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570—=WNYC, New York— 570—WMCA, ~{ Doodle Dandy.*" THURSDAY, APRIL 18 €8y The Associated Press) Eastern 8 e is P. M. unless otherwise Kiloeycles on right. Chain L 18.6—WABC New York—860 nettes: £ U "AU WJAS WLBW WWJ KYW r—Also WGR ¥ vlin New York—526 violinist; MclLeod: the Vocalist 560—WLIT, Philadelph 5:01—Popu b3 0—Pierc: 560—W ol Mixed Quartet , Philadelphia—535 FOR 509 SHUTTLE M the Past WFBL WKBW o WCA World—also WNAC WEAN WFBL WMAL Conirasted with Those of Present— " WCAO WJAS W WMAL U W N WFB 1 WH LBW WMAL BL_WCAQ WKRC WHKs WKBW WosH WGY WWJ R WIT WRC WSM WSB WBT G WCSH _WF WBT_WJAX WTAG WGR_WGY. WFI WRC AX_WRY A WFI WRC a—Also WGR WWJ WRVA W . WTAG WRV M WLW KYW ews; late news ri-Astoria dinner mu- 1100—WPG T90—WGY, schenectad y=—380 — produce mar- news program 980—KDKA, Pittshurgh—306 NEW RRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 1929, ing “You're A Grand Old Flag, ou Remind Me of My Moth ive My Regards to Broadway, Where. Were You?” and “Yankee Othe# selections in- clude Robbins' “Broadway Melod: | “Wherr: the -World s at Rest” un-h‘ “My Kind of Love.” | With a symphony orchestra under | the direction of Cesare Sodero and a bevy of famous radio stars, the Na- tional Concert Bureau program prom ises to be th feature program of | the evening. This pogram may be | heard at 10:38 ‘ever. WEAFP and WTIC and will include such’ num- bers ag Brahms' “Hungarian Dance No. 1.” Liszt's “Liebestraum,” Bach's ir for the G. String,” Wagner “Traume,” d» Koven's “Q P.omise | Me,” Levy's “Tango Burl 78 mer's “Sing to-me, Sing. “Arabian Impressions™ and Sistek's | “Tostenka.” Keler-Bela’s - spirited overtyre | “Lustpiel” will opeif the hour of| slumber music at 11 - o'clock over WJZ, while'other numbers on'fo-]‘ night's program include selections | | from Sullivan's “Pirates of Pen- lzance” Chaminade's “The Flatter- er,” Von Blon's “Spring and Love, Debussy’s “Clair de Lune™ and Gou- nod’s “{wvecation." | | { “Duska Moya” a story of the Rus- an revolution will be enacted in vglish for Achmed Pasha by ani English “artress, in the Arabesque | program at 9 o'clock tonight over | | WABC and assoeiated stations. This | lis another of a series of plays pre- | |sented by Myra Loring, English stage 1 “captured in the desert, who is| | promised her frecdom if she suc- | {ceeds in satisfying the Arabian | | sheik with hec presentations of | drama. | | Allan Jones, well-known American | tenor, once a miner in Pennsyivania, | will be heard as guest Soloist in a | | program to be broadcast over the | | same system at 9:30 tonight. In ad- | dition to Mr. Jones, a male-trio and | |a symphony orch;s:ru will contrib- | ute to the program. Among theé s | lections included in this prégram are “Swing Low ®Weet Chariot,” & selection from Grieg's “Peer Gynt | | Suite,” Meyerbeer's “O Paradise,” {the march from Tschaikowsky's | | “Nutcracker Suite,” Rapee's dAVage | Carnival”” Massenet's “Elegie” and | “Love Tale of Alsace-Lorraine.” | LG, FLIZABETHTON MAY LOSE 7S INDUSTRY Owners of the Chadwick-Hoskin: mill number five, Pineville, N. C., to- day had a petition for consideration from workers asking the manage- ment to resume operations at anee. The striking employes also moved to bring action against Fred Erwin Beal and other communist leaders ofthe National Textile Workers' | union on grounds of inciting to riot | and obtaining meney under false | pretenses. | “The mill management declared a fockout after the strike of 400 em- plo Newspaper Editors Gather at Capital | Washington, April 18 UP—News- | paper men from all sections of the | country were here today for thu“ opening of the seventh’anpual ton- vention of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, | The organization, headed by Wal- ter M. Harrison of the Daily Okla- homan and the Oklahoma City Times is composed of working newspaper- | men. The meeting will continue | through Saturday, with a great deal of shop talk and speeches by leaders in the profession on various phases of the work. | A larger attendance was made possible by the decision of many of the editors to come here on their way to New York, where the annual meeting of the Associated Press will | begin Monday. 300 Communists in Jap Student Roundup | Tokyo, Apri! 18 UP—Although publication of the news has been | forbidden locally, it was learned to- | day that another roundup of alleged communists took place throughout persons, principally students, were | arvested. | It was understood the action was | roundup last May and was not due | to a mew intrigue. | RUSSIAN PROPOSAL | WILL BE REJECTED But Geneva Delegates’ Look for Tactiul Path of Action 18 (A—The soviet disarma- Geneva, April plan of extensive partial nent was doomed to Tejection by the preparatory commission on dis- armament today, but how to reject it delicately enough to prevent the Russians getting angry caused con- ference officials considerable worry. The conference yesterday dodged an actual vote on the plan itself but —at its sponsor’'s insistence — there faced the session late today debate and a vote on principles underlying These principles were put yester- day by Maxim Litvinoff, soviet \‘ict‘-i commissar for foreign affairs, in three questions of a supplemm(aryi natu (1) Whether the commission would express itself on the necessity for a reduction in armament; (2) whether it favored reduction on the principle of proportion; and (3) | whether it was ready to approve a mathematical coefficient as the prin- ciple of reduction. p Rejection of the three soviet prin-! ciples would seem to put the confer-| |ence on record as favoring only lim- itation of armaments, and not reduc- | tion. On the other hand srcemancnf of all three principles would involve acceptance of certain mathematical | methods of reduction which in the | past have been questioned as to whether they were best. Delegates of } Japan Tuesday night. More than 300 |other nations relished neither pros- | pect. | Litvinofi's Purpose Not Clear M. Litvinoff's purpose was not en- |due to information obtained by the tirely clear .It seemed to some per, | examination of those arrested in the sons he was courting a definite re jection of his project for disarma ment, which other persons charac Repave? Textle Plants Threaten to Quit Due to Labor Trouble 30—Maytag program ber music Cincinnati—128 ock Hawailans stock reports and Ann, the Glad ert orchestra ngsworth Hall —Musical an Ga r 3 30—Variety Hour 4 orchestra ) [ Today’s Features e ——————— - songs “Boola npoof Song” t § o'clock popular on WTIC. Other g this pro- Ole Ole 9 o'clock o team and novelty vo- combine in the interpre tion of classical and popular selec- Gus Haenschen will direct while the artists in Pollack, V. fa rat nd the Ponce Sisters i include ds 1le’'s “Bolero,” G! n and Winter.” T & selection from Sho . Miss Hannah” and a selection | from “This Year of Grace Another program that should prove an interesting diversion in the line of popular music will come over W Sentinels orchestra a Dragonectte interp George M. Cohan’s m e WHEN IN HARTFORD DINE WITH US. ng a odies includ- Don’t forget to take home | some Maryland oysters and fresh crackers. HONISS’S 22 St~ St Hartford, Conn. (Tnder Grant's Stove) SALE EADOW AV UE Old Dunham Homestead Frontage over 100 1 Very —~Depth over 230 1t Low Price. An orches- | | WALL PAPER Elizabethton, Tenn, May 18 (UP) his community faced industrial | nction today with the formal an- ement by officizls of the American Bemberg and American corporation that their ts would remgin closed and all further construc scction abando the strike of 9 textile workers The announcement was tempered |with the statement “no further pro- |ductlon activity is anticipated until |1abor conditions becomes stabilized.” | The town of Elizabethton has de- pended largely upon the industry The plants, located on the edge of the town, caused the husiness sec- tion to expand with the trade of the 8,900 employes. Charlotte, N April 18 (UP)— | i Strikers Want Jobs Back Beautiful Women Simply Love It MELLO-GLO Face Powder is pre ferred by beautiful women becaus 1t leaves no trace of pastiness, flaki or irritation. Stays on long —no shiny noscs! Made by a new French = process'— prevents large {pores. Spread more smoot a youthful bloom. Very pure. |MELLO-GLO Face Powder. wonderful, J If the old street is rough, and the repair gang al- ways puttering around — then it’s time to repave. Discard the old expensive surface and repave with portland cement concrete. You can enjoy driving when the streets are smooth and safe. PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION 347 Madison Avenue NEW YORK CITY A National Organisation to Improve and Extend the Uses of Concrete Offices in 33 Cittes 1 cent a Roll terised as visionary and utopian. When driven to a corner where he would have obtained rejection by a vote, M. Litvinoff changed his tac- tics slightly and instead put up to be voted on the broad general prin- ciples underlying his speeific plan. Slightly puazied, Jonkheer Lou- don, chairman of the commission, evaded by postponing action until today an immediate answer which might have led to the Russians to withdraw in a huff, with thunder aplenty for any future international role they might have in mind. There was little doubt as to the attitude of the conference delegates about the soviet project, although delegates of only four nations—Ger- many, Japan, Chile and France—ex- pressed themselves. M. charged that others in remaining silent sheltered themselves behind the anonymity of the commission, and he demanded every delegate shoulder his own responsibility by eaplaining his country's attitude. An Oriental delegate said the plan had been given *“an honorable funeral, with some floral tributes.” After disposal of the soviet project the commission planned to take up the next part of its agenda, the Ger- man project for publieity of arma- ments. This project is based on article eight of the league covenant which requires that the powers ex- change full and frank information concerning the scale and details of their armaments and of industries Litvinoft Reduces cultivating to an absolute minimum, | Mulch Paper utilized in the manufacture of war material. Bomb Wrecks Italian Grocery in Chicago Chicago, April 18 (UP)—A west. side Itallan grocery, whosc owner recentiy refused extortionists’ de- mands for $5,000, was wrecked by two dynamite bombs today. The families of Michael Dec Salve and Adolph Santangelo, residing above the grocery, werc thrown from their beds but escapcd injury. The entire front of the building was wrecked. De Salvo sald he received several bomb threats by telephone and let- ter during the last week. - for Everything that Grows Another Modern Miracle! Mulch Paper Increases crops with decreased labor. Makes possible earlier and more profitable crops. Doubles results at lower expenditure of time, effort and money. Mulch Paper Increases soil temperature. Conserves soil moisture. Stifles weeds. is impregnated by SPECIAL GRADE OF ASPHALT- UM, which has NO EFFECT ON SOIL OR PLANT LIFE. It is one of the toughest, strongest and most durable papers made, Its black surface catches and AF and WGY at §:30 with the | Miss Jessica | cyele of | | THIS IS OUR OFFER For every roll of Wall Pap>r you buy at our | regular low price, we will sell you another roll of the same pattern for one cent. Nothing reserved— -you choose from our large and complete stock. JUST THINK OF IT! You can paper two rooms for what it would ordinarily cost to do one. Special prices on Paints and Varnishes during Wall Paper Sale Kyanize '\.’amish Moore’s Paint HALL’S 179-183 ARCH ST. New Britain RETAINS HEAT OF THE SUN. Mulch Paper can he used to cultivate ANY AREA, regardless of SIZE. Sold in two types—for garden and field culture. TWO SIZES IN EACH TYPE We Can Make Immediate Delivery— RecxrirreBro Hardwure, Paints, Glass, Sash, Doors, Trim, Agric Tel. 5000 NEW BRITAIN PARK and BIGELOW STREETS tural Supplics, Dairy Equipment. HEV~HEY WORRY WART, 1S AT A WAY WELL, HE WONT GIMME MY POLE, S0 1 HAFTA USE HIM T FISH WiTH,