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The Evening News from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania • Page 5

Publication:
The Evening Newsi
Location:
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE EVENING NEWS, HARRISBURG, PENNA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1930 PAGE FIVE Permission must be granted by I Premier Mussolini before any pub-1 He institution in Italy is named for him. Belgium is to celebrate the ten tenary of her independence this year. Tunto the radio dial tunes will be heard at 8.30 o'clock. The adventures of Mary and Bob will be continued at 9 o'clock. Classical selections will predominate at 10 o'clock, followed by another program of classical selections at 10.30 o'clock.

Dance orchestras will broadcast in both the 11 and 11.30 the use or handling or intoxicating liquor. Of the revocations last year, 1861 were brought about by intoxication and sixty-eight for transporting liquor. Other causes for revocation were: Failure to stop, 175; larceny, 762. Of the suspensions last year intoxicating liquor was responsible for 592. Other causes were as 'CHUTE JUMPERS MUST OBEY RULE OF COMMISSION Parachute jumping: for exhibition purposes will be regulated in Pennsylvania in the future, the State Aeronautics Commission announced today.

Because of accidents to jump First Showing at the Motor Shows of the NEW NASH "THE JAMESES," a comic sketch of American family life, will be dramatized at 7 o'clock over WEAF. Popular music will be sung by a comedy team, assisted by an orchestra, at 7.30 o'clock, when WTIC and WGY will join the chain. Jessica Dragonette, a male quartet and an orchestra will broadcast a tf itAnnAff anI AnArfit OA. lections at 8 o'clock. A dance or- chestra will eo on the air at 9 o'clock.

Classical music will be of- fered at, 9.30 o'clock, and popular music will be broadcast at 10 o'clock. A melodrama will be presented at 10.30 o'clock. A dance orchestra will broadcast at 11 o'clock over WEAF and WGY. Amos and Andy will broadcast at 7 o'clock over WJZ and KDKA, followed by a program of current melodies at 7.15 o'clock. Uncle Bob Sherwood will tell some more stories of circus life at 7.30 o'clock when WHAS and WLW will go on the chain.

Vocalists and an orchestra will broadcast a program of TWIN-IGNITION EIGHT SIX SINGLE SIX SUPERIOR PERFORMANCE 1 TO! 5 B3Baj follows: Failure to file accident re port, 45: failure to file accident re port and appear for a hearing, 160: fatal accidents, 426: fatal accident and failure to file report, 152; im- ersonation of another driver, 219: arceny, 68; loaning operator's li- cense. 159: manslaughter, 'IT. mis demeanor, 84: misstatement of facts, 64; misuse of motor vehicle, 93; physically incapacitated, 69; reckless driving, 363; transporting liquor, 316; unable to interpret traffic signals and warning signs, 63; operating without consent of the owner, 140. Total revocations and suspensions for the last six years are as follows: 1924, 2280; 1926, 2521; 1927, 3104; 1928, 3904; 1929, 5869. The total number of withdrawals in 1929 was nearly fifty-nine times greater than that of ten years ago.

Mrs. McCauley to Give Extension Lecture The operation of the Department of Welfare and the State-owned in-stiutions over which it has jurisdiction is the topic of a lecture to be given soon by Mrs. E. S. H.

Mc Cauley, State Secrtary of Welfare, tt; i ymveiaii.y c.u in the caucus room of the House of Representatives here. The first half hour of Mrs. Mc-Cauley's lecture will be broadcast over the State police radio station while the remainder of the lecture will assume the nature of an open discussion. ROYAL "WATCHDOG LONDON, Jan. 24.

With the announcement of the retirement of Superintendent McBrien, of Scotland Yard, comes the following story: His job for the last twenty-five years has been to guard English royalty. Once the Prince of Wales wanted to attend a movie by himself. He left the house in which he was staying and unnoticed, slipped into a movie. Unknown to him, however, the watchful McBrien followed and eat two seats away from him. CAREFUL MOTHERS KEEN ABOUT IT "Coughs never last long in our family, for we use Foley's Honey and lar, says Mrs.

J. M. Hill, Homer, Ga. "Foley's Honey and Tar has never failed to take care of coughs and colds in our family, and we have used it over twenty years," says Mrs. Ornstein, Green Bay, Wis.

Dependable always, no opiates, no chloroform, nothing that a careful mother hesitates to give her children. Thats why mothers endorse Foley's Honey and Tar. Ask for it. For sale at the Square Cut Rate Store. the ice Motor Show, classical and semi-classical music at 8 o'clock.

Marthin Provensen, baritone, will sing a short program of classical selections at 8.30 o'clock, followed by the life of Dolly Madison at 8.45 o'clock. Popular tunes will be sung by a vocal duo, assisted by an orchestra, at 9 o'clock. Current and classical selections will be offered at 9.30 o'clock, followed at 10 o'clock by a similar program. Dance music will be broadcast at 10.30 o'clock. The program of Slumber Music will be brodacast at 11 o'clock over WJZ and KDKA.

Station WCOD will be on the air from 8 until 10 o'clock, A DANCE orchestra will broad-V cast at 6.30 o'clock over WHP and WABC, followed at 7 o'clock by another dance orchestra. Popu lar music will be broadcast at 7.30 o'clock over WABC, WCAU and WMAQ. A variety program will be offered at 8 o'clock, and. popular 5 mi MOTHER year, another A and the interest of o'clock programs. Mary Weston Seman will review the latest books at 5 o'clock over WHP.

A dance orchestra will broadcast at 5.15 o'clock. Another dance orchestra will be heard at 6 o'clock, and a tour talk will be given at 6.1& clock. A story women around a popular song will be pre sented at 7.30 o'clock. Services at the Ohev Sholom Temple will be broadcast at 8 o'clock. The station will be on the air from 6 o'clock tomorrow morning until midnight, except for an hour at 10.30 o'clock in the morning and an hour and a half at 7.30 o'clock in the evening.

At 3 o'clock Sunday morning WHP will present a DX party. PRINCESS COATS Spring coats grow more princess by the day. These are for the more formal wear. Swagger coats are still full, racrlan and belted. i and attractive features as theTwin-lgniHon Eight and Twin-Ignition Six motors with their 9 and 7-bearing, hollow-crankpin crankshafts; aluminum connecting rods; self-energizing, cable-actuated 4-wheel brakes; flexible steel spring covers; built-in, automatic radiator shutters; and superb new body designs, with the new arched-in upperstructure.

Qfoucan see every worth-while feature of motoring for 1930 without leaving the Nash exhibit! Entire Bankrupt Stoek of Yohn Bros. Music Store Has Been Purchased by Spangler's Music House Stock of Pianos, Radios and Cabinets, Saxophones, Violins, Sheet Music, Uicfrolas (In Fact Everything in Music) Office and Store Fixtures Must Be Sold, as Store Must Be Vacated FFEIR REFUSED! Chance of a Lifetime to Buy Music Supplies Cheaply Stock on Sale at 21 North Fourth St. goers again concentrates on Nash. In the new Nash cars, the Twin-Ignition Eight, Twin-Ignition Six and Single Six, Nash engineering and manufacturing genius has accomplished another decisive step forward in motor car design and performance, These new 1 930 Nash "400V' Introduce to the motor world such new Motor Show- OTHER CITY NASH DEALERS Leonard E. Hebner Motor Co.

South Cameron Street, Harrlsburg, Pa Line of Reconditioned and Guaranteed MYERS MOTOR SALES S16 Maguire's Garage Duncannon, Pa. We Hare a Full ers, the commission has adoptea aras-tic reguations covering this activity in the air, and the new rules will become effective in the spring. Hereafter no pilot or airplane licensed to operate in the State will be permitted to carry as a passenger a parachute jumper or person intending to jump for exhibition purposes, who is not equipped with an approved type of parachute, properly, packed, and an emergency parachute. A parachute properly packed, means under the new regulations, one packed by a qualified rigger approved by the State commission. The commission will approve as a qualified ripger a graduate of a parachute packing school maintained by the United States military service or a manufacturer of parachutes or a person who demonstrates to the commis sion his capability.

The new regulations were decided upon as the result of two fatal accidents during the 1929 flying season and reports of carelessness at certain flying fields where jumpers are engaged for exhibition purposes. Investigation showed that in one of the fatal cases the parachute was not packed but was carried under the arm of the jumper who was not skilled in his work. InsDection of nlanes and lots will be more strict and unlicensed planes will be driven out of the State, the commission stated. Last year there were nine accidents to airplanes, causing eighteen deaths in Pennsylvania, exclusive of accidents to Army or Navy planes. Fifty-eight accidents were reported to the commission and 60 per cent, of these were classed as avoidable.

DRUNKENNESS IS CHIEF CAUSE OF LOST LICENSES Sixty-six per cent of the revocations of automobile licenses in Pennsylvania are due to intoxication, Benjamin G. Eynon, Commissioner of Motor Vehicles, said today. The number of licenses revoked in 1929 was 2918, and in 1933 cases intoxicating liquor was responsible with the withdrawal. Revocations since 1918 are as follows: In 1919, 10; 1920, 115; 1921, 387; 1923. 1011; 1924, 1740; 1925, 1466; 1926, 1345; 1927, 1559; 1928, 1948; 1929, 2918.

The total number of revocations r.nd suspensions in 1929 was 5869, of which 2525 were occasioned by on 1330, Lmcrrr Myzs Tobacco Cq its Tyy. 5.: mi- in a ciaarette TASTE 0) fl if 215 Broad St. SteeHon Garage 158 South Front St. Steeltoit, Pa, Used Cars its yes and yet THEY SATISFY rr The easy graceful swing of the skater has years of training behind it. Equally, the smooth sparkling zest of Chesterfield is no chance affair.

Tobaccos are chosen for mildness, for fragrance, for wholesome flavor then patiently aged and mellowed, exactly blended and cross-blended. And unvarying good taste is the constant result quite naturally, when every step of every process has good taste as its goal: TASTE above everything MILD SUCH POPULARITY MUST BE DESERVED.

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About The Evening News Archive

Pages Available:
240,701
Years Available:
1917-1949