New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 20, 1929, Page 24

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11:30—News — 11:40—Mousic and wir ‘Eacters Daylight Saviag Time 12:00—Village Grove Nut club : 434—WEAF, New York—860 5:15—The Magic of Speech—Vida Sutton 5:30—Jolly Bill and Jane 5:55—S8ummary of programs 6:00—Black and Gold orchestra 6:55—Baseball scores 7:00—Federation Hymn sing 7:30—Comfort music 8:00—Buck and Wing sketch 30—S8entinels 9:00—Singers 300—WTIC, Hartford—800 4:80=—fummary of programs; news - elleting :30==Herb France's dinner music 55—Bussball acores 7:00—Musieal memory contest— il Helmberger, director 7:30—Comfort hour from NBC stu- s 8:00—Buck and Wing—Phil Cook and Vie Fleming in black face sketch tm’u—uueu program —Broadway Lights 9:00—8ingers from NBC studios 10:00—Orchestra 9:30—Fred W. Bayers Saxophone [10:30—NBC concert hour sextet 11:30—Albin orchestra 10;00—Program from NBC studios |[12:00—Roosevelt orchestra 10:30—Ol4 Fashioned barn dance from Bloomfield, Conn. 11:00—News bulletins; weather re- port . 303—=WRBZ, Springfield—990 $:00—Final closing stock markets 40—Rhythms 00—Time; news bulletins 6:06—Dinner music; weatherman; agricultural reports 6:30—Melodies 6:45—Financial news 6:55—Baseball acores; chimes, tem- ture 7:00—Melody Boys 7:15—Piano Etchings 7:30—Variety Half Hour 00—8erenade $0—Ben Bernie's orchestra 00—Concert from NBC studios 9:30—Concert from NBC studios 10:00-—Tone color program 30—Around the world tour jportogram news bulletins; 395—WJZ, New York—760 00—Brier's orchestra 5:30—Summary of programs 5:35—Reports; stock market quota- tions; day's financial summary; cotton exchange prices; state and federal agricultural reports 6:00—O01d Man Sunshine 6:25—Baseball scores 0—Pollock’s orchestra 0—Deafness—Harvey Fitecher :15—May Singhi Breen and Peter De Rose, duets 7:30—Retold Tales—Avenging Angels $:00—Serenade 8:30—Ben Bernie's orchestra 9:00—Orchestra 9:30—Concert 10:00—Tone color program 10:30—Around the world program 11:00—Time; slumber music 428—WLW, Cincinnati—700 6:00—Hawaiians 6:130—Live stock reports 6:40—Polly and Anna, the glad girls 7:00—NBC program 7:30—Dinner music 7:40—Training for the Legal Pro- fession—M. L. Ferson 8:00—Serenade from NBC studios $:30—Men's orchestra from NBC studios :00—Concert from NBC studios 9:30—Concert from NBC studios 10:00—Henry Theis and his orch. 10:30—Around the world tour 11:00—Hollingworth Hall 11:30—Radioette 12:00—Review :00—Johnny Hamp's Kentucky Serenaders 1:30—Variety hour 2:00—Sing off 11:19—Temperature 11:30—The Templars 387—WJAR, Providence—89%0 6:16—News bulletins 6:25—Musical program 0—U, 8. weather bureau report §—Harold Sheffer's dance orch. 0—Concert ensemble | 7:30—Comfort program from NBC studios L Hhirepnctlc society of Rhode s l—hnehfll scores 0—Hawailan serenaders ! 8:38—Joint recital by Margaret reve and Clara Sabin Foster 00—8ingers from NBC studios 0—Broadway Lights '10:00—Program from NBC studios 10:30—News flashes; baseball scores 433—WOR, Newark—710 5:00—Book reviews—Oliver M. Saylor . B:1§=—Organ recital + 5:40—Traveler's French — Prof. * Edmend LeVergne ! 5:80—Dorothy McDonough, lyrie 5 770 + _oprene 7:00—Studio orchestra and Barton | : 6:00—Time; Ruth Taylor McDow- | ‘0 " Mo | | 7:30—Dinner dance with Terrace and College Inn dance orchestras 5—Baseball review 0—Columbia chain feature —Detective Mysteries —Recording artists 10:00—The Mangelodians with Charley Straight 11:00—S8tudio frolic and dance music S44— R, Chicago—870 :00—The Air Juniors 5—The Farmer's Farmer ¥ 0—The Musical Checkerboard 0—Mike and Herman 0—Studio Gossip 1:00—DX Air Vaudeville 389—WBBM, 0—Sports talk 0—Fulton Royal orchestra 7:00—Thirty Minutes of Sunshine «—Charles W. Hamp 7:30—8lim Figures 7:60=—=Chimes; musical overtones 8:00==WOR steck company 10:00—T9 be announced 11:00—Time; news bulletins; weath- or veport §—Canton Palace orchestra 0—Hotel Alamac orchestra ew York—8680 -§:00—Food talk, Dr. Daniel R. H 5:00—Vacation ensemble 0—Big Brother club 0—News despatches 0—Big Brither club 0—Irish Minstrels 0—Comfort hour from NBC studios 8:00—Morse program :30—Sentinels from NBC studios 0—Singers from NBC studios 0—Musical program 0—Program mrom NBC studios 0—Weather and flying forecast —Sea Horses :05—News despatches odgdon . §:30—Closing market prices §—~David Ednor, concert violin- it :00—Al Liwellyn, Wolt™ :16—Bill Schudt's “The Lone “Going to §—Duke Ellinston’s band 7:00—8ymphony orchestra 6—To be announced 00—Arabesque--A Thousand and One Nights 8:30—U. 8. Marine band from Washington :08—=Detective Mysteries 6—Recording arirts 10:00—Concert—dance orchestra 11:00—Paramount orchestra 11:30—Pancho’s orcheatra 13:00—Time 244—WNAC, Boston—1230 :00—Ted and his gang - 5—Mariners 0—String ensemble —Orchestral program String ensemble 0—Time; The Lady Tvories 7:05—Baseball scores; —Amos 'n’ Andy 0—News flashes of the | weatherman NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. THURSDAY JUN! fi. lfl. 7:30—La Petite ensemble 7:59—Time; orchestra 9:00—Detective Mysteries 9:30—Light Opera Gems 10:00—The New Yorkers 11:00—Time; news 11:10—Paramount orchestra 11:30—Pancho’s orchestra 379—WGY, Schenectady—790 :00—Hum and Strum boys :25—DBaseball scores :30—S8ame as WEAF :00—WGY program :30-10:30—8ame as WEAF :30—Orchestra :00—Dance program 261—WHAM, Rochester—1150 :00—Dinner music :00—Time; stock quotations 20—Baseball scores 30—School of Music program 50—Newscasting 00-10:30—NBC programs 00—Something about everything 00—Organ recital 30—Radiogram and government weather forecast 226—WDRC, New Haven—1330 6:45—News; theater review; weath- er report 7:00—Time; restaurant ensemble 8:00—Special program 8:30—Ruth Lindsay Oliver, con- tralto; Doris Claire Ward, harpist §:45—Mrs. Horace Hancock, 80- prano; Helen G. Williams, accom- panist 9:00—Wilton H. Hill, baritone; Thomas Doerr, accompanist 9:15—Margaret Sheppard, pianist 9:30—Weather report 306—KDKA, East Pittsburgh—980 00—Time; band —Baseball scores; 00—Studio program 30—Orchestra 00-12:00—Same as WIZ :00—Weather; baseball scores chimes 283—WBAL, Baltimorc—1060 — :00—Salon music :45—Sun Tan talk :00—Organ recital :30—Arcadians orchestra 00-10:00—Same as WJZ :00—Chesapeake Liners :30-12:00—Same as WJZ 273—WPG, Atlantic City—1100 5:00—Studio program 0—Organ recital 5:45—News; weather 8:00—Baseball scores 8:05—Gospel hymns 8:20—Organ recital 9:00—Little club entertainers 9:30—Mannequins 10:00—Stanley Meehan, tenor 10:15—Subway Boys, songs 10:30—Play—The Renters 11:00—Weem's orchestra 11:30—Follies Bergers orchestra 12:00—Pelkin ensemble Through the Static A program of dinner music will be put on the air from WTIC, Hartford, at 6:30 this evening by Herb France and his Sea Gull Din- ner group. At 6:55 the day's results in baseball will be read to the sport fans. Emil Heimberger and his orchestra will present another of their musical cross examinations at seven o'clock, and at 7:30 @& presentation called an Old Fashion- ed Scrap Book will be on the ether, Buck and Wing, the radio comics, will continue their escapades at eight o'clock. At 8:30 the Tone Color program will be heard, and at nine o'clock Frank Black's singing violins and the singers will take to the air. One of the high lights of the concert at 9:30 by Fred Bayers and his saxophone sextet will be a medley of Irish airs arrangeds for reed instruments by Mr. Bayers himself. Tips on investment securi- ties will be offered at ten o'clock. Sammy Spring's eccentric fiddle and his stentorian voice will rever- berate over the ether waves from the barn dance in Bloomfield. Conn., at 10:30. lending a snappy conclusion to the evening's program. With the staccato cries of the coxswains and the strident cacoph- ony of cheering crowds and steam | launch whistles for a background, four veterans of the N. B. C. sys- tem announcess will send a graph- ic picture of America's premiere in- ter-collcgiate shell classic from Poughkeepsie-on-the-Hudson over a nationwide network Monday af- ternoon, June $98—WNYC, New York—570 §:10—Marguerite 8. Clark, con- - tralte 8:20—Market high spots 5:30—Sixty-three Miles of Books— R. W. Hendcrson §—Dogs—Daisy Miller 0—The Baxte ensemble 30—Citizenship class ¢8—Mabel Thibault, cornetist §—Information for Moto: 1:00—Boys Camps—N. Dana Younge 7:10—Dept. of Health talk—Dr. Israel Weinstein 7:26—Civic information; tide tables 7:30—Time; police alarms; baseball scores 7:38—The Jacob A. 8chiff Center— Rabbl Alexander Basel 7:36—Civic Duties—J. Winter Rus- 8:15—National Security League 8:30—Sign off 536—WMCA, New York—570 9:30—S8tudio program 10:00—Variety program 10:30—8mail's orchestra 11:00—Handel's orchestra Stove Repairs Complete line of stove repair paris carried in stock. NEW BRITAIN STOVE REPAIR CO. 66 Lafayette St. Tel. 772 a fire. By 2 p. m. on settled. This is not so fies at least one of the DENTIST Dr. Henry R. Lasch OOMMERCIAL TRUST BLDG. City Hall - X ray—Fyorrhca Treatments Saturday Night At a late hour on Saturday night there was the Monday following the loss was completely and satisfactorily unusual—yet it signi- advantages of a large well established insurance agency. GeW. L.HATCH Co. INSURANCE Real Estate -Mortgage Loans Tel-3400 Radio spectators will take thelr positions on the banks of the Hud. son at five oiclock in the atter- noon, fifteen minutes before the start of the Freshman race. Through the eyes of their announcers they will witness three hours of Amer- ican racing history, broken only by brief interludes of music be. tween the races, and ending shortly before eight o'clock, when a varsity crew dashes down the four mile course to a national championship. WEAF and WJZ will head the na- tionwide network to broadcast the races. Ruth McDowell, violinist, a young concert artist who has already ap- peared as soloist of the American Orchestral soclety, the Alliance Symphcny orchestra and with civie and various other clubs, is to be heard through station WOR, New- ark, at six o'clock this evening. Miss MacDowell is scheduled to play the following compositions: Corin- thian Melody by Winternitz; Hun- garian Dance No. § by Brahms; Old Refrain by Kreisler; Ave Marie by Schubert; and Rondino. by Bee- thoven-Kreisler, Miss MacDowell's accompanist will be Miss May List. Clues to a mysterious murder take Sherlock Holmes across the western plains and covered wagon trails of the Mormon pioneers this evening at 7:30 when another episode of Re- told Tales is produced on the air by a cast of N. B. C. actors. How Scotland Yard tried ineffectually to solve the murder and called in the world famous sleuth at the most baffling point of the investigation will be told in the radio version of A Study In Scarlet. Holmes finally picks up the trail of the avenger of the Avenging Angels. WJZ heads the broadcast. A huge radio audience will be added to the throng of spectators at this year's collegiate rowjng classic. when the eight-oared shells of Harvard and Yale sweep past five microphones of the N. B. C. system in their racs for the finish line on the Thames river, New London, late Friday afternoon. A full description of the race by the five announcers along the course, with Graham McNamee at the finish line, will be broadcast over the N. B. C. system beginning at seven o'clock. WTIC, Hartford, is the key station. Besides N. B. C.'s ace sports announcers, along the water course will be Paul Dumon! of N. B. C., James F Clancy, Paul Lucas and Walter Johnson of sta- tion WTIC. Dorothy McDonough, a newcomer to WOR listeners, will have her lyric soprano voice on the air this eve. ning at 5:50. Miss McDonough is famed American singer, having re- ceived her instruction from teach. ers in Boston and New York. She gave many recitals in the former city and also appeared in concerts throughout the New England states. For the past two years she has been the soprano soloist in 8t. Steven's church at Arlington, N. J, New vocal and instrumental selec- tions to be prosented in the Music of Tomorrow group, which will be on the air this evening at nine o'clock, include T'aint Nobody's Fault But My Own, which will be sung by a trio, and Vilma, which will be presented by the orchestra and trio. Included in the program are two orchestral numbers from Ferde Grof's The Mississippl Suite, and selections from the Gershwin show, Song of the Flame. WJIZ heads the broadcast, An experiment in radio drama will take place this evening when an original playlet by Pauline Phelps, well known author of pro- feasional and amateur successes, will be broadcast at $:30 from the studios of station WTIC, Hartford. The presentation, which is en- titled Home Sweet Home will intro- duce a new form of radio entertain- ment—the story play. It will dem- onstrate the use of stage directions, which frequently contain as wmuch literary meats as the lines them- selves, as an integral part of the dramatization. It is believed that this device will combine the ad- vantages of the closet drama and the drama intended for actual pres- entation on the stage. She pointa out that such playwrights as O'Neill, Barrie and Maeterlinck conceal some of their most deft touches in their stage directions, which, of course, are lost when the play is presented full stage. WOR's radio curtain will rise at 8:30 this evening on a play by Os- car M. Wolff called Where But In America? The playlet is written around an American couple called Mr. and Mra. Espenschade and & Swedish maid, Hilda, furnished by the way that Hilda runs the house. It represents an in- teresting slant on the labour prob- lem also. —A. M 8 A. PINKUS Optometrist Satisfaction Guaranteed Removed to 390 Main Street Phone 570 Headquarters for Lace Curtains Absolutely the Largest and Finest Display in the City at the Lowest Prices, BLOOMBERG’S 328 MAIN STREET Honiss’s Oyster House is noted for its Lobster, Crabmeat, Shrimp, Tunafish and Salmo Salads; also our Shore Dinner that is served from 5 P. M. to 8 P, M. each day except Sunday. S,?oleat place in Hartford to ne. HONISS’S OYSTER HOUSE 3281~ 8’ Hartfonl, Conn. (Under Graat's Siore) WHY PAY A premium ror AUTOMATIC - HOME HEAT? Here is LUXURIOUS COMFORT at LOWEST COST Read the Report of the Anthracite Operators’ Conference A BILLION DOLLAR INDUSTRY —America’s oldest and domestic flel—edouu the after gives conclusive ! modern, thorough This experience of TWS‘AT&T)S OF of safe, LECT!ICFURNCE—)IAN NTISPIED USERS, the SUPERIOR SERVICE of this time-tested device over all other automatic systemss. The ELECTRIC FURNACE-MAN is beating plant—any system, whether. warm air. ulqhblohy-rpln—‘ vwh'—'- ly and easily installed in a few hours. The ELECTRIC FU'IINACE-IAN burns lower Buckwheat and Rice sises of Am&hlt—m FUEL. There is no fire or cxplfi- smoke or odor. It is Also Idesl for Hot Water Supply BACKED BY AN ESTABLISHED, DISTRIBUTORS AND 'y Gillesple r——=—————IT EARNS 4S IT | | | ] Bailding, 7 Dey S, New York BURNS————. AUTHORIZED DISTRIBUTOR and DEALERS WILLIAM B. CARSON CO. 224 Sargeant Street, Hartford, Conn. CITIZENS' COAL CO. New Britain, Conn. THE GOULD CO. Southington, Conn. BULDERS AGAINST PROAIBITON AW Approve Local Repeal Movement Whea Pol Is Taken After lauding manufacturers and financiers who are leading the local movement against the prohibition act, Mayor Paonessa yesterday took a poll of a gathering of more than 150 at the second annual outing of the New Britain Master Builders' as- sociation at Lake Pocotopaug and found no dissenters. The mayor urged every man pres- ent to write Treasurer 1. D. Rumell of the local committe and pledge his support. The mayor, Aldermen Wal- ter R. Fallk and David L. Nair, Pub- lic Works Commissioner Harty E. Battistonl, G. Bengtson and sev- eral others spoke briefly, having been called upon by Toastmaster Louis W. Vogel. A vote of apprecia- tion was extended Inspector Arthur Comedy s ] tured Miss Dot Seeley, a dancer whose exoceptional ability won the hearty applause and demands for encores of the entire audience. Her numbers were easily the outstanding attractions of an entertainment which was endorsed from start to finish. Bob Spencer, who was re- membered by many of those present as a comedian of the Hi Henry min- strels when that troupe played out of this city, was on the program, as was Miss Kathleen Maloney, well known for her professional enter- tainments in this city, and Misses Kathleen Knepsel and Edith Moodi a team of variety dancers. Sammy Greenberg was at the plano. New Zealand 'Quakes Less Violent Today Wellington, New Zealand, June 20 (P—Earth tremors, while continu. ing, were easier today in the Murchi- son district. Although there was an occasional heavy shock, they seemed more deep seated and not so wrack. mfe, but between there and Murchi- son several families are isolated and nothing has been heard of them. The Reefton police have a party out ia that direction to render assistance.” Ranger, Tex., is planning . a well equipped airport. Want to Sleep All the Time? Don’t blame your dopey. drowsy feel- P Hiood” of yours must be made pure again. McCoy's Tablets are just the thing for a job like that. They cer- tainly get you back on your fest in Jig time. Am amasing ingredient that th contain works directly en the biood, im- parting a clear, rich redness to it. Jt also vitalises the nerves bullds strength where it is most needed, and tenee wp the whole aystem. Got thess safe, pleasant, effactive tab- lets today at the Fair Department Store or any drugstore. S —— PAINTING AND KNOWLEDGE IN PERFECT HARMONY WALL PAPER OF FAMOUS BOYLE QUALITY —AT A 40% REDUCTION ! PAINTS, VARNISHES, STAINS, LACQUERS, OILS, LEAD THE JOHN BOYLE COMPANY’! AT A BIG SAVINGS! ANNUAL 'WALL PAPER and PAINT SALE THIS SALE MEANS A SAVING OF MANY DOLLARS TO EVERY HOME OWNER IN NEW BRITAIN! YOU CAN'T BUY BETTER QUALITY—YOU CAN'T GET LOWER PRICES —AVAIL YOURSELF OF THIS GREAT, ONCE YEARLY SALE, A HANDY SUMMER HOUSEHOLD ITEM WILL BE GIVEN AWAY WITH EVERY PURCHASE OF ONE DOLLAR OR MORE DURING THIS SALE. JohnB 35 FRANKLIN QUARE WHY, THER'S A NEST UP HERE wWiTH NEW BRITAIN RS eCe WELL OO WONT HAVE TO GO Avu @ t] SOME LTRE BIRDS [ | TH' WAYS LP 31‘5'1' HATCHED. I\I L3 € NEUER SEEN A LWTILE BIRD \ NN e L bal) 1 U\S’\: ouT OF ' SEE THAT!

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