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THURSDAY ¥astern Daylight Saving Time iy 283—WTIC, Hartford—1060 5:00—*“In the Spotlight” 5:30—Party 5:45—James McCormack, tenor 6:00—*“Speaking of Sports,” Arthur B. McGinley 6¢15—Baseball scores 6:25—Orchestra 6335—News 7:00—Dinner dance orchestra man Cloutier, director 7:30—DMusical Questionnaire Wor- 303—WBZ, Springficld—990 5:00—Ensemble ¥ 5:30—Stock quotations 5:58—Contest 5:55—Road man 6:00—Weather man '6:04—Agricultural markets —Baseball scores; sport digest 30—McCoy Boys 8:45—"Topics in Brief" %:00—Amos 'n’ Andy ¥:16—Jesters 7:30—Phil Cook 8:00—Musical program 8:30—Criminal Law, Gleason Archer 8:45—Musical program | 9:00—Orchestra 9:30—Ensemble $0:00—First Alarm :30—Organ, Louis Weir :00—Weather man :03—Baseball scores: sport digest 422—WOR, Newark—710 5:00—Eleanor Kaplan, violinist ' 5:15—Constance Talbot, s Questions T Am Asked"” 5:30—Homer Mowe Trio :40—Motors contest Shirley, popular songs H. Woods of the "Nint Guest” company 5:59—Tower time 6:00—Uncle Don 6:30—Sports Period ** ¢:45—Hotel Astor dance orchestra 7:01—Hotel Astor dance orchestra 7:15—John M. Holzworth, cam- y Dpalgn Issues 7:30—“Ohrbach’s"—Basil Ruyvsdael announcer §:01—Little Symphony with Con- suelo Cloos, soprano 9:00—New Jersey State L Municipalities dinner 9:30—Kremlin Art Quintet 10:00—Around the World in Nights 10:30—To be announced 10:45—Globe Tretter 11:00—Weather report ##:08—Will Oakland Terrace or- ,chestra. M 30—Moonbeams Thirty 249—WABC, New York—860 . NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1930. | ing prices | 6:00—~Whyte's orchestra, direction Peter van Steeden 6:30—Park Central Homesecke _ Ponce Sisters, Ethel and Yoroth vocal and piano duo 6:45—Topics in Brief, Floyd Gib- bons 0—Amos ‘n’. Andy —Jesters, male trio (—Phil Cook :45—Associated Press bascball ores 0—O0ld Fashioned dapce band §:00—B. A. Rolfe and Ms dance orchestra 9:00—Orchestra isemble; orchestra dired tion Willatd Robison: vocal trio 10:00—Victor Herbert Opera Series: “Naughty Marietta;” Ivy Scott, Mary McCoy, sopranos Hopple, contralto; Harold Branch tenor; Walter Preston, Harvey Hindermyer, Frank Moulan, barl tones; Earl Waldo, directior Harold Sanford 11:30—Slumber Music; string en semble direction Ludwig Lauricr 10— Palais d’Or or ra bass 128—WLW, Cincinnati—760 | 6:30—Hall Duo 6:45—Announcement 6:47—Vocal solos Vesper organ Brooks and Ross —Baseball scores 30—Phil Cook 7:39—Weather forecast $:00—Theater of the Air 30—Contest pr Radio I)og am Glenn salt and Peanuts 0:30—American Hour Hollingsworth Hall 30—Amos 'n‘ Andy ‘opics of the Day, Floyd $:00—Weather man 2:03—Los Amigos: The Friends Remodeled Melodies astle Farm orchestra Melville Ray, tenor Hotel Gibson orchestra M. 1150 Knopc —W Rocheste IFlorence Ame WJZ 1xophonist & —N. Y. arkets, police news 6:15—Tommy Tucker and his or- chestra, 6:30—Ball scores Smith ' §:00—Manhattan Towers orchestra | ' 5:30—Bert Lown and his Biltmore orchestra 6:00—Harry_Tucker and his Hotel Barclay hestra 6:30—MacDougnall Rar 7:00—The Crockett Mountaineers 7:15—Huston Ray orchestra 7:30—Variety program 8:00—Toscht Seidel and concert orchestra 8:30—Kaltenborn Edits the News 48—Dramatic Sketches o 9:00—Billy Artzt’s orchestra 9:30—Dramatized Tales of Mystery 10:00—Burbig’s Syncopated History 10:30—Columbia Educational Fea- tures #2:00—Bert Lown and his Biltmore orchestra #1:15—Heywood Broun's Radio column 11:30—Ted Weems and h tra 12:00—Casino orchestra B2:30—Nocturne; Ann organ | 454—WEAF, New York—660 {5:00—In the Spotlight; Verna | Deane, soprano; Welcome Lewis, T contralto; Robert Simmons, tenor; ¥ Walter Preston, baritone; orche T tra direction Graham Harris 6:30—The Party; stories for small girls and boys; health and diet talk by Martha Curtis 5—Mountaineers; vocal strumental 6:00—Review National Am e Golf Championship, O. B. Keeler 6:20—Black and Gold Room or- chestra direction Ludwig Laurier 0—United Press paseball scores 5—Uncle Abe and David, rural sketch with Phillips Lord and Ar- thur Allen 0—Mid-Weck Federation Hy i Sing; mixed quartet: Helen Ja contralto; Muriel Savage, soprano; ! Clyde Dengler, tenor rthur Bill- ings Hunt, barntone and director George Vause, accompanist 7:30—Musical Program sketch: orchestra liam Merrigan Daly . 8:00—Rudy Vallee and tra 9:00—Birthday tion of Chief shall; John Monc Har- old Hansen, tenor; The Rondoliers male quartet; string ensemble di- rection Annis Fouleihan. 9:30—Melody Moments Smith, tenor violinist and d 20:00—RCA Hour; conce tra direction Nathaniel Shilkret H1:00—Hotel Paramount orchestra 11:30—Don Bigelow and his Hotel Park Central or #2:00—Jack Albin or orches- Leaf at the and in- i Kb dramatic il- his orches- oh . bass; Oliver iy, tor of orchestra orches- Hotc 395—WJZ, New York—760 Che Use of t Er Yanguage.” John D. B 5:15—Breen and d duo 5:35—Reports 5 g When in Hartford dine with us and be sure to bring home some of the finest, Oyste Scallops, Crabmeat, Lobster from the oldest eating estab- lishment in Hartford. HONISS’S OYSTER HOUSE CO. 22 State Sireet Hartford, Conn. s, Shrimp, and meat, Clams, as W hie Barrett and his S: more_orchestra as WIZ Same Tom t Palace organ 244—WNAC, Boston—1230 nd hig Greater Gang * | | | i | ovelty dance program Tip-Top club §:00—Toscha Seidel, concert orchestra ~Xaltenhorn E S:45—Mu Musical prgaram Magazine Hour —Syncopated Kistory 10:30—Democratic Kadio Rally | 11:01—Basebalk scores 11:05—News 11:15—Heywood Broun's Radio column :30—Jimmie Gallagher and his orchestra | 12:00—Mickie Alpert and his or- hestras, —Ann L the organ WDRC, New Haven—1330 Dance music violir 9:20 Have your tubes TESTED by your neighbor- hood radio dealer - Re-new your tubes at least once a year. NOW IS THE TIME TO DO YOUR FALLPAINTING No Job Too Large | Or Too Small || Estimates Cheerfully Given | |Crowley Brothers| TEL. 2913 | EXPRESS _ Four Times Daily 52 50 ONE 53,75 ROUND WAy TRIP Return Ticket Good 30 Days Brand New Latest Type Parlor Car Coaches Deep upholstery, air cushions, inside baggage compartments, elect ice water, and card tables. No finer built. We e your comfort. Le ‘s Drug Store 9:00 A. Running Time 41, Hours Phone 1951 Make Reservations Early Bonded and Insured || YANKEE STAGES, Inc. be | dance band, | | .. INEW YORK |- 6:50—News and weather report 6:58—Contest announcement 0—Dinner dance music 5—The World Bookman 0—Dinner music :45—Message frgm the Board of Education 0—Hertler's-Haven Four 5—Ione K. Chalmers, pianist :30—The Universal Old Timers 9:00—Adeline Beebe, popular pi- anist 9:15—Jack Waipio, Hawaiian gul- Adeline Beebe, accompanist :30—News and weather report 5—The Moonlight Skippers S soens FRIDAY MORNING PROGRAMS 303—WBZ, Springfield—990 7:30—Rise and Shine 7:40—Road man 7:45—Jolly Bjll and Jane S:00—Phil K.i(‘)ck 5:15—Peggy Winthrop, “Romance ind Marriage' \:30—Shopping v Randall About with Dor- 1:15—Lewis Bray, Minstrel of the Minuette ' 15—Home Forum Sewing school 30—Stock quotations 35—Manhatters 0:4 ‘Food,” Josephine B. Gib- son 1:00—Musical Moments 0—Bostonia Quintette State House Safety 00—Weather man 395—WJZ, New York—760 7:30—Rise and Shine, dance or- chestra, 7:45—Jolly Bill and Jane, child- dren's program 8:00—Phil Cook in character songs and dialogue 8:15—Chats with Peggy Winthrop 5:30—The Headliners, dance band $:45—Popular Bits, dance band ring Trio with Singing Canaries [10:00—The Manhatters Josephine B. Gibson, food ~Musical Miniatures 2:00—Luncheon ensemble, rand 11:00- dance D ———E— Through the Static A blow-by-blow d\cription of the Sharkey-Victorio will be bri from the ringside at Yankee Stadi- m tonight. The towering Argentine are scheduled to crawl through the ropes at about 10:00 o'clock. The broadcast will begin at that time and continue for an hour. . Graham McNamee, Who has de- scribed many of the notable ring battles in recent years, will be at the microphone. A group of old favorites that vary widely in sentiment and tempo will heard when the Old Fashioned under the direction of broadcasts over an tonight at T7:50 H. L. NBC Field, network o'clock IS “Naughty Marietta,” a comic op- | era in two acts, with lyrics by Rida Johnson Young, will be presented in the Victor Herbert opera series over an NBC network tonight at 10:00 o'clock. Baking Demonstration Gasco Crawford Bungalow Com- bination Ends Saturday If you have not seen this demonstration be sure and come in Mrs. Bean will gladly.-show you all the wonderful features of this range and you can gee the bLeauti- Friday and Saturday. fully-baked foods coming cut of the insulated oven. are interested in a combination all enameled which will fit into a 34 inch*space @nd which really heats, you will find that the Crawford Gasco fills your every requirement. the oven is insulated and has automatic control. ford quality throughout and is reasonably priced. Are Making Special Allowances On Your Old Campolo | deast by the NBC | Boston heavyweight and the | Hand Holding Emplo;’:; Arrested by Girl Cop Boston Sept. 25 (UP)—Hold- ing hands with a young woman i who applied to him for a job will cost S. Earle Carpenter $100 un- less the superior court upsets a municipal court decision. Following complaints from sev- eral young women that Carpenter had not acted in a business-like | | manner while they were in his employment bureau, police sent Miss Madeline Hardman, attrac- tive department store detective, to his office. When she reported that he had held hands with her, Carpenter was arrested on a simple assault charge and imposition of the $100 fine followed. Carpenter appealed Ogleans in about the yvear seventeen | rifty. Etienne Grandt, son of the | lieutenant governor and beau of the town, is really Bras Pique, the pi- rate, who is incognito. Captain Dick Warring, an American, in seeRing the pirate meets Marietta, an Ital- ian Contessa in disguise: | The opera closes with Captain | Dick capturing the pirate and’ win- | ning the heart of Marietta. B. A. Rolfe and his dance orches- |tra will be on the air three times izl week over NBC networks begin- | ning September 30. This new pro- | gram will be heard Tuesdays at | 10:15 p. m., and will last for three- quarters of an hour. | | The setting of the opera is in New | Al Jolson, famous blackface comedian and “mammy singer,” will | be guest artist during the broadeast | by Major Edward Bowes and his | “Family”, from the Capitol theater | over a NBC network Sunday at 7,35 | o'clock. f Tifis will be the first time Jolson | has been on the air since ea¥ly®last spring. He has not announced the | selections he will sing Sunda | it is presumed that he will sing sev- eral of the songs that have made him famous. When President Hoover speaks to approximately 7,000 members of the American Bankeps Assoclation in their 56th annual session at Cleve- land, Ohio, Thursday night, October 2, his words will'be picked up by a | NBC microphone and broadcast to the entire nahin SK FACTS IN SLAYING Newburgh, N. Y., Sept. Working with a few flim authorities today were identify the slain man whose body | was found dumped in typical gang- ster fashion on a farm near here. Oil had been poured on the body and fire had destroyed nearly all hope of identifying it. Gold plates in two front teeth and in one back #ooth’ afford the main clues in estab- lishing the mai$s identity. 850 FRESHMEN ADMITTED New Haven, Sept. (UP) — A total of 850'students have been ad- mitted to the Yale University fresh- man class, announced today. Forty states, the District of Co- lumbia, Canada, France, Persia, Siam and South America are »epre- | sented in the entering class. New York leads with a total of 222 stu- dents and Connecticut is second | with a total of 199 entrants. the hoard of admissions POLICE CAMP FOR ‘PUBLIC ENEMIES 23 Sought in Chieago Drive on Recognized Gangsters Chicago, Sept. 25 P—The law,to- day sat on the doorsteps of 23 “publie enemies,” waiting for them to come home. : 1t they do c®me home, they will be arrested s vagrants. One hun- dred detectivks are assigned to the job. - Al Capone, the 1 man” on the list of “enemies” found his |home and his haunts under the |law's espionage, He was to be taken to jail should he appear either at his residence or his “head- quarters” in the Lexington hotel at Michigan avenue and 22nd street. His brother, Paul, out on bond following conviction for income tax fraud, wad one of the ‘public ene- mies” Who was expected to surren- der today. He has opened negotia- tions with authorities through an | attorney. Three of the original 26 | | “enemies” already have been book- ed on the vagrancy warrants issued last week and~under which police hope to drive them out of town. Miles Devine, attorney for Ralph Capone, expressed surprise that his client should be sought as a va- grant, explaining that Capone is “a blg race horse man,” with nine horses running at the Lincoln Fields track. TRUCKMAN KILLED IN LONELY MARSH Taximan Tells of Murder by JGlare of Headlights New York, Sept. 25 (A—A killing by the light of a taxicab’s lamps in the lonely marshes of Barren Island, Breoklyn, was described to police today by the chauffeur who was compelled to help dispose of the | vietim's body. Joseph Perrone, the taxi driver, said {wo men entered his cab at | Third and Prospect avenues, Brook- lyn, last night and ordered him to drive to the island. On the way, he said, he could hear them talking and laughing like friends. ‘When the cab reached a desolate spot near the eastern end of the island, one of the men showed a gun and ordered him to stop. He directed his companion to get out of the cab. The man' demurred and was pulled out, pleading for his life. Uses Two Guns The gunman shoved his victim in- > the glare of the cab’s lights and shot him six times. When that gun was empty, he drew another and fired four more shots into the body of the other. Then the gunman, Perrone said§ compelled him to help strip the clothing from the body and throw it into Jamalca Bay. The gunman ran into” the marsh and disappeared. Police recovered the body from “No. If you Of course It is Craw- the shallows of the bay. It was identified as that of Charles May of Brooklyn, a truck driver for the street cleaning department. No motive for the killing was apparent. Pertdone was held for questioning. City Items Harvest Home services were hel last night at the Salvation Arm: barracks on Arch street. Rey. C. J. Fredeen, pastor of Bethany Swedish church, spoke on “Religious Condi- tions in Sweden.” 5 A three family tenement at 138 Pleasant street owned by the Deep River Savings bank was sold this | morning through the W. L. Hatch | agency to Ale¥ and Bridget Prusch- nicki of 144 Pleasant street. Probation Officers E. C. Connolly | and Miss Ruth Bristoll attended the quarterly meeting of the Connecti- cut Probation Officers’ Asseciation at_Trinity Parish church, New Ha¥| veh, today. The speaker was Roy L. McLoughlin, newly appointed superintendent of the Connecticut School for Boys, at Meriden. Application for a marriage license has been made by Ralph M. Sanadk o 172 Smith street, and® Jennie Maccarone of Kensington FLOUR PRICES LESS " Berne, Switzerland, Sept. 25 (Pr— A pound of flour sells for eleven per cent less today than a pound off wheat, under the new price fixing schedule adopted by the §wiss gov- ernment yesterday. The federal council fixed the price | of wheat at 41.5 Swiss francs per hundred kilograms which is roughly $2.25 a bushel. Flour was fixed at 37 francs per hundred kilos, the government absorbing the difference | in the price and cost of milling. BAPTIST GHURCH RECITAL Howard Brewer, First Baptist church, will give his first recital of the season in the church Wednesday evening, October organist at the further || 1, at 8 o'clock. Miss Virginia MacCracken, so- prano, will be the soloist. The Board of Health’s Test for August Shows That MOORLAND GOLDEN _ GUERNSEY MILK Was Absolutely Clean, and the Bacteria” Count was well below the requirements ) of Certified Milk_ The BEST is none too good for your family. It costs more and is worth more. Add your name and_address and mail us today. _Untfl our customers return from vacations, try our milk without cost. Moorland Farm - “Tél. 3940 COLLECTIONS SLOW? Let Us Speed Them Up Fpr You! . \ . We will take over your accounts for a nominal fee and insure collection with a minimum amount of publicity. THE SERVICE CREDIT & ,COLLECTION BUREAU 300 Main Street Room 509 New Britain, Conn, Phone 4593 SERIES STARTS NEKT WEDNESDAY w// Screen-Grid Chassis! Tone Control! Amazing Power! Great Distance! Perfect Repro- duction! Ranges During This Demonstration. "A. A. MILLS PLUMBING PHONES 5100 - 5101 HEATING SHEET METAL WORK 66 WEST MAIN STREET Beautiful Tone! = KOLODREY HARDWARE .COMPANY “Growing With keason”/ ’ TEL. 909 “ The crack of the bat .. . The roar of the crowd as Miller out in right field for the Athletics makes a beautiful one-hand catch — enjoy every game just as though you occu- pied a hox seat! We'll guarantee delivery of your Lyric in time for the opening game ngxt Wednesday! Screen Grid Radio WURLITZER Built by ¢ Master You'll Get Every Play Clearly On Your LYRIC! For Lyric with the mighty Waurlitzer speaker is de- signed for per- fect reproduc- tion. N - Models Priced From 99" Less and up to $264.00 $ MODEL 129 $139.00 Less Tubes Tubes —_— SMALL DOWN PAYMENT " EASY WEEKLY,TERMS e ] 0} 0 220 MAIN ST. DIXIE DUGAD} i | —DOGS ARE SUCH A HELP! I'M MRS TIMOTHY DUGAN ! SHALL REPORT THE POLICEFOR ‘OU TO /AKING OUT SUCH AVICI0US DOG WITH= A MILLION PARDONS, MADAME DUGAN, YOU ARE A BIT UNNERVED. PERMIT- ME TO SEE YOU HOME. — | AM PRINCE KOMANOFF POODLE / J0 YOURE THE PRINCE WHO SAVED MY DAUGHTER DIXIE'S LIFE IN THE PARK YESTERDAY AND NOW YOUVE SAVED HER PRECIOUS By J. P. McEVOY and J. H. STRIEBEL €A Yir 1S DELIGHTFUL TO ANTICIPATE SEEING YOU AND YOUR CHARMING DAUGHTER ONCE AGAIN, DO HAVE WITH US SATURDAY AFTERNOON,