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PR THURSDAY Eastern Daylight Saving Time NEW E! D STATIONS $560—WTIC, Hartford—535 :20—Summary of program; news 6:25—Sportograms §:30—Dinner music 6:55—Baseball scores —Song recital 15—Pet Animal League | :30—Musical program | s§—Choristers §:30—Dance orchestra 9—The Fortune Teller 9:30—Major and Minor Boys 10-——Concert orchestra 10:30—Correct time 10:31—Dance orchestra 11—News and weather 1130—WICC, Bridgeport— 6—Music Hour 7—Studio program 7:45—Baseball scores 7:50—Question Box $—~Studio trio 5:30—Arthur Withstanley 9—Studio program 9.50—News 10—Dance orc 11—Correct time 900—WBZ, Springfield—333 :30—Time and weather reports :31—Pianistic Capers :55—Radio talk | Dance orchestra 7:30—U. § Navy band concert s—Retold Tales §:30—Dance orchestra g—Musical program 9:30—Concert orchestra 10—Correct time 10.01—Musical program 11—Baseball scores, weather 650—WNAC, Boston—161 5—Ted and His Gang 6—Juvenile Smilers 6:30—Dinner dance —Visiting the Theaters and | | time mos 'n’ Andy” with Baseball Star :40—Lady of the Ivories §—Studio Play, “The Doctor™ Helen Woodward, contralto 9:20—Vocal recital 9:30—Neapolitan _ trio 10—Studio program 11—News 11:13—Ballroom orchestra NEW YORK CITY 530—WNYC—526 : seball scores 6:35—Market high spots 6:45—Mae Rich, cornetist “7—Richard Crafts, tenor :15—"Bascball for Boy: John | Foster |7 35—Air College; W. Orton Tewson | 50—Paula Gartin, soprano | —Time §—Band concert 10—Time; police alarms; weather 610—WEAF—192 5—The Marionettes 5:30—Jolly Bill and Jane, duets 6—Dinner music §:55—Baseball scores 7_Mid-week federation hymn sing 7:30—Orchestra 8—Choristers $:30—Hoover Sentinels 9—The Fortune Teller 9:30—Major and Minor Boys 10—Concert 10:30—Correct ans 11:30—Orchestra 660—WJIZ—154 5—Maurice Tyler, tenor 5 b: time; Pennsyl 5—Beal Holbar, soprano | 30—Reports; stock market, finan- cial summary, cotton prices, agri- cultural reports, summary of pro- | grams 5:45—Piano Twins €—Orchestra | 6:25—Scores; summary of programs 6:30—Orchestra 7—Correct time 7—United States Navy band s—Retold Tales 8:30—Orchestra 9—Orchestras that diffffer 9:30—Concert 10—Correct time 10—Concert 10:30—Concert 11—Slumber music 710—WOR—1422 6:15—Dinner concert 6:45—Baseball &cores 7-—The Harmony B's 7:15—Dance orchestra $—Chimes; modern symphony Orchestra 9:45—The Carolin Trio 10—Little Symphony Southern pro- gram | 11—Time: news: bulletins; weather 11:05—Vineent 1 St 6:30—Journal period T—Concert ensemble 0—Arthur Cornwall, tenor 7:45—Dr. George Walton King S—Will Oakland's Trrrace 8:30—With “Coolkie™ 9—Orchestra 9:30—Prince Piotti and Madelyr R10—WMCA—370 —William Mitchell, Taylor ison, travel talk Commerce 11 To ccilia enser —HRalph di Be T—Venetian orche 7:15—Joseph ipkir 0 . 6:5 etin, violiatat ier, baritone Hlar program AG0—WGBS—349 5—String quartet b ntal Broad 30—Milly Giibs, Housing s; string quintet Keden on the Keys” 920—WPCH— 5—Phit and Eddie Ross, singers ewis Dolgoff, comedian cloved Vagabonds 4.30—Tip Top Boys 7—Michael Simmo 7:15—J. Coots, compo: T:30—Intercity trio S—Ruth Marantz, contralto 2 45—Kedrn on'the Kevs ano; Profes movie talk r | | { | | | | | 11:30—O0r; o | place of the Goldman bari~ | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1928, “Marche Militaire” at 11 o'clock to- night through WJZ. After this stir- ring air, the sextet will proceed with a selection from Lehar's “The Merry Widow," the overture to Flo- tow's “Stradella.” Foulds' “Keltic |Lament,” Tschaikowsky's “Sere- {nade” and Schumann's “Evening | song.” R ) &’ll 377 y “ /L :15—Henry Burbig. humorist 9:30—Industrial program 10—Sunshine Sisters dna Bennett, L. C. PRAISES PROHIBITION | Commissioner Doran, Speaking in contralto; tenor 11—Jeno Bartal's ensemble 970—WABC—309 —Esther Lundell, pianist 15—Lillian Francis, soprano songs chuster, duo —Waldemar Worman, violinist 6.30—Dorothy Marwick, soprano §:45—Cook book Washington cal program speech prepared for delivery today | \lian orchestra before the International Congress | azainst alcoholism at Antwerp, Bel- | gium, James M. Doran, commission- |er of prohibition, declared that the | general results of prohibition in the | United States “thus far have been wholesome and beneficial.” The address, which was made public here by the treasury depart- a1 program contained a suggestion that e orchestra ‘m'wr countries cooperate with the | 17nited States to combat illicit fnter- | national liguor traffic | “The need for such an arrange- ment is hecoming increasingly ap- | parent.” Doran said. “We hope that | the future will bring about a strong cooperative action between nations |\n suppression of this illicit traffic.” By such action, he declared, pro- hibition countries would be in a po- sition to devote more attention to | domestic combatitive measures and Inot expend great energy in meeting | lan “international illicit liquor traf- | fic which uses the ports of many | foreign nations and seeks the \pro- |tection of the flags of those nations to cover illegal acts ™ At the present time there are at |1east 25 ports in foreign countries used almost exclusively as basis for smuggling operations to the United | states,” Doran said. “If the appro- priate government would require the |production of duly authenticated |landing certificates showing that| |liquor was actually discharged to | | the port for which the vessel cleared it would certaily distinguish legiti- mate trade from illicit traffic, and | Arive the latter from the society of nations.” Antwerp, Says Results Have Been Wholesome and Beneficial. Aug. 23 P—In @ .0 Woods Melody Della Riordan, baritone Musketeers FASTERN STATIONS 1020 —WODA, Pa port t 11—Colonial 1 11:30—Californians 1120—WNJ, Newal £ 01—Madeline Freeman, soprano $:30—The Happy Three 7—Doris Frank, son, 1120—WGCP, Newark—268 i 5——Merchants’ program S—Colonial Collegians orchestra a—Trving Porter, soigs; pianist 9:30—PBert Boyce .fenor 860—WTP, Philadelphia—319 —Concert orchestra 7—Redtime story; roll call §—Hajoca Musical Shower Newton Forum 10—Harmony Kings 11—Whispering orchestra 0—WFI, Philadelphia—105 Sports news 7:15—"Topics in Season” s—Same as WEAFR 10—To be announced 10:30—Pennsylvanians 1100—WPG, Atlantic City—27 —Organ recital Dinmer music yance orchestra ening organ recital al half hour ¢ Boys 10—Orchestra, 10:30—Dance orchestras 790—WGY, Schenec Stock repor 40—Dinner mu ores; outdoor talk 45—Music studio S—Same as WEAF 10:30—Musical program n recital OVER $18,000,000 TRIBUTE LEVIED Consumers of Kosher Poultry| Pay Dearly in New York New York, Aug. 23 (W—A tribute of $18,500,000 a year is levied | against consumers of Kosher poultry | in the New York area by the so-call- e poultry trust, federal officers as- serfed today. ! | Seventy-one men will be arraigned | before Judge Julian Mack tomor- | row on information filed by the gov- | ernment charging criminal violation |of the Sherman anti-trust act. Gov- The cool and peaceful paths of a ernment agents characterize the cloistercd abbey are the scene of to- trust as a gigantic conspiracy to night's broadcast of choral music at |mulct the public by means of price | 8 o'clock through WTIC, Among the |fixing, restraint of trade, and threats, | selections are Ketelby's “In a Mon- |violence and intimidation directed astery Garden,” Beethoven's “Ves. against dealers who refuse to follow r Hymn.” Gounod's “Ave Maria,” | the bidding of the trust. ‘Hymn to the Manonna,’| The government charges that ow- and Abt's “Evening. |ing to the trust's machinations con- — | sumers have been forced to pay an | A new series of Gypsy programs overcharge of from 7 to 10 cents a | known as “The Fortune pound on spring chickens and in ad- | Teller” will be inaugurated tonight |dition dealers have been forced to | at § o'clock, which will be offered |pay from 1 to 1 1-2 cents a pound cach week at the same time fn|on all poultry sold to pay gangsters and concerts | employed by the trust —to compel which formerly ocenpied this hm,,_‘dnalnrs to deal only with spr‘cmed} Let's listen in tonight on WTIC and Wholesalers. | see what it's all about. | Of the 4,176,000 pounds of live | — | poultry which come into New York Two Saint-Saens numbers will be |€very week. 3,758,400 pounds are in- | played during a band concert by the |tended for the uge of Orthodox jew, United States Navy Band which will |and federal officials declared the broadeast at oclock through |greater part of this is subject to the | WBZ the numbers being scenes|impositions of the trust. | from “Samson and Delilah” and| Independent dealers have been balist | dlvertissstrent. fioi "Heary|siven the protection of federal WIL" Gther! elections’ ircivde|cEenis ag a resulb of the borbing i Woods' “Spirit of St. Louis" a|Brooklyn last Sunday of the hon\; movement from ailioweky's | Of an independent dealer, who ha ‘Symphony in I wwoorpts |supplied the authorities with valua- from Herbert's Fortuna | ble information. David _Hirshorn. Teiler and Lisgts “Husgaian |president of the Greater New. Yoik Rhapsody No. 1. Poultry Dealers’ Chamber of Com- ¥ me is being held withont bail “The Caballero's Way." a slory of |28 & suspect in the bomblng. L a Mexican Deaufy. a ruthless young | e murderer and a vellow-haired, ru- | PRI “LOBSTER” DINNER 8 o'clock through WBZ From 5 to 8 P. M. Every Day (Except Sunday) HONISS’S State St Hartford, Conn (Under Grant's Store) be nite of Negro spiritnals will od Ly an orchestra during a mder the direction of Na Ikret, to be broadcast at WRZ. The program | “Valse Bluetfe,” | ement popular L “Car-| Negro of RBizet' on lumber music | Have yonr ztove put into good running condition now. You will need 1t soon, REPAIRS FURNISHED FOR ALL MAKES OF RANGES, PARLOR STOVES, FURNACES AND BOILERS. We have some 2ood Second Hand Coal Ranges & no If yvou need one come in and look them over. A. A. MILLS Plumhinb—-Heating—Sheet Metal Work PHONES 5100--5101 66 WEST MAIN ST. Q ight | equality | Stove Repairs | EQUALITY PLEDGE IS GIVEN WOMEN Smith's Speech Devotes Time to. Fair Sex Albany, N. Y., Aug. 23 (P—Equal- ity 1s the promise Gov. Alfred E | Smith makes to the women of the country if they will help elect him president of the United Sta In his speech accepting the demo- cratic presidential nomination, the es, | governor made it plain that he be- lieves in equal opportunity for wom- len, as well as equal protection for |, ors acceptance speech and who re- them, “I believe in that true equality of women that opens to them without restriction all avenues of opportun- ity for which they can qualify in business, in government service and in politics,” he stated in his credo. In the matter of protection of working women and protective leg- islation, he said: “I shall continue my sympathetic interest in the advancement of pro- gressive legislation for the pre tion and advancement of working men and women. Promotion of pro- per care of maternity, infancy and childhood, and the enforcement of those scientific activities of the na- tional government which advance the safeguards of public health, are so fundamental as to need no ex- pression from me other than my rec ord as legislator and as governor. His stand on protective legislation for women is in direct opposition to the plea of the national woman's party that equal rights for women be carried to the point of the repeal of all incriminating legislation. The woman’'s party holds that working women do not care to be protected tec- |to the point of making it difficult for them to get jobs in competition with men whose working hours and conditions are not regulated by law. The National League of Women oters has taken its stand against this drastic interpretations of equal- ity, and has sought for plans in the party platforms only for general with adequate protection of the working woman, child labor laws, and proper maternity laws. The general federtion of women's clubs, representative of women's clubs for all purposes, creeds and causes, has upheld equality only |its broader phases, with adequate protective legislation in the matter | of maternity and childhood, leaving | the more detailed angles to its mem- ber clubs. Gov. Smith pays courteous tribute {to woman's worth as a possible | member of the political life by spe- | cifying: | “The sole standard of my appoint- | | ments will be the same as they have | been in My government X X X in- | tegrity of the man or woman and| s or her ability to give me the eatest possible aid in devoted serv- ice to the people.” Prominent women democrats who came to Albany to hear the gover- | mained today to dry out a hit after | the steady and soaking rain of Wed- | nesday are all planning to leave for |New York today for official doings !at national commitftee headquarters in honor of Gov. Smith and his wife, | Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, |drove up with her husbard for Vh@‘ |day, returned to her home in Hyde | | Park hours. her advisory headquarter. in | during the early morning She has called a meeting of | board at the women's in the General Motors building at 2-30 today and plans to | be t an informal tea late | [in the afternoon for Mrs. Smith. She reports that nearly all of the 500 invitations extended for the re- ception at the Astor hotel in the | evening have been accepted. While Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Robinson, wife | of the vice presidential nominee are | the guest of honor, it is expected | that the two candidates will drop in | | come time during the evening for a | few moments “We extended our inuitations to {men on condition that they needn't | Istay very long explained Mrs. | | Roosevelt. “We thought they would | be scared out if they knew they had | {to stay all evening and go through | the line with all the gn 2 i hostess FIGHT TONIGHT Boston, Augz. 23 (UP)—Enrico | Savado. Filipino featherweight, will | | meet Tony Santello of Worcester in {an eight-round bout at Fort Banks. | Winthrop, tonight | | % JohnA. Andrews & Co. Present 1 DAY GOOD OF 100% LUCK Guaranteed By The C ommercial:l»'rust Co. FRIDAY, AUGUST 17Tk SATURDAY, AUGUST MONDAY, AUGUST 20TH TUESDAY, AUGUST 21 18TH ONE OF THESE "DAYS ST WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22ND THURSDAY, AUGUST 23RD FRIDAY, AUGUST 24TH SATURDAY, AUGUST 25TH The Commercial Trust Co. nounce that day, They have in their care a slip of pape: sealed in an envelope, bearin: 17th and 25th. No one knows what day it is. Not ever the employes or employers August 27th, the bank will open this envelops and an nounce the date— If you have made your purcha ¢ cii this day—v. 3 complete home outfit running into hundreds of dollars— or just a small purchase—absolutely regardless of price— your down payment will be refunded and you will be given a bill receipted in full—in othzr w be absolutely FREE! We are \\'iT'lmg to do this to get our 200 new accounts—and you mav be one of the lucky ones to get your purchase free—so bny now—within the next 3 days—the thin vou need or expect to necd Watch our newspaper advertising for hargains all during the next 5 days—prices are exceptionally low during owr August sale—down payments and terms just as liberal as usual, re THE BI|C FUR i JoHN-A- ANDREWS & (& WILL BE FREE DAY has kindly consented to ar g some date between Augug of this store. On Monday rds, your purchase will within the next few months. NITURE STORE VBRITAIN CONN. BABY GIRL. AGAIN [ IN CRURT ROOM This Time However, Mother Is Satistied With Her (A)—M. Cleveland, Aug a Smith, one year old, might have a good laugh for herself to- day had she been able to look back and comprehend all the trouble she caused twelve months ago when the famous Smith baby case at Fairview | Park hospital attracted national at- tention to her. All dolled up in a new white dress | and a new pair of shoes fiss Ana-| stasia arrived in the courtroom of Common Pleas Judge Carl V. Wey- | gandt. She gave the judge a know- ing glance, as though she had seen Ana- | Leen born /the grief-stricken mother proteste |the nurses had mixed the babie: |endured seemed familiar. And then Miss Anastasia would have remembered all about it had she been able. A year ago she was born in Fairview Park hospital. At firs' she was a boy, her mother call- ed her “little son,” and even the nurses noted in the hospital record said that she was a boy. Then all of a sudden she became a girl. The discovery just about ostraciz- ed her from the family of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Smith, into which she had In fact, Mrs. Smith in- she was not her child A mistake had been made, that the mistake was made in the hospital record and not in the mix- ing of babies. The nurse who reg- istered your child called her a boy. But all the evidence shows that she was a girl. Take her home and be good to her.” It was the same fatherly judge sitting on the bench Miss Anastasia might have reflected when she en- tered the court room for the second time yesterday. It was quite a surprise to be back 3 —a birthday surprise. Judge Wey- gandt just wanted to give her a lite tle party on this first memorable oce casion since he is her official guard- ian. While the cameras clicked he presented her with a little blue book |showing a bank deposit of $10 ix [her name. | sam smith, the proud parent, :pulh‘d Judge Weygandt aside and | whispered: “We know you wrre right. Ana- [stasia was our baby all the time, Upon th pon the |y, sesn't she look like her mother?" sisted that t all some one had her somebody else's girl. “Baby Smith,” though nameless, it all without a whimper while doctors and learned men. talk ed of blood tests and what not. A the wee age of three weeks she wa haled into a court room. bench sat the fatherly judge who listened to the -vhole story earnestly. “And now,” said Judge Weygandt boy; she had '3 Friction is greater between soft him somewhere hefore. Somehow the surroundings of the court mm"l substances than it is between hard substance. to Mrs. Smith when he had heard it all, “there is scarcely any doubt THE FINEST PAINT SALESMAN IN OUR PLACE IS A CAN OF B.P.S. YOU’LL NEED— Fruit Pressers Fruit Pickers Baskets Ladders Kegs Crusher Glass Jugs —AND HAVE THEM It does not promise It does not plead It does not threaten It just goes to work and does the job without any fuss or bother. And when the job is done—The proof of every claim of superior- ity is there for all the world to see. It's a silent demonstration that speaks for itself. The Facts and Figures of Ex- S perience prove it. You can paint more surface, more thoroughly, less often, at a smaller cost with B. P. S. WE “IT’S RIGHT FROM RACKLIFFE'S — —ALWAYS” RacxLirre/BRros, PARK AND BIGELOW ST TEL. 5000 Hardware, Paint, Builders’ Agricultural, Dairy Supplies HEART EDDIE, SURE. JOE -HE GOIN’ To PLAY THAT SPECIAL m\ i INDUCEMENT GOLF -ERt— WELL ) NEVER /HAD A GOLF STICK IN MY KANDS-THEY THAT BIRD HAS GoT A GREAT WHEN JOE VITAMINE SIGNED UP TO JOIN THE IDEA, SO THEY SAYY NEW COUNTRY CLUB, THATS To BE OPENED UP ol THE OLD HICKS FARM ~MARSHAL OTEY WALKER DECIDED TO LOOK INTO THIS SLICKERS SCHEME (( TO BE CONTINUED TOMORROW) e-23-28]'