunteer life [570 fect derp. Previous aitempts fo| savink ssrwice, Wor dhelr iworl |82 B0 TR LT ;'.m’ S the Kentucky legislature, awarded | POT 88 PUIBTEN 10 C58 BRIVERE SO0 [tham ot medais | Mining Journal, Sl |- In. 1888 (Paill Boynton, or New |[SERE S8 UL LU e Forks D e Hyag 0 "K“"’d,&p“‘/],fl‘r burne 1tself out I its suit, was attempling to swim {r0m | giopy 4y ouch gpace and plunged | [Bittauurgn o vew, “oneans el TENECEE L RO sc Cl th [ was escorted by a small coat con-| D B E B S e over the reen (v taining 13 {pondents eof eastern | Boynton ana the Loat passed over| the falls unaware of the danger ot‘ i"\‘\ rapids below. The life saving| lerew rescued the boat's passengers and Boynton, seriously injured, was | { picked up by a river packet below | {the whirlpeol The attendant agita- | men, principally corres- | newspapers. | tion resulted in establishment of a federal life station here, | During the Dayton flood of 1313, station Dayton | {the men from the Louisville whe had been ordered to were the first to cross the Miami| river to reach unpenetrater flood | areas and to 10 families. | | A Teat o 1 widespread | comment was their rescue in Feb. | —————————— SCAOOL DEPARTME NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT BIDS WANTED FOR ALTERATIONS AND ADDI- TION TO HIGH SCHOOL BUILD- INGS AT NEW BRITAIN, CONN. Sealed proposals for the construc- tion of a new four story addition approximately 192°-07%150°-0" and alterations to the present Academic | High School and also to the present Vocational High School at New Brit- ain, Connecticut, will be reccived by Mr. Joseph M. Halloran, Chatrman | of Building Committce, at the office | |of the Schoel Department, Walnut | Hill School, New Britain, Connecti- cut, on or hefore 10:00 o'clock a. m. | Daylight Saving Time on July 9, 1928, on plans and gpecifications prepared hy the Warren Holmes- Powers Company, Atchitects. 112 | Fast Allegan Street, Lansing, Michi- | | gan | Bids wid he taken separately on {the general contract, heating, plumb- ling and electric wiring and must be {made on the blank forms accom- panying the specifications. Sub-bid |mailed to the architeet will be d resene | the contract | Plans and specifications mav be scen at the offices of the architect, Lansing. Michigan, and at the of- fices of the School Committee, New | Britain, Connecticut. Plans and | speclfications may be secured of the | Superintendent of §chools, New Brit- | |ain. Connecticut. on deposit of $15.00 | | which will be refunded to contrac- ‘lnrs submitting a bona fide bid upon | return of the plans and specifications |in good condition. Sub-contractors {requesting plans and specifications | shall deposit $15.00 which amount | less cost of blue printing plans, will | be refunded upon return of plans and specifications in good condition. All gencral bids must be accom- panied by a certified check for 207 |of the amount of the bid submitted land all plumbing. heating and elec- |tric wiring bide must be accompa- nied by a certified check for 57 of the amount of the bid submitted, all checks made pavable to the Chair- an of the Building Committee, Britain, Connecticut, which {sum shall be forfcited to the School District if contractor awarded the Jcontract rcfuses to sign architect's |standard form of contract and file | an approved Surcty Company's bond | for the full amount of the contract | | within fifteen days after opening of | bide. The right is reserved to reject any or all hids. JOSEPH M. HALLORAN, Chairman of Committes on School | | Accommodations. June 15, 1928 without ‘benefit of science. The Tn- dians explained the origin of ""i huge erater with the pretty fra dition of a flaming god who | (tumbled from the sky and disap- | peared into the ground at that spot. | Late in the last century, however, | desert as it fore out hole big enough to accommodate itsten million body For at 700 years, and probably many more, the meteorite lay 1n ifs grate of the carth n’ ton | SCALP SPECIALISTS SAY BANISH GRAY HAIR EASILY | APPLY YOURSELF—NO ONE KNOWS LEA’S HAIR TONIC | RESTORES HAIR TO COLOR OF YOUTH ALL DRUG STORES $1.00 A BOTTLE ) ] Fnamel Flyosan, the Oid Reliable Fly Killer Herbert L. Mills “The Handy Hardware Store” 336 MAIN STREET Fitch- Jones Co. MEN'S SHOES Johnston & Murphy—they have all the styles demanded by the well dres durance. Sport Shoes SAY MRS RITCHIE— RUN OVER AND FiLL IN FOR ME THIS AFTERNOON, SADIE ISNT ABLE To BE HERE --- OR THANKS, “THATS JUST DEAR OF YOU - - - == - HURRY OVER--- 'SHORE “LOBSTER” DINNER From 5 to 8 P. M. Every Day (Except Sunday) HON]SS’S '« man—smart looking—and built for en- Street Shoes Golf Shoes PRIZE — SHE HOLDS WONDERFUL CARDS —AND HOW SHE PLAYS THEM - -~ - WE RAVENT ANYTHING TO LOOK FORWARD To -NowW BUT “THE LUNCH Luex WINNERS! WHO CLAIMS TO BE ONLY A BEGINNER, BUT KNOWN TO BE A LUCKY FINISHER,AND PRIZE GRABBER