New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 18, 1930, Page 20

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THURSDAY \ v BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBéR 18, 1930. vheal and piano duo 6:45—Topics in Brief, Floyd Gib- Eastern Daylight Saving Time 283—WTIC, Hartford—1060 5:00—*“In the Spotlight” 5:30—Musical Party b:45—James McCormack, tenor 6:00—"Speaking of Sports,” Arthur B. McGinley 6:15—Baseball scores 6:25—Orchestra ] 8:55—News 7:00—Dinner dance orchestra; Nor- man Cloutler, director 7:30—Musical Questionnalre 308—WBZ, Springfield—990 5:15—Ensemble 5:30—Stock quotations 5:53—Contest 5:55—New England Roadman 6:00—Weather man 6:04—Agricultural markets 6:20—Baseball scores, sport digest 6:30—McCoy Boys, Happy Feet, Truthtul Parson Brown, the Marn from the South :45—*"Topics in Brief™ :00—Amos 'n’ Andy :15—Musical program :30—Phil Cook :45—Ensemble :00—Musical program :30—Criminal Law, Gleason Le Archer 9:00—Orchestra 9:30—Ensemble | 40:00—American Legion Hour | 11:31—Weatherman | 11:33—Baseball scores, sport digest 422—WOR, Newark 8:00—B. 10:00—A | 11:30—Slumber Music; 9:00—K. 11 710 11 bons 00—Amos 'n’ Andy :15—Jesters, male trio 30—PHhil Cook sociated Press baseball :50-=01d Fashioned dance band, {irection H. L. Field A. Rolfe and his dance orchestra 9:00—Orchestra 9:30—Ensemble; opchestra tion Willard Robison; malc tet nwtimn‘ gion program string en- semble direction Ludwig Laurier 00—Palais d'Or orchestra 428—WLW, Cincinnati—700 :00—Angelus Trio )—Hall Duo 6:45—Vocal solos 7:00—Vesper organ and Ross 30—Phil Cook 45—Salt and Peanuts 9—Weather forecast 00—Theater of the )—Contest program Radio Dog club, s Air Adam Riley and § al b 0. -Hum Mus| 0:00—Variety Salt and Peanuts ingsworth Hall ‘30—Amos 'n’ Andy 5:00—Eleanor Kaplan, violinist 5:15—Constance Talbot: “Tea at the Ritz" :30—Homer Mow Singers 40—Motor contest :45—Eva Shirley, popular songs :00—Uncle Don :30—Sports period :45—Hotel Astor dance orchestra | :15—John M. Holzworth, ca paign issues 7:30—"“Ohrbach” | 8:01—Little Symphony with Ar- | turo de Filippi 9:00—To be announced 9:30—Art Quintet [0:00—Around the World in Thirty Nights #0:30—Katherine Kent and Ruth Glenn 10:456—Globe Trotter 11:00—Weather report 11:08—Will Oakland Terrace or- chestra 11:30—Moonbeams b 340—WABC, New York—860 5:00—Manhattan Towers orchestra 5:30—Bert Lown and his Biltmore orchestra. 6:00—Harry Tucker and his Hotel Barclay orchestra 6:30—MacDougall Ramblers | 7:00—The Crockett Mountaineers | 7:15—Rhythm Ramblers 7:30—Tip Top Club 8:00—Toscha Seidel and concert orchestra 8:30—XKaltenborn Edits,the News 45—The Melody A\l\*.'skc\f‘vrs 0—Musical program —Story Magazine 10:00—Syncopated History 10:830—Columbia Educational tures 11:00—Bert Lown and his Biltmore | orchestra #%16—Heywood Broun's radio column \ 11:30—Speech at General Pershing dinmer 12:00—Paul Tremale and his or- chestra #2:30—Nocturne; Ann Leaf at the organ 10 fea- | | 454—WEAF, New York—660 5:00—In the Spotlight; Vera Deane, soprano; Welcome Lewis, contral- to Robert Simmons, tenor; Walter | Preston, baritone; orehestra di- | rection Graham Harris 5:30—The Party; stories for small | girls and boys; health and diet | talk by Martha Curtis §:45—Mountaineers; vocal and in- strumental 6:05—Black and Gold Room or- chestra direction Ludwig Laurier 6:40—United Press baseball scores 6:45—Uncle Abe and David, rural | sketch 'with Phillips Lord and Ar- thur Allen 7:00—Mid-Weok Federation Hymn Sing—mixed quartet: Helen Janke contralto; Muriel Savage, soprano; Clyde Dengler, tenor; Arthur Bill- ings Hunt, baritone and director; George Vause, accompanist 7:30—Musical program; dramatic | sketch; orchestra direction Wil- | liam Merrigan Daly | 8:00—Musical hour; and his orchestra 9:00—Birthday Party; reincarna- tion of Dr. Samuel Johnson and James Boswell; John Moncrieff, Rudy Vallee |11:45—To :45—The Melody Mus 10:30—Columbia 11:01—F 11: | 11:15—Heywood Broun's radio 7:30—Rise 9:15—Lewis Bray cs of the Day, Fl Gibbon 12:00—Weather mard Los Amigos, The Friends —Remodeled Melodies stle Farm orchestra 30—Melville Ray, tenor Hotel Gibson orchestra 61—WHAM, Rochester—1150 —The Three, of Us, Is' trio > as WJ axaphonist, Sac Smith 45—Stocks, ball scores anadian stocks, police —Marigold dinner dance —TUnderwriter's sl news 244—WNAC, B8ston— Ted and his Grea lists Gang :13—Melodists 6:30—Oracle and dinner orchestra —Modernists —Baseball scores ovelty dance ‘program 8:00—Toscha Seidel, violinist and concert orchestra :30—Kaltenborn E the News eteers it :00—Musical program 30—Story Magazine Hour 00—Syncopated History Educational Fea- tures, republican radio rally sball scores column 11:30—Emerson Gifl and his Pa- villon Royal orchestra 12:00—Broadcast from Cocoanut Grove Garden 12:30—Nocturne; Ann Leaf at the organ 226—WDRC, New Haven—1330 )—Dance music ws and weather report Contest announcement 00—Dinner hour music 5—The World Bookman nner hour music Hertler's Haven Four Reginald A. E. Smith, pi :30—The Universal Old Time: 9:00—Adeline Beebe, populag pianist 9:15—Jack Waipio, Hawaiian gui- Adeline Beebe, accompanist —News and weather report 35—The Moonlight trio B FRIDAY MORNI 303—WBZ. Springfield—990 and Shine 40—Roadman Jolly Rill m\il Jane tar PROGRAMS throp, “Romance iage Shopping About with Dor- othy Randall :45—Popular Bits Minstrel of the Minuette 10:00—Manhatters | 10:15—Fome Forum Sewing school direc- | bass; Harold Hansen, tenor; The Rondoliers, male quartet; string ensemble direction Annis Foulei- han 9:30—Melody Moments; Oliver Smith, tenor; Eugne Ormandy violinist and director of orchestra 10:00—American Legion program 11:30—Don Bigelow and his Hotel Park Central orchestra 12:00—Jack Albin and his Htel Bossert orchestra 305—WJZ, New York—760 5:00—"The T of the English Language,” John D. Barry 5:15—Breen and de Rose, piano duo ports: stock market clos- NOW IS THE TIME TO DO YOUR ALLPAINTING No Job Too Large Or Too Small Istimates Cheerfully Given Crowley Brothers TEL. 2913 ing prices 6:00—Whyte’s orchestra, direction Peter van § 6:30—Park Ce Homeseekers; Ponce Sisters, Bthel and Dorothea, | When in Hartford dine with us and be sure to bring home some of the finest, Scallops, Crabmeat, Shrimp, Lobster meat, Clams, from the oldest eating estab- lishment in Hartford. HONISS’S OYSTER HOUSE CO. £2 State Street Hartford, Conn. and NEW YORK EXPRESS Four Times Daily 50 ONE .10 ROUND Q75 ¥ TRIP rn Ticket Good 30 Daya New Latest Type Parlor Car_Coaches Decp upholstery, nir cushions, inside baggage compartments, electric fans, ice water, and card tables. No finer built. We' gquarantee your comfort. Leave Crowell's Drug Store T West 9:00 A, M Make Reservations Early Bonded apd Insured YANKEE STAGES, Inc. 11:55—State House Safety 12:00—Weather man 395—WJZ, New York—760 7:30—Rise and Shine, dance or- chestra 7:45—Jolly Bill and Jane, chil- dren’s program $:00—Phil Cook in character songs and dialogue 15—Chats with Peggy Winthrop 30—The Headliners 30—The Headliners, dance band :45—Popular Bits,dance band :15—String Trio with Singing | Canaries | 10:00—The Manhatters 10:45—Josephine B. Gibson, talk | 11:00—U. 8. Army band, direction | Captain Wm. J. Stannard 30—Musical Miniatures 00—Luncheon Ensemble, dance band s s 8 N 9 food | | | | — 1 | Through the Static | ) How Paul Miller obtained the one | vote necessary to change the name | {of Veedersburg to Amsterdam will | {be told in a dramatic sketch to be | | presented during the program over | an NBC netfvork tonight at 7:30 o'clock. | Based partly on history and part- ly on legend, the playlet will de- scribe the dramatic circumstances | which enabled young Miller to have his way about giving the town a name so that trade would be | attracted | A concert of five numbers played | by an orchestra directed by William | | Merrigan Daly will augment the sketch. new L | | | A polka, reel, cotillion, and waltz | | will be heard when the Old Fash-| |icned Dance Band, under the direc tion of H. L. Field, is heArd o |an’ NBC network tonight at | Dr. Samuel Johnson, the great cenversationalist, wit and literary ific, who dominated English lit- crature during the eighteenth cen- | tury, will be the reincarnated guest honor at the birthday party to broadeast over an NBC network tenight at 9 o'clock. he of novel and H\?‘ r- ever staged by will be presented tonight with mall army of radio stars appearin. 1s guest artists. The program will | be broadecast from 9:30 to 10 p. m. | The guest artists who will be | neard include James Meiton, one of | radio’s most popular young tenors; Thomas Waller, dusky Harlem | pianist who is Known for his skill | s the “two-piano pianist’; Lou | dderman, recording violinist; the | Mariners' trio, a male vocal group | | making its first appearance on the Maxwell House programs, and the newly-organized saxophone sextet, headed by Ross Gorman, one of the | greatest masters of the saxophone since that instrument first came } Outstanding business men and larm’nrnmrnt officials will vie with a | group of internationally known vo- | | calists and musicians in a salute to | radio for solving the unemployment | | problem at Camden, N. J. during an | | hour's program th¥ough the NBC networks 10 o'clock. One of the mo: esting progra Willard Rol com. bined tomorrow night Italian Specials Bari, Sept. 18 (UP)—A group of Italian-Americans of Apulian ex- traction arrived on the Motorship Vulcania yesterday. They were greeted by officfals, visited the Le- | | vant fair, and were the guests at a | reception given by the royal com- missioner at the town hall. Mantoba, Sept. 18 (UP) do Rinaldi, former political tary of the local Fascio, tenced to enforced vears due to alleg ind continued in Leopol- secre- was sen- domicile for five 4 moral faults scipline. les, Sept. 18 (UP)—Giovanni rdi, 60, and his wife were ser- injured and their chauffeur was slightly hurt when their auto- mobile turned over and fell into a ditch en route to the famous shrine of Monte Vergine. Thg party came from Monte Sarchio. ! NOW IS THE TIME TO THINK OF WEATHER STRIPS ! Let Us Estimate N. B. Screen Mfg. Co. Rocky Hill Ave. Tel. 5147| | pr essari, Sept. 18 (UP)—Antonio IFerraceiu, professor of constitution- al law at the University of Paler- mo, died at his home in Calangian- us yesterday. Sept. 18 Giacomo, Viareggio, Barkentine (UP)—Thc owned by Bartolomeo Lombardi, was partly destroyed when it was struck by lightning during 42 storm off Tunis. The crew of eight men escaped in 1 life boat. Ariano, Sept. 18 (UP)—Workers engaged under the supervision of the Vatican arrived yesterday to begin the work of rebuilding and repairing churches, a seminary, par- ish house, and a bishop house de- stroyed or damaged by fhe July | earthquake. Repairs _to the cathe- dral will sbegin when %he ministry of education approves the plans. All work will be carried out un- | der plans made by Monsignor Spir- ito Chiapetta, who was an archi- tect before he entercds the priest- hood. He toured tht earthquake area as the pope's special represen- tative to ascertain the spiritual needs of the populace. Agrigento, Sept. 18 (UP)—Anto- nio Decaro, proprietor of a motion picture house at Licata'in which 18 persons, mostly children, were burned to death in April, was sentenced yesterday to five years imprisonment for conductipg un- safe premises. _His son, Salvatore Dec: ceived a similar other son, Andrea, two and a half ye Five operators and acquitted. ro, re- and an- ushers wert e R Flashes of Life ] Ethaerd Lieg) Associated Pr ew York -— Look over the radio ams, set a clock-like affair for wish during the next 24 that's all there is to it listen. Somebody has in- vented a device for automatically t in for various programs at -minute intervals. It hs successful demonstration. Schenectady, N. Y.—A vacuum tube is so sensitive it will measure the heat of stars which are difficult 1t has been developed at the Zlectric laboratories. ¢ York—A knockout speech is what Mayor Jimmy Walker calls it He was speaking at a Brooklyn attending the breaking of ground for ceremony attending the breaking of ground for a school. Two boys faint- cd from heat. London—RBobby Jones has all the golt cups, Stribling knocked out By the what you hou and except to irto popularity. { Daily Baking In Our | Scott, Australia won the ashes, the | | polo cup is in the U. S. A, Sham- |rock V is no better than I, II, III |and 1V, and woe is me, thinks John Bull, the American bridge team is ahead by some 5,000 points, New York—Maria Corda, “Hun- garian actress, back from FEurope, s employing a college girl to im- prove her English pronunciation She plans to appear4m a play in De- cember. . | TLondon—The Bishop of Norwich | believes that every young man and zirl, before they t to be married, | should make quite sure that they are [true friends at heart with a deep {true friendship that will grow with the years. He gave a warning against hasty marriage when officiating at the wedding of Lady Helena Rous and Major Douglas Beresford-Ash. New York—There's salt water erywhere around Father Knicker- bocker, but not a drop is fit to drink for his fishes. Some 125,000 zaflons of choice Atlantic ocean brine from the vicinity of Cape Cod, where there are no oil and sewers, have been imported for the city aquarium at the confluence of the Hudson and | Bast rivers. | cCairo, Yeypt—Two English girls the Misses Badgell and Blecher, have motored the length of Africa. In a | small car they came to Cairo from |Capetown, 8,000 miles, in 5% | months. Lions once sniffed around their tent 3 New York—On the fifth floor, of the new home which Irving Berlin is planning will be a spundproof | studio. The-idea is that e will not disturb the sest of the family when he wakes up at 4 a. m., and pounds the piano to work out an in- spiration for a song. Newark, N. J—The Dobbins' day | |is done. In 1850 Joseph A. Dobbins |opened a harness shop. His grand- | son, Raymond E. Dobbins, is to dis- | continue the business and folks no {longer will sec a plaster horse, a trade symbol which has been in a | show window 60 years. FRANCE NOT FACED BY UNENPLOVHEN had a | \Workers Imported for Factories | a5 Well as Farms 1 Prie Paris, Sept. 18 (A—There is more work than workers in France at Official statistics show that re some 15,000 jobs going nemplogment exists, . it is true. Counting strikes and voluntary ab- senteeis number of men idle . | amounts to some 20,000. But there | i Demonstration Window STARTING MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22ND Mrs. you intend to buy or not. This range is a wonder bolts. Comes in gray, buff | ' SPECIAL ALLOWAN Bean direct from factory will demonstrate this wonderful range and bake daily. recipes whieh she will gladly She'has some wondeml give you. Come in whether ; 'ful heater and has insulated oven and automatic control, lock valves and no exposed and green. CF ON OLD RANGES A. A. MILLS Plumbing — Heating — Sheet Metal Work PHONES 5100 - 5101 e 66 WEST MAIN ST. [ RED DEVIL. WHY NOT | ADVERTISE. FOR | FLOSSIE IN THE. DIXIE DUGAN—WORTH WORKING FOR YE-AR ! FLOSS'E COME. BACK /(—ALL |'VE & TREAT IT GENTLY, SAM ITS IN A STRANGE PLACE oT e are only 850 workers on the, books of the local unemployment funds, and those are really the only unem- 'wloyed 4n the Arerican sense. Thus there is really a deficiency o? labor, and France is and is likely to continue to be an importer of workers. There are considerably more than 1,000,000 foreign workers in France, mostly Italians and to bring 180,000 in 1929 to meet the | Belgrade, Jugo Slavia, Sept. 18 (P requirements of Franch indWSUY| cuptain Matthews, British aviator and agriculture. 3 ? 4 The general Index of production |{¥ing a sporting plane, continued for the month of May was the high- |today toward Sofia after landing last | est since the war, being 14 per cent |night from Croydon, England. He | more phan that gf 1913, is attempting to break Bert Hink- . ler's 15 day record between England | USE and Australia. | Polfs, vet it was found necessary| CAPT. 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We will be pleased to talk things over with you and we feel that we can he of great assistance to you. { Call 2112 ; is extended you an EGAN Budget For Appointment Fire =aFlood and Raging Blizzard powerless o check the dependlable operation of the ¥LOOD 12 the ey waters of tho o Canal they drowned it. It still MONITOR TOP NEVER—(hrbugh all its years of faithful service in the péace and quiet of your home—will the General Electric Refrig- erator be required to withstand such |tests as these. But what years of service you may expect from the refrigerator that can urvive the most terrific gavages of time and wear! In the Monitor Top, the entire mechanism is fortified agatnst air, dirt and moisture with impregnable walls of steel. Buried in sand, frozen in ice, drowned in water, roasted in flames, the General , Electric Refrigerator still ran on! A refrigerator so dependable, so efficient, is within the means of]| eteryone. It is true economy to own one. 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