New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 29, 1928, Page 32

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O'PROGKi7é . E DLEGATONS 2% IREPIRE FOR HOME N FRIDAY | S—Honduran music and noveltles | (@ 1+ o [s—rostcs taum - amencan “S01id South” Vote Cast a Eastern Dajlight Saving Time | songs and dances | I pR— |'s:30—Heckendorn and Julicher, | i ; | cchenternntunerer - Hougton Gonvention New England States |, ... 1. | MD—“‘!‘IC:—-Hnrlfnnl—hs.s | Houston, Ju (#) — Having Gl e S tay Peila o i e 6:235—Sportograms 2 E ADE | solid Su delegations to demo- 6:30—Hotel Bond Tri L 4 cratic national convention were pre- 5.:5_3;’:0“},02,0,,.;0 ‘ R0 WA emd o0 | paring for triumphal homecoming . b, contralto {yg4ay arier having played a leading 7—Chopin Glee club of New Brit- ain Datitons il gt nomination of Governor —Piano recital | anu-El serv-| ifred E. Smith of New York. 7:45—Talk by Capt. H. F. Haynes { Bvery gland vote went to i - ecit i [Smith on the tirst and only roll call. ¥=Ausiin 1Ran] tavlinl 3 . SOPTano | Now England delegates were jubl- §:36—Colt Park Municipal orch. Sl ng aule e o o is (s Le B8 lint at the overwhelming Smith vie- 3 «-A:H}:n;‘o‘:; f»nefi;“rcs :;;, pro- Hirsch, violinist [torv. United states Senator David L jHe El . b Haskins and Dawson, duo | \Walih of Massachusetts said that 10—Program from NBC Studios AR s Apuns ihin lihe party had chosen the strongest 11—Time; Hotel St. Regls orch Vitall RKoretzky, tenor; Bright |y qigential candidate it could have 3 e Trio named and one who would lead it to 11:30—News and weather inter's Saxo o | 1130—WICC, Bridgeport—260 Wielws Suzopknee victory at election Were Enthusiastic —M Thou . :—s‘:lrd(;:mprngr:n.\m Adami, violinist With the rest of Smith's support- ? Madehue Hardy, v ¥ngland delegates were en- §—De Luxe hour of music 500—~WDRC, New Haven—2608 isical Period thusiastic contributors to the tumult- 970—WABC—309 uous demonstration that followed Se-=ipsnmis’ Al -Dr. Hodgdon's “Food" | the announcement of the vote. Stan- 6:45—News, weather and theater | 500 BEG IR S e A e T 6 ;;‘_‘.e[‘;‘n ball scores Martucel's Mapletonians Lobbed up and down in milling pro- o4 L \—Yrank Lyon, tenor cession around the hall, while men T=Tipé; Oonn. 3 6:45—Broadway chat nd women stood on chairs and 7:15—Clarence Stretch 05 ATt Rosen Aol gar Platt, pianist 7:30—Studio program 8—To be announced 9—Time 900—WBZ, Springfield—333 | 6—Weather report gt ::o;_"‘z::ym};:":?r::"Ch“"" 9:15—Anthony Pesci, tenor —Base! cores : 5 ke 6:30—Program from NBC Studios | J:30—Folish ’"}‘_"“‘m i 7—The Ramblers Shrenberg, 1:30—Program from NBC Studios 1—Plzzitola Strummers ries ern's ori During roll call each New England state was acclaimed by other dele- gations as it was recorded solidly for Governor Smith. Two speeches sec- onding Governor Smith's nomination had been made by New England delegates, one by former M: r An- drew J. Peters of Boston and an- ofher by Park H. Pollard, chairman of Vermont delegation and a cousin Lof President Coolidge. stra ., Arthur Hunt, musical Roschiglian, tenor 0—Baseball scores 11:01—Negro achicvement hour —_— i o 1 2 mid.—Orchestra :36—Hampden Glee club AR s CANYT STOP MARATHON i!—r°¥:m§l‘u;r“$:;;“::(ra 4—News; Welsh hour of music - . i s - - S 10—Weather; finance talk B 850—WNAC-WBIS, Buston—164 | - %7 e FIEAOT 0 Nine Couples Enter 19th Day of 5—Ted and His Gang 0 Entertainers 30—Washington Pancing in N. Y.—Four Doctors é—Juvenile Smile 6:30—Dinner dance music o | 1—"Amos 'n’ Andy” | Eastern Stations Watch for Drugs. e Minute Stories from Life New York, June 29 (UP)—Milton| Rty Bt Hie Jrane (==WODA, Paterton =208 D, Cran promoter of the inter- $—Music Lovers’ Half Hour ews; sport talk tional dance marathon, is begin -5:30—The Chimney Swallows wikte Tagaucs Californians |ational dance marathon, is begin. 9—Program from »w York —studio Trio ”mg, to 'v'] ""\ B g t 11:06—News i netiae o something he can't sop. 11:15—Kenmore Restaurant orch. | s—paramount orchestra Nine couples entered the 11t 580—WEEI, Boston—508 R fNedtly dosnlisnal s, | of_the coniest in Madison 6—Waldorf-Astoria_concert orch. | 11—Arcola entertainment ware Garden tolays. No one has Rl el Elstenia DD e orains. nd 1 univers 7:30—8tudio program | , Newark—268 i $—Program from NBC Studios | 10:01—Lou Keating, planist look strong enough to keep on in- definitely. :30—N itan Country club 10:15—TIrvington High school en- :D’—O-Pr:;::z: from Nl“‘) Studios 1.\ nble The gate receipts continue good, | 11:01—Weather and Flying ¥ore-| 11— Belleville orchestra but Crandall fears that if he doesn’t cast 860—WIP, Philadelphia—349 zt some action into the marathon, | ny of the spectators will lose in- l beetle control 11:06—Jacques Renard and orch. A —Japanese beetlo contr B ary 1103’:)]_9:‘?':. Fhat e | s lk‘j‘b‘n‘: e R ek 'I'va. city health departme nt post- e~ 1100—WPG, Atlantic .l‘il_\—vfihl ‘w‘ four .[>|Y\>‘\U‘l|n:’ ‘:lxr“fl\r:;":“.li |I:S“; New York st “the rainers were keeping 4 570—WNYC—526 | s—Castillians dance orchestra v’lw"“].;.m'.‘_xr“.’l;':Ifiwly;fidl,,mi‘\;::"r:;;: G—Artist’ Tecital ert orchestra band 6:05—Market hight spots 6:10—"Songs of Yesterday"” 6:30—French lessons 7:31—Police alarms; scores 7:35—Alr College: “Speech Art with Word Craft” 7:50—Lola Chalfonte, soprano Iwould be stopped if he caught any- one taking narcotic: The negro contest fn Harlem was enlivened by a wedding. Bernard Paul and Amelia Hallbach danced | out to a truck, got on it and danced co 9:30—Creator: | 10:30—Oriole Glee club | 11—Dance orchestra | | 790—WGY, Schenectady—380 ock reports; news B er mus| P ¢ way down to the municipal — “usenza, mandolinist Dinner music all the way down I 3 t)s‘l‘(\.f:‘:‘rfrts“r::ner tenor —Health talk building where they were married Ns:\'ml; Blanchay, soprano 0—WGY Players They then went back to the truck {01—Rudolph Joskowitz, violinist |S—IFro-Joy hour jant’ rosumed tneir place in tic 0—Negro arts program E R e {marathon. i 10:01—Police alarms; weather me a3 WEA [ — 3 N7, Sl Rivera to Meet His 610—WEAF—1493 | :16—Maurice Tyler, tenor* :30—Jolly Bill and Jane, duets 6—Waldorf-Astoria dinner music TN N | Former Fiancee Soon 9 | ciliation is expected soon between | 5—Baseball scores i betwe i Gen. Primo De Rivera, the dicta- T N"TH] A[;T[]R “EA[] nd hie recent flancoe, Senorita | iy i e o Castells vealthy —C| 3 e Orchestra and 3 des De Castellana, wea { Ve 2 st 9 | heiress, the Journal correspondent gamé a% |wired from Madrid toda The dispatch said that the «nd-} cing probably would occur in the | jm.mwhmn future, but jp private and |entirely without the gorgeous cere- | mony that had.been planned before | 9—Same as WTIC— | A e [Succumbs to Heart Disease in Austria 660—WJIZ—454 —The Gotham Trio 0—Reports, stock market, finan- cial summary. cotton prices, agri- S |Gen. De Rivera recently broke the “cyltural reports Vienna, June 29 (Pr—Leo Unrl(’\l; |engagement. g 5:45—J. David Danziger, violinist tein, noted American actor and| Do Rivera, without warning, an- 5:55—Program &ummary right, died in a sanitorium nounced the breaking of the froth | 6—Scott’s Venctian at erg last might from heart s fow weeks ago, on the ground | |that Senorita De Castellana had ap- 6:25—Baseball scores 16 6:30—Same as WBZ 1 7—Correct time | —Stardom of Broadwa —Same as WBZ richstein, who was born il peareq at the stock exchange. In in 1865, his first ap- {yjew of her prospective status, De on th in Berlin, buli pivera held that such an appear- | o the Un States in 1899 Lapee and exhibition of an interest | devoted his HIC by grancial dealings, made Senorita | om that time | I |10 th can st [De Castellanos incligible to be his | £ m | Began in 1893 _ |wite. 0—WOR—122 | M 3 ppeara in ‘]fl Eng- | i ; i 593 n TS S ton ensembl ; 'rwo League of Nations Is TWintz orciesirs t hit as)| Interested in Smith | $-—Chimes 1 Dream: followed Geneva, June 29.—(®—Governor | iz CRols nelud- smith’s victory a Houston inter- ested league circles today e of esman i New ‘York—There is a young feminine Babe Ruth in Blandford, |Ind. A game in the boys' tourna- | be married on the spot to Ella Viola { Dr. John Roach Straton is to have {a summer religious colony here, Leaders of Senator Claude A. Swanson, left, and Governor Harry Byrd were leaders of the Virginia delegation at the Democratic na- tional convention in Houston. ferred in their hotel after a busy session of the convention, FLASHES OF LIFE: GIRL MARBLE - Virginians They are shown as they econ- | SHOOTER IS EQUAL TO THE BOYS Pelham Manor, N. Y.—Mrs. Wil- liam Roos of this town is going be- fore the mast. She will be one of the crew of her husband's schooner the Rofa, which will start with three others tomorrow from New York on a race to Spain, ment sponsored by the American Le- gion was tied in the 12th inning. Margaret Gislo a pinch hitter wal loped a home run. The losing team has protested to headquarters that the tourney is for boys only. Atlantic City—Gladys Coleman, 13, of Harrisburg, Pa., as a marble | shooter is equal to the hest of the boy: She and 46 bhoys entered a national tourney. In the first day she tied two boys for the lead. w York—Sarazen who has come to hate his fields of trumph, will see them no more. The horse, not the | golfer, is meant. Mrs. W. K. Van- derbilt is retiring a speed King that won more than $200,000. Recently no persuaslon .even when he was | blindfolded, could get him on a track. Amsterdam—All trug helievers are urged by the Dutch Reformed church to refrain from watching the Olympic games, “Godless pursuits promoted merely for the sake of crazy sensationalism.” New York—Charles M. Schwab is | merely u dub to a certain caddy. As | Mr. Schwab tells it. “When T was about to drive before a gallery the caddy called ont: ‘Put your dashed | head down, yo big slob.” And I did.” Boston — Eber Draper of Hopedale announces candidacy for republican senatorial nomination. Rurlington. Vt. — Delegates to New England Fire Chicfs' conven- | tion heip fight blaze; Chief Carl D. Stockweil and eight firemen come by illuminating gas. over- Edgemonf, N. J.—After making a hole in one playing golf here Paul T. Bloodsworth, 25, of Hornell, N. Y., dropped dead White Plaing, N. Y.—Percy Grain- ger announces that just after his | latest orchestral work, “To a Nordic Princess,” is performed in the Holly- wood Rose bowl August 9 he will dish artist, “whose soft Strom, § | is like that of a | flawless Ibvelines fairy-tale princess Greenwood Lake, N. Y.—The Rev. | He has bought a hotel and 200 acres of farm land. Parents who are not dance mad 4 liquor mad may bring their children. There will be uplifting study a an sports. §—True story 10—"0n the Fron 10:30 — weather as George in 189 in “Are You a prevailing belief th w York's governor favors cloger cooperation with the T of Nations. | The Herbert Hoover is | better known in Geneva than that of Governor Smith, due chiefly to the cpublican nominee’s war activities, | Many officials however seemed to be npressed the governor's execu- Albany ague G by in tive record News 0 ernor $mith’e nomina- tion put in circulation here a story to the offeet that when Smith sked about his feelings towards the | ieazue of Natious he replied that he did not know n about it but thought 11 5 nations were nding re ntatives to Geneva it it b for the United States | 4 out what was gojng on. 0—Jimr ¢.45—Woods and Vi orchests pros AGRE ne, J Perstan provisi lar to 1 which concluded with United States, Great Britain and I ce, was sign- ed June it was announced ofii- | cially toc "[ DUCO (1) Tron A—370 rewing in Pom iy R10-—W M( (U'P)—An Italian- I agreement, simi- Persia ne Half Playland Right Quintet —Littmann's en'ertat 11—Dan 6—Littmann Scotch “Modern Pey ", hou “LOBSTER” holog 7:05—James Hagney, to g el DINNER || And the Dupont No. 7 L206—"Swimming Lesson N e B-30—Wilson, fenor; pianiet ! (Except Sunday) Vuleanizing Our Specialty Talk” | 5:56—News; studio program ’ T H (:u ell £:20—Alton Slight, songs HO N l S S S . o gsw 7:30—Mary Godwin, soprano, ”.\la~] 23 State St. Stasilied - Cona 10 ELM ST. jor Golf Events” (Under Grant's Store) ! {last command, the freighter City of | “Promise me, ficers, recently | Ni dying wish eof Mclelland, 54, at sea all his When his Ca Engli life, Ambrose hman, who w has been fulfille Cambarr from TIndi off New York hound his last moment came. he said to his of- | “That you will bury me at | And so after the steamship the hody, draped in the Union Jack, was put aboard a tug nd dropped in 20 fathoms as near | le 1o the spot he died. New Haven—Trolleymen of the strike by vote of 995 to Pt wage proposition of the Connecticut Company. Tune |bullet wound | tional WTIC Mies, Seoniiats White West Haven—Federal prohibition agents raid “wild cat” brewery at 763 Washington avenue and selze 300 gallons of beer and two large tanks, one of 300 gallons capacity and other equipment. Dan Hag- | gerty, alleged owner, is arrested. | New Haven—Mrs. Christine Heck- man, 38, belleved to be insane, com- | mits suicide by inhaling illuminating | gas. | New Haven—Henry Derus, alias | 'homas W. Perrin of Shreveport, Ta., receives a sentence of one to three years in state’s prison in criminal superlor court when he pleads guilty to the theft of an au- | tomobile, i i Meriden—Frank Carlino is in the Meriden hospital suffering from a in his thigh and a three inch knife wound in his back and James and Salvatore Carabetta, Lrothers, are being held Ly the police on charges of assault with d;\ng"l'-‘ ous weapons. | Kimsbu Hon. John G. Sargent, | attorney general of the United States is the guest of Senator and Mrs. | George P. Mclean at their home. Smith Got 724 2-3 On Original Roll Call Houston, June 29 (UP)—The to- tal vote received by the various ndidates in the democratic na- convention was recorded on the original roll as follows: ‘mith 724 2-3; Hull 71 5-6; George 215; Reed 43; Pomerene 47; Jones 43; Woollen 32; Harrison 20; Ayres 20; Watts 18; Hitchcock 16; Dona- hey 5; Thompson 2. After several states switched their votes, the final totals stood officially as follows: Smith 8§49 2 Hull 50 5- Woollen Hitchcock 2; | | ; George 521;; Reed Jones 43; Harrison Pomerene 3; Ayres Thompscn 2; Bilbo 8 3; 1 (Necessary to nominate, 733 1-3.) Special for Saturday Legs of Genuine SPRING LAMB 40c ™ Jones’ Quality Market 33 Myrtle St. Tel. 285 Free Delivery OLD NEWGATE PRISON at East Granby, Conn. 14 Miles North of Hartford The Most Commanding Ruin in All New England and the Far Famed GranbyCopper Mines Chicken Dinner at WGATE TAVERN (1763-1928) Open Under New Manage- ment N. B.—Motorists should drive to Granby, Simsbury or East Granby and then follow cross- road signs marked “Old New- gate Prigon.” Wi " * NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 1928, RUSHING DIVERS 70 WRECK SCENE Collision Last Night {Freighter on Beach Following Chatham, Mass., June 29 (UP)— the | Divers and salvaging equipment was being rushed from Boston today in {an effort to save Grecian, a freighter of the Merchants and Min- ers’ Transportation company of Bal- timore, beached a short Baltimore night. distance southwest of Old Monomoy light aft- er a collision with the Dorchester, a|battle again to fight the republicans and Chesapeake R. R.[in the coming campaign. | company freighter shortly after mid- | The Dorchester was uninjured and | stood by until three o'clock morning after being assured no Complete in oh ““Baker's Little Journeys To Good Meals™ WTIC TUESDAY MORNINGS AT 11 O°CLOCK this one Edgings on shade are all bound, making a durable and lasting outfit. 99¢ No Phone Orders THE O D"-HME. TOWN WELL. MY VACATION WILL BE TWO WEEKS ON THE JURY- YOURE FARLY worked with him. Among those who | | | was in danger. Apparently the two vessels had lost their bearings because of a dense fog and the Dorchester, bound for Baltimore and carrying freight and few passengers, plowed into the Grecian, carrying only| freight and its crew to Boston. A large hole was torn in the Grecian's bow and she was beached. Coast guard crews were being held in rcadiness to take off the Grecian's crew should the weather increase the danger to the vessel. |Sen. Reed Will Fight For Democratic Part Houston, June 29 (P — Senator Reed of Missouri told his friends who gathered in his room last night after the nomination of Governor Smth, that he was going out to Despite his strenuous campaign, the senator was in a good mood fter the balloting as he talked | things over with those who have| BRIDGE LAMP BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED FREE DELIVERY ON SALE SATURDAY AT 9 A M. GEISINGER’S i 6 MAIN STREET Where Better Furniture Is Always Sold For Less! VACATION Stand made of heavy ornamental wrought iron. No Mail Orders gathered with the senator after thg late session were Bennet Clark and Mrs, Genevieve Clark Thomson off New Orleans, son and daughter of] the late Champ Clark of Missouri who was a presidential candidatd hefore the democratic convention in 1912 Mrs. Reed seemed genuinely re lie She gave notice that shy hoped the senator was finally out of politics. He plans to retire from th. senate next March on the conclus: ion of his term. STARTS INQUEST Haven, June 25 (UP) ew i Deputy Corner Lewis L. Field be gan an inguest today into the death of George Zuppe of Brantord wha was shot and killed by Chief of Po lice Victor La Croix of Branford Zuppe was said to have been in an| insane rage. SEVERE STORMS REPORTED Bu harest, June 29 (UP)—Sever storms in the provinces have don: serious damage. to crops and are re-} ported to have caused several deaths, 99¢ Complete ANY OF Yol MEA GOING To THE BIG CITY ON YOUR THIS SUMMER _ CAN PROTEUT YOUR OVERCOATS AND STRAW HATS.WITR THIS LITTLE GIANT THIEF PROOF HAVE AN ANCHOR AND CHAIN FOR WALLETS— —=\Ts Al A SLICK CITY OFF A REMARKARLE INVENTION . N OLD SCOoTCH SALESMAN SHOWED ¢ o g Py P I T PP P g A S U TN L I I T T T T s T T T T IE T T ™™ T T T ™ a T rTIEEY

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