New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 10, 1928, Page 28

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Eastern Daylight Saving Time NEW ENGLAND STATIONS $60—WTIC, Hartford—335 6:20—Summary of program, news 6:25—"Sportograms” 6:30—Trio 6:55—Baseball scores 7—Dinner Dancers 7:30—Piano recital 9:45—Ten Years in the Jungles of Burma $—Character actor and humorist 8:30—Dance orchestra 9—An Evening in Paris 9:30—Connecticut State Fair pro- gram 10—Correct time 10—Concert 11—News and weather 1130—WICC, Bridgeport—266 6—Merchants Music Hour 7—Studio program 1:15—WICC Trio 7:45—Baseball scores 7:50—Question Box $—sStudio program 8:45—Florence G| Mallott 9—Harmonica Band 0—Studio program 9:45—Baseball scores 9:50—News 10—Dance orchestrs 11—Correct time 900—WBZ, Springfield—333 6—Weather reports 6:01—Dance orchestra 6:25—Baseball scores 6:30—Musical program 7—Concert orchestra 1:30—Dixie Circus 8—Concert ensemble $—Musical program 10—Correct time 10:01—Sextette 10:30—Baseball scores 10:31—Dance orchestra 11—Weather and time 650—WNAC, Boston—164 §—Ted and His Gang §:16—The House That Jack Built §:25—Ted and His Gang 0—Juvenile Smilers 0—Dinner dance I—News 7:11—"Amos 'n" Andy” 0—Stories from Real Life Lady of the Ivories 7:45—Books, Old and New 8—Orchestra 0—Joseph Eggleston, tenor :45—Plano Recital 9—"True Stories” 310—8ketch, ““On the Front Porch” 10:30—Concert orchestra 11—News $90—WEEI, Boston—3508 6—Concert orchestra 49—Chimes $0—News 7:30—Quartet $—Concert orchestra 9—Musicale 9:30—Neapoitan Country Club 10—Concert Bureau program 11—Correct time 11:01—Weather cast 11:05—News and Flying fore- NEW YORK CITY 570—WNYC—526 6—Time; market high spots $:10—Dominick Tramontano, clari- net solos 6:25—DBaseball scores 30—French lessons 30—Time; police alarms; baseball 7:35—"Elocution and Self-Develop- ment,” by Miss Mary McGovern 9:580—Mabel Thibault, cornet solos 8:05—Talk by Winter Russell #:20—Regina Besner and Dr. Goldberger ,piano duo 9—Municipal Band 30—Time; police alarms; weather 610—WEAF—{92 8—The Marionettes §:30—Jolly Bill and Jane 6—Dinner music €:656——Baseball scores —Happy Wonder Bakers 7:30—8ingers 3—Orchestra #—Around the plano 9:30—Orchestra 30—Correct time 10—Concert 11—Orchestra 660—WJZ—455 8§—Dan Gridley, tenor $:156—Studio program 8:30—S8tock market prices and quo- tations; financial summary; cot- ton prices; agricultural reports B:45—Lewis Zeidler, tenor 6—Bcotti's Venetian Gondoliers 6:25—Baseball scores 6:30—Music J—Correct time 9—The Theater of the Air 7:30—Dixie circus 83—Godfrey Ludlow, concert violin- st A $:30—Orchestra $—Concert 30—Correct time 10—Concert 10:30—To be announced 11—Slumber music 710—WOR—422 §:15—Dinner eoncert 6:45—Baseball scores 7—Phila and Anne Brae 1:15—Orchestra $—Chimes; “Pipe Dreams’ 8:30—Lone tSar Rangers 9—True Story hour 10—Music 10:30—Concert orchestra 11—Time; news; bulletins; weather 11:05—Orchestra 60— WHN—385 8:30—Dance orchestra 9—Concert 10—News; Jimmy Fiynn tenor 10:30—Mr. and Mrs. Leo Woods, harmony 11—Poems by N. T. G 11:30—Orchestra 760—WPAP—395 B:30—Augusta Spefte, soprano 5:45—Smith and McConnell, songs 6—Joe Lavaux, accordion 5—Eve Rothenberg, pianist 0—Tom Hackett ,tenor :45—Dr. George Walton King 7—Orchestra 9:30—Joe Lane and Eve berg 8—Orchestra 810—WMCA—370 5—Entertainers 5:30—S8tudio program $—Quintet 8:30—Eitertainers 9:30—Correct itme 9 New Jersey Rothen- industrial pro- 10 _.can life 10:;30—concert 11—Correct time; orchestra 11:30—News; “McAlpineers" 12 mid.—Joe Ward Swanee S10—WLWL—379 6—Music 6:45—Organ recital of C. hour —James Chamberlain aret Sadlier “McAlpineers” orch. —K. of C. orchestra $60—WGBS—319 ¢ announced ming Lessons, William 50—Triangle Trio N\ string quartet nance talk 0—Quartet 5—aAngelo Bochetti, arias 9—Concert 10—Watchtower 11—Ballroom orchestra 920—WRNY—326 5—Walter Horton, violinist — Congregational Emanu-El services 7—Studio program 7:15—Bill Creamer and Frank Mack duets 30—"New York Inns and Outs,” by William M. Myers 7:45—Bob Schafer, songs 8—Svetlana Duo; Radio hearts 8:45—"Advice to Voters” 9—Bright Star program 9:30—O0ld fashioned singing school 10:10—Giuseppe Adami, violinist 10:30—Prince Piotti and Madeline Hardy, “Royalists of Harmony" 970—WABC—309 5—Food Educational Service 6—Joe Maie Evans, southern melo- dies 6:15—Mapletonians 6 7:05—Milt Rosen, violinist 7:15—Patricia Peshinger, soloist 0—Claire Roof orchestra 8—Daisy Miller, “Dogs” 8:15—Down Memory Lane 8:45—Antonio Mell, baritone 9—Orchestra 9:30—Polish hour 10:02—Cardenas Guty and Arnez Jorge, Mexican troubadours 10:30—Orchestra 115 egro Achievement hour 12 mid.—Orchestra 12:30—Castililian Gardens 1020—WGL—204 9:05—Orchestra 9:40—Ukulele Bob McDonald 10—San ‘Carlo Serenaders, direction of Joseph Le Secco 10:30—Entertainers EASTERN STATIONS 1020—WODA, Paterson—294 5:30—News 5:50—Sport talk 6vFrankie Pagano and Californians | —Studio Trio :15—Sunshine Boys —Orchestra 8—Oscar Perdula, baritone 5—Francis Emmit, soprano 0—Weckly decotional service 11—Arcola Manor entertainment 11:30—Orchestra 1120—WNJ, Newark—268 10:01—D>Musical moments 10:30—H. Halperin, uke and songs 11—Belleville Gardens 790—WGY, Schenectady—380 ock reports; news, baseball res 30—Dinner music Health talk 30—"Dark Fear,” episode No. § §—Music | 9-11—Same as WEAF Through the Static | A 30-minute program of concert selections in vocal and instrumental form will be offered at 7:30 through WEAL, the program including Sul- livan’s “Oh Hush Thee My Baby,” Hale's “Robin Loves Me,” Bridge's “Joan to the Maypole” and Champ- ney's “Rustic Coquette.” Instrumental and vocal novelties will be rendered during a program by a concert orchestra at $ o'clock through the same station, the selec- Vaga- and tions including Friml's “The < Sanela’s *Jack “A Bunch of Ro felody in F,” Nevin's and Albeniz's Jill,” Chia Rubifistein’s * “Mighty Lak’ a Ro: “A Night in Sevill Uncle Rob Sherwood, Barnum's famous clown and star comedian of a half a century ago, will tell some interesting anecdotes on methods of training elephants, during the regu- | lar ‘kly ecircus program which will come through WBZ at 1: The program will be supported with a clown band and circus band, which will supply the musical back- ground. Two movements from the “Sur- prise Symphony” by Haydn will be played by a concert orchestra dur- mg a program of classical music at 8 o'clock through WBZ. The con- cert also boasts of some borderline ics including “Mlle. Modiste™ by Herbert, Hadley's “Suite of the Special for Saturday Legs of Genuine SPRING LAMB 38¢c ™ Jones’ Quality Market 33 Myrtle St. Tel. 285 Free Delivery DENTIST Dr. Henry R. Lasch Commercial Trust Bldg. X-Ray Pyorrhea Treatments Sweet- | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 1928, Silhouette: Harlequin.” and Drigo's “Heart of PLANS 70 LINK THREE BIG POWERS Airmail §enioe Is Steadily Expanding et i ‘Washingtos {than a year after Colonel Lind- ‘ht:tgh's none-stop Washington-to- Mexico City flight, the air mail pre- |pares to follow him across the Liszf's famous “Licbestraum” will be played as an accordion solo dur- ing a program to be broadcast at 9 o'clock through the sme station. | Other features include Friml's “Gi- Robinson’s “Song of the E 's “The Empty Cradle"” and other instrumental and vocal | solos. Quartet numbers, a vibraphone solo, violin selections and vocal solos by Miss Rice will be heard during a concert at 10 o'clock through WBZ. “Indian Love Call” will be |the number featured by Miss Rice, who will also sing “The Fat Little | horger, Fellow With His Mammy's Eyes” | Post office departments of the | Other_selections include “Drink 10| Mexican and the United States gove !Me Only With Thine Eyes,” “Treas- | ernment have fixed tentatively on nre Chest of Memory” and “"Where | September as the month in which to the River Shannon Flows." start the new international service. Thus 1928 should see the creation of an air mail route 2,800 miles long, the longest in North America. To Cut Longitudinal Section Cities which will be stations in the United States-Mexico service are: Boston, New York, Washington, Richmond, Atlanta, Birmingham, Mobile, New Orleans, Houston, (possibly San Antonio), Laredo, Nuevo Laredo (where the Mexican division begins), Monterrey, San Luis Potosi and Mexico City. —L. C. When citizens finally attain to the | | new air route will unroll for travel- German composers will be fn the fore” during tonight's broadcast of the slumber music which will come through WJZ at 11 o'clock. The | | numbers include a selection from | |Gluck's “Orpheus,” Beethoven's | | overture “The Creatures of Prome- theus,” Haydn's “Gypsy Rondo” and | {three Wagner selections. | | i continent. The service will slice | North America just as the New | York-San Francieco air line cuts a | cross section of the United States. In Drunkenness Not UnCOMIMON|about ¢5 hours planes wit pass trom the land of baked beans to the land AmOI] Ins%t Ll[e of chill con carne; from the sea- 8 side metropolis of New York to the mountain valley metropolis of | Mexico City; from the heat of Wash- Washington, Aug. 10.—{—The |} 0¥ inap, Austin 21 X cotton fields and cane brakes of the S;“‘“;;‘2:*“"u;g;‘““;’,2,:3;“;5:::;5‘mm to the orange orchards and kuowledge which is most neurly‘g:;nr:::bncheal Hieldozel the poutt approached, not by other mammals [ ™" | 2 as might be expected, but by the| Ajr mail planes leaving Boston at vy |6:15 p. m. will carry letters sched- Mr. Clark, who is the author of | uled to arrive at Laredo at 2:30 p. m. a number of works on zoology, has | the next day. The transit time by | the relay at once reaching the capi- | tal about 9:30 p. m., cutting the let- | ter-delivery time between New York and Mexico City by three to | four days. classes of men. The complicated engineering achievements of beav- ers and the intricate construction of some bird nests are examples. Bower birds also have a taste for ornamenting their nests with shells, | and pack rats, crows and jays en- joy the human miser’s trait, hiding away anything shiny which they come upon to gloat over in eoli, tude. Insects. however, make much broader applications of the princi- ples of physics and chemistry which, he holds, are two of the sci- ences that have contributed most to the clevation of man's estate. Wasps learned to make paper long before man acquired that art, and the parasitic varieties employ the | principle of asepsis with enviable considered a tri-national creation because the mail from Boston will meet the mall from Montreal at Hadley Field near New York eity. It is even true that the three capi- tals of North America, Mexico City, Washington and Ottawa, will be connected by air when all the vari. ous services dovetall because Mon- treal and Ottawa are already con- nected by alir mail. tirely new air route over its section, the United States must extend its present service. The service south to Atlanta went into Orleans to Laredo a completely new route must be prospected and ar- ranged for, | Names of all the American towns on the route ring famillarly, but the jection of formic acid which at the | same time preserves it from decay, | while another kind protects the | eggs themselves with a thin layer of this chemical when depositing . D. C, Aug. 10.—Less | of course found some birds and |train is four days. Although the de- mammals which have practices in | alls are yet to be worked out, Mex- common with the more -civilized |ican planes will probably pick up | In one sense the service can be | While Mexico must build an en- | |skill. One species, before laying operation last eggs on a caterpillar or spider, | SPring and is now being operated es the victim with an in- | Fé8ularly to New Orleans. From New | them and allows the host to go on with business as usual. Some dig- | Mexican cities, with .the exception | The wounded marines were partly because it is not entirely Mexican. English is spoken quite widely and there are American | magazines and even an English | newspaper to assure the traveler | from 'the north that he has not en- | tirely cut himself off from hie home- | land. Monterrey also smokes | familiarly with many factories, for it is the chief manufacturing city of | Mexico, and in this industral actvity there is a reminder which has given |the city its nickname, “the Chicago |of Mexico.” From Monterrey the air mail | plane will have to climb over en- circling mountains to skirt Saltille which may be an emergency stop. | Peaks and ridges confront the pilot | on every hand from Monterrey south | and the farther he goes the higher they rise. It is not flying country. Spick-and-Span Mining City At Baltillo the air mail will be| over the capital of Texas—or what | was once the capital of Texas—for | Saltillo is the capital of Coahuila, & | state which at one time included Texas but has been shorn of most | of the vast acreage’it commanded in | | Mexico's heyday. Lovely S8an Luis Potosi, a clean, | eparkling city, lies in a beautiful valley. Although it is below the| Tropic of Cancer line, its summer | {temperatures are cooler than the | hottest spells most American cities | must endure; and yet San Luis | | Potosi has groves of citrus and other | tropical fruits at its very doors. | Fortunately the mines that have (made the city and have bullt jts in numerable magnificent churches, oc- jcur not too close to tarnish the | municipal housekeeping. And al- | though they were discovered by the | Spaniards, the mines continue to be | worked to this day. More than $3, { 000,000 in silver is said to be mint- | ed every year in San Luis Potosi. Where History Was Made About halfway between San Luls Potosi and Mexico City the air mail will pay its respects to Queretaro, the chief historical shrine of Mexico, | | The Mexican republic was born here when plotters, who have become heroes, planned the overthrow of | Spain's power. Later Queretaro lived amid more great days wheg Maxi. | | millan and his handful of defenders | | were captured, tried and executed | on the hill where the Austrians have | |built a memorial. Few towns can | | support life on history as Queretaro | has found, to its regret. One of | Queretaro’s bits of good luck has| | been the finding of opal mines in the | | nelghborhood—a paradox when the | {world's superstitions are taken into | account. EXPECTED T0 GET BETTER Three Marines Reported In Good Condition Following Wounds Re- | cefved from Nicaraguan Bandits, Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua, Aug. 10 (UP)—The three marines fnjur- ed in Tuesday's engagements be. | |tween the American forces and na- | inve bandits were reported in good condition today and all were ex-| pected to recover. | Reinforcements were sent to the | scene of the engagement, which was | between a group of 48 marines un- | |der Capt. M. A. Edison of Burling- | | ton, Vt.,, and a strong group of ban- | |dits. Ten Nicaraguans were Killed |and three wounded | sions and a fractured legmMiss Lucy of Mexico City are little known north | Thomas Paine, Roxbury, Mass., Rus. | TWO.DIE, FIVE HURT IN AMPHIBIAN AIRPLANE All Injured Are Expected to Re- cover Following Crash on Rocks of Ontario Lake Gravenhurst, Ont, Aug. 10 (P— Five persons injured in the crash of a sightseeing airplane at Lake Mus- koka, in which two were Killed, to- day were expected to recover. The dead are Robert Erving, 19, of Pittsburgh, a passenger. and Captain Charles Haines of Miami, Fla., pilot of the plane. Erving was killed instantly. Capt. Haines was taken from the plane unconscious, his neck and both legs broken, and died shortly after at Calybor sani- tarium The injured are Walter Phillips, 19, of Philadelphia, severe concu; Hill, Boston, Mass., left arm broken, and Miss Molly Spaulding, East Aurora, N. Y, Miss Betty McKay, Pittsburgh, and James Reed, Pitts- burgh, injuries not serious. Phy- sicians today said all were out of immediate danger. The plane a Loening amphibian, had just taken off from the waters of the lake and climbed to an alti- tude of 500 feet when something went wrong. It started to fall, one Wing struck a tree and the plane turned completely over, crashing on the rockes along the shore. Linesman for a power company working nearby, who witnessed the accident, pulled the injured from |the wreckage and rushed them to | the sanitarium in a motorboat. The | plane was a total wreck. The plane had just been received at Gravenhurst Tuesday, and was | making one of fts first flights with | passengers, es Bad Language, | Beggar Goes to Jail For using indecent language to | passengers at the railroad station, William Murphy, 51, of Hartford, will spend the next 42 days in the | county jail. Williams, who has but S e |one arm,' was in police court two days ago charged with drunkenness and vagrancy. He was given a sus- pended sentence of 15 days and told 1to get out of the city. Last night he was arrested at the station by Patrolmen Clarence Lan- phier and William Cabelus, who & |cused him of using vile and inde- cent language to people who refused to give him money. They say he would accost passersby for funds | which he spent for drink. When they refused he used what Prosecu- |tor Joseph G. Woods said was “the | vilest language ever heard in New Britain.” Judge Henry P. Roche revoked | the suspension of the 15 days and |added another 15 days. This in ad- dition to a total of more than $12 costs which he must work out, | makes 42 days he will stay in jail. EXTRA TAXES Lisbon, Portugal, Aug. 10.—(®— | The Portuguese government has | established extra taxes on sugar, oils |and gasoline in order to increase revenues. e 75¢ 75¢ JUST CALL 904 FOR A DOUBLE FOR TWO SINGLES THERE'S A SALE OF BLANKETS AT THE UNION! NEED NEW BLANKETS FOR THE FALL? Here’s the Idea— DURING THE MONTH OF AUGUST THE PRICES FOR “Fluff” Cleaning OF BLANKETS ARE “FLUFF” CLEANING is slow careful washing and rinsing in rich white Ivory soap suds, water completely filtered, soft- ening oil to lubricate the Wweave of the fabric, a soft regular fabric as the blanket is gradually dried. Laredo; Monterrey, the Chicago of Mexico and San Luis Potosi, a rich mining town. Desert, Platean and Mountains Once in Mexico the new air mall route will follow the National Rail- ways of Mexico line south from nd stresses which man only now | NUeve Laredo, For 165 miles over is exploring is displayed by spiders |the Sunbaked, cactus-spiked, semi- in the construction of their webs, | deSert there is almost nothing of in- | some species even devising efficient | terest; but Monterrey, the first stop, |trap doors with hinges. is a good introduction to Mexico, | The spinning ants of Africa and | Australia, although not equipped | with spinning apparatus them- | selves, he relates, have learned to make use of irvoluntary child la- | bor by pressing their larvae into service. When they set out to make one of their huge nests, they take some of their helpless young and { use them as shuttles to sew bunches | | of leaves together with the liquid | silk they contain until the supply is nearly exhausted. Then they re- | turn the larvae to their resting | rlace and bring out a fresh supply | | of living shuttles, | Nor is drunkenness an exclusive. | 1y human failing, for butterflies and moths frequently “take too much” in the fall when rotting apples lte | |on the ground, and some species of |these insects also are excessively | fond of tcbacco smoke. Bees are | also notorious incbriates, and hum- | ming birds and some butterflies are | out-and-out bullies, darting at any | ereature they can hope to scare. Hornets and ants are strong de- fenders of property rights, while terpillars, moths, caddis flies 1 bag worms have the habit of | covering themselves, like men, with i!a)n:rs of protective clothing. iSocialists Want Allies To Quit, Rhineland Brussels, Aug. 10 (P—Immediate | | evacuation of the Rhineland by { F'rance, Belgium and England was | | demanded in a declaration of world | | policy adopted by the socialist labor | international congress meeting here | Reestablishment of German sov- ercignty in the Sarre reglon was also | demanded. | The clause covering the demands was applauded by the French del gation, which joined the Germans in a demonstration for its adoption. holes. Hawk moths, humming birds and | hover flies are more advanced than man in one respect, Clark says, hav- |ing learned to fly backward as well as forward, and an entirely ade- | quate knowledge of physical strains | | | | | ) = 2ND FLOOR 300 MAIN ST. | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS | FOR BEST RESULTS SHORE “LOBSTER” | DINNER From 5 to 8 P. M. Every Day (Except Sunday) HONISS’S | 22 State St. Hartford, Conn. (Under Graat’s Store), FOR OUR SPECIAL “Hat Cleaners 38 CHURCH ST. ( | | f Ous Cusromers Recommend thiy = \LOAN SERVI( TH| Modern Hat Shop | 1 Schoenberger, Charleston, W. | or wasps also make use of tools, |Of the Rio Grande. Thumbnail |se A Bt o s e o el tix B il |Va, and Melvin Moster, Topeka, | sticks or stones after filling in their | NUevo Laredo, Mexican twin of Kas, Myer Stengel of Hartord, Conn., was killed. The wounded men were brought | here by plane from the scene of the | engagement, which was 60 mfleul | from Bokay. Headquarters here is! keeping in touch with Capt. Edison's | force by plane. Major Harold Utley. | | | |commanding the eastern area of | marines, was on his way back from | Bokay, which he was visiting at the time of the engagement, to take charge of the situation. | | in a loan at this time or THE MUTUAL SYSTEM LEONARD BLDG. TELEPHONE 4-9-5-0 Hours 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. Sat, Till 1P. M. Open Monday Evening Till 8 BE READY! SEPTEMBER FIFTEENTH Soft Hat Season Begins Bring in Your Soiled Hats Now! RENEWING PROCESS E Deliveries Everywhere NO-NO = | SAY THEDITOR LOST ALOT -BROWN ?S:‘%os ~FINECOMBS 8¢ FLAT | to New Britain” A Step From Main THE EDITOR OF THE WEEKLY CLARION OF TOWN FOLKS, AND THOUWGHTLESSLY TIPPED HIS HAT TO A COUPLE NEWS ITEMS, HE HAD BEEN sma7 FOR NEXT WEEKS PAPER LOST ALL THE LOCAL COLLECTING b I . e A S,

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