The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 8, 1934, Page 2

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Three Famous Players Offer THE BISMARCK '1KiBUNE, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1934 IKFY R-NBC Program; __(Gubeet to Revisten) lay, Sept. 16 fast Club it of Sons Lu. ‘'n Em—Coilgate- t jt arkets 00—The Hour of Memories :00—Markets, Weather and Aunt Sammy 15—Charles Sears, Tenor 30—Vic and Sade 45—Words and Mus! 00—Markets and World Bookman 15—The Honorable Archie 30—Nat ‘arm Home Mour Mills “Wheaties” with it & Band 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 pt 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 00—Chicago Symphony Orch. 30—Oxydol's Own Ma Perkins 45—Procter & Gamble Camay 00—Al Pearce and His Gang :30—Twenty Fingers of gat 45: pt Jack Turner and other tis Dance Orch. ball Scores 5—State Mill & Elevator Prem. with Speed Wallac 00—Harry Turner's Orc! 15—In a Garden 30—Press Radio News and So. St. Paul Livestock Markets 6:45—Eddie Dunstedter’s Preferred Band—Hamm's Beer 9:00—Binclair Mins! 30—Colgate House Party 00—-NBC Concert Orch. 30—Hazel Arth, soloist. 45—Democratic Republican Series \—Piano Mood Farmers Union rel Original Bavar- 00—Jack Berger and Orch. 1:30—Paul Pendarvis and Orch. 2:00—Silent ‘Tuenday, Sept. 11 Ta, Em—Colgate- Palmolive-Peet Farm Flashes Ww Melody Mixers kets, Weather and Aunt 10— and World Bookman 15—The Honorable Archie 30—-National Farm and Home Hour }0—General Mi! Wheaties” with Prof. Sauerkraut & Band 45—Studio 0—Markets 00—Irving Kennedy, ‘Tenor. 5—Organ Rhapsody 30-—Women's Radio R: ‘Peg La Centra, Soloist 0—Harry Meyer and Orch. 30 Horatio Zito & Orch. ware, Jack Turner & Other and Other Artists tt—Hellpwood Radio Preview a ' 0—Harry Turner and Orch. Arnbeim & Orch. mopolitan Hotel Orch. Orch. ive-Peet 30—Farm Flashes 45—Press Radio News :55—Markets 00—The Weather Tenor and Aunt io World Bookman Archie 30—General Mills “Whi w Prof, Sauerkraut & Band s5—Studio 15—Organ Rhapsody }0—Women's Radio 00—Rhythmic Serenad 15—Queen of Hearts #0—Loterns: jonal Music Festival Pgm.—Beron and Bo. 6t 8 Radio New Livestock Markets and Aunt ind World S—The Honorable Archie ee” Farm lome Hour Om 3 ties” with Ban y ‘ome! io Review 0—-Rhythmic Serenade and Orch. mphony Orch. Ma Perkins le Instrels & Other Martin & Orch. re ey a Paul Livestock Mark B——Btudio 6—Harry Turner's Orch. or Handy udio rast pregres 1o Moo! Me Davis end Orch. BLABORATE SERIES | OF PROGRAMS FROM EUROPE ARRANGED Will be More Varied Than Ever, Says NBC Radio fare for NBC audiences dur- ing the coming fall and winter sea- gon will be more varied and elaborate than ever before. Extensive plans now being completed by NBC execu- tives at Radio City and abroad assure for network listeners a succession of unusually interesting international broadcasts from a score of foreign! countries. From the edge of the lava lake in the crater of Mt. Vesuvius, from Al- pine mountain peaks, royal opera houses, quaint villages and from stu- dios in a doren European capitals will come voices of noted public figures, Opera and concert stars and descrip- tions of unique events and scenes of beauty and interest. Intrepid engineers and announcers will make the descent into the fiery crater of Vesuvius early in the fall to send by short wave to NBC audiences in America for the first time in radio history a description of the awesome scene. They will tell of the research now being carried ori in the crater by Coming Fall and Winter Season | Pee | In New Show { Tony Wons, celebrated radio per- former and star of the new House by the Side of the Road program, as Ul- derico Marcelli, musical conductor of the program, caricatures him. The show is broadcast over an NBC network each Sunday at 3:30 p. m. (CST) having started Sept. 2 by a broadcast Aug. 19 from the top of Mt. Rainier, one of the highest peaks in the United States. The launching of the world’s larg- est ship, the giant Cunarder “534, and its christening by Queen Mary, will be broadcast over NBC networks Sept. 26. scientists to determine the cause of eruptions and will paint a graphic word picture of the fumes and smoke ‘and boiling lava in the volcano near Naples, Italy. Contemplate Swiss Program In contrast to this sinister setting, the serene beauty of Alpine valleys and peaks, as seen from the summit of the Jungfrau, will be brought to NBC audiences in a September broad- cast from Switzerland. Native Bernese singers and yodelers also will be heard, in this program, which was ilwaukee Philharmonic, j—The Troubadours 0—Dancing in the Twin Cities 0—Studio $—Clyde Lucas & Orch. 0—Herman Crome and Orch. :00—Silent Friday, Sept. 16 0—Breakrast Club 1 Singer Lun Em—Coig: live-Peet 0—General Mills “Wheat Prof. Sauerkraut & Ba: j—Btudio 5—Markets eee Aubrey, Wandering Min- e stré :30—Temple of Son, —Rhythmic Sere! eball Scores j—Sti Mill & Elevator Prgm. with 8 eee jarday. Sept. 16 fast Ciuy sic o and Worlé Bookman Fell 0—America’s Cup Races 0—East-West Polo Matches 0—Chick Webb and Orch, 0—-One Mi b:5—Flying With ams $130—Baseball Scores 5145 —He ing & 10—Do! Livestock Mai 5—Hands Across the Bo 0-—-Marcardo's Fiesta Mexi: 0—Procter and Campi ewee 338 uy Lombardo & Orch. o—Paut Whiteman and Orch, 0—Carefree Carnival o— Frankie Masters. & Rafi] Lucas & Orch. ym poverersy eS wewwe weno :30—Radio ncert the Bible sam 02 coee nenorsnstoce: 0-—-Organ Recital 0—8. C. Johnson, Inc. the Side of the Roa Bong of Love 0—Harry Turner's Orch. 5—Studio 0—Hessbergers Original Bavarian }0—-Canadian pers, 0—Wendell Hall, Fitch Program sie Crawford “Parade of Adio News 4 The famous Oktoberfest, merry and colorful festival of the harvest wit its peasant singers and orchestras, will be broadcast from Munich early in October. Plans also are being made for @ series of broadcasts from the Royal Opera in Budapest, and for symphonic, opera and folk music from jussia. The noted Westminister choir of Princeton, soon to leave for an European tour, will sing for NBC audiences from several cities in for- eign countries. Of special sentimen- tal interest will be a program, now being planned, of songs by Gloria for- | novel, and will be announced during the fall and winter months, together with further details of the enumerated ‘ONE MAN'S FAMILY’ GETS RE Cariton E. Marse’s Popular! Dramatic Serial Awarded Magazine Medal HN rel . Capt. Al Wile Stars th} Rosamund (ONE OUT OF PRINT OLD FAVORITE AND TRAGEDY ARRANGED |‘Thomas A. Beckett’ Will Be Presented, Thanks to Bit of Sleuthing SHAKESPEARE CAST READY ‘David Garrick’, T. W. Robert- son Comedy, Will Be Given Sept. 24 A play that is out of print, a quaint olé favorite in drama and one of the ‘best of the Shakespearean tragedies make up the September fare to be oftered by the Radio Guild over an NBC-WJZ network the last ‘three Mondays of the month, =. Tt required a bit of sleuthing on the part of NBC to trace down a copy of “Thomas a Beckett.” written by Alfred Lord Tennyson. Its subject is the bitter quarrel that arose between’ Henry It and his chancellor after Beckett ppointment as Archbishop cf Canterbury, of Henry's love for fair and of her rescue by Beckett from the vengeance of Queen Eleanor, This play will be Presented PRESERVE THIS PAGE would do well to save next week. on Sept. 17. Its plot was @ now forgotten Italian Hundred Tales” by Gir- ‘aldi Cinthio, but the creative breath of & great genius caused Othello, Des- demiona, Iago and the rest to live and ‘breathe for all time. “jent—musical comedy created espec- ~jbeen fulfilled with announcement Richman Unable to Abandon Microphone| —$__—____—____—_—_¢ Neither rehearsals for a new show nor the urge of new songs e Tuptedly into the fall season. Wednesday night will ol American battleship to @ trail to Broadway is better known as a star entertainer of HARDWARE For All Around the Honie Also Complete Line of Paints, Varnishes and Painting Supplies. French & Welch SMASHES Right for Your Purpose— Budget — Pleasure All Sets Equipped With Micro-Sensitive Tubes MODEL 121 A 6-tube Globe Trotter that MODEL 210 ‘ul, ed by Radio Guild RADIO MUSICOMEDY PREPARED FOR AIR’ PROGRAMS COMING Courtney Ryley Cooper, Howard Deitz and Arthur Schwartz Collaborate Predictions that appearance on the radio of a new art form was immin- fally for broadcasting by leading composers, writers and artists have that Courtney Ryley Cooper, novelist, Howard Dietz, lyricist, and Arthur Schwartz, composer, are collaborating on just such a project. ‘They are preparing a series of 39 one-hour musical comedies, “Thé Gib-| “Th son Family,” written specifically for the air, divorced from conventions of the stage, and accepting and mak- ing full use of the unlimited possibill- ties of radio presentation. The premiere of “The Gibson Fam- ily” series will take place Sept. 15, at 7:30 p. m. (CST) over WEAF and an NBC country-wide network. One of the original radio shows will be pre- sented every Saturday night at that time for the next 39 weeks. Answers Great Need ‘The announcement confirmed the opinions expressed by musical, liter- ary and artistic leaders who, in a na- tionwide symposium made public by Dr. Sigmund Spaeth, critic and com- mentator, were agreed that radio should call to its service the country’s ablest creative writers in the field of musical comedy to develop a new form of aesthetic expression, especial- eens for presentation on the Convinced they could capture the imagination of their fellow-Ameri- cans by providing a common meeting ground for the entire people in the field of entertainment, Messrs. Coop- Rem ainder of Month’, arold Cox 91-Year -Old Indiana Marshal Finally JAMES MELTON | er, Dietz and Schwartz have made the daily life of a typical American’ family the theme of their musical comedies. “The Gibson Family,” around whom the new radio musical comedies are written, is a typical American’ fo.eiy. Ivory City, their home, is an average American town. The lives 0: the Gibsons are the common lot cf Americans; their drama is the ¢rama of the people; their songs are! America’s songs. Point Toward Achievement The careers of the three men who evolved “The Gibson Family” point toward such an achievement. e1, newspaperman in cities across the country, Marine private in the war, and since then author of many best; yl Catches Up With Great Radio Quartet It took him a generation to do it but 91-year-old Clint Cochrane, retired town marshal of LaPorte, Ind., finally has caught up with the Maple City Four, now known throughout the country as the Sinclair quartet and heard every Monday night on the Minstrels program over the NBC-WJz net- work at 7 p. m. (CST). While 5,000 persons, gathered at an outdoor arena where the quartet, performed, looked on at LaPorte the other night, Marshal Cochrane stepped nimbly up the Platform and collared Frits Meis- sner and Al Rice, tenors, Art Jones, baritone, and Leroy Peter- son, bass. < ‘Years ago, before they sang their way to fame as the Maple City Four over station WLS in Cliicago and later before NBC micro- phones, the “boys” gathered on LaPorte's street corners and tant- alized Marshal Cochrane with a tune entitled “Good Night Clin- tie” to the melody of “Good Night Ladies.” 5 LaPorte and LaPorte county. And the signature of Marshal “Clintie” headed the list. ey KING AND QUEEN TO | esgsbaex, Raia LAUNCH GIANT LINER} 22s oss, seuse sant opera baritone, already is one of the giants of radio though the House by the Queen Mary Might Even Give bee Talk Over NBC During Christening Program Coop- jt! sellers and stories and articles in na-| several tional magazines dealing with the American scene, is well acquainted with “Gibson families” in scores of American cities. Arthur Schwartz and Howard Dietz, long collaborators, have established themselves firmly with the American public. They worked together in| “The Bandwagon,” and they’ have ‘written such popular hits as “Something to Remember You By,” “I Love Louisa,” “New Sun in the! Sky,” and “Dancing in the Dark." Vocal leads in the new show will be sung by Lois Bennett, radio s0- prano, and Conrad Thibault, _bari- tone, with Jack and Loretta Clemens in prominent roles. Don Voorhees will direct the music, and Ken Christy, noted arranger, will direct the male quartet and the chorus, Dramatic parts will be played by Adele Ronson as Sally Gibson, Sandor Vega as. Jack Hamilton, Bill Adams as Mr. Gibson and Anna Elstner as Mrs, Gibson. Emmett Whitman of “Green Pastures” fame will play “Aw- ful”, handy man and servant of the Gibson family. Gene and Glenn, who have been ‘singing hymns for five years on NBC have made a survey of listener re- quests for sacred songs and found that; “The Old Rugged Cross” is the favorite. “Rock of Ages” and “ Kindly Light” are next tions of their audience The open fire has always been. symbol of romance and friendehip. A The cave man started it. | Our, Pa Tedey the Humphrey: — with its cheery glowing warmth; is being installed in thousends of American homes — and not just for! comfort, beauty end sentimenta reasons either — It actually cuts down the fuel bill by shortening the furnace heating season many weeks. demonstration. Ask for interesting Mo 30t Trejen Medd, MONTANA-DAKOTA POWER COMPANY Bismasck - Mandan + Dickinson - Hebron luxurious liner afloat. She will have a speed estimated at 30 knots. The NBC broadcast of the event will be i erect Richard Himber, the NBC maestro, is looking for a number grams, but his search neither avarice nor ambition. & i 3 i Your appearance be much improved with: peri- odic treatments here by efficient beauty operators. Competent att Fil é a8 inclined chestras! i Double-Duty Inexpensive MARKWELL FASTENER Here is a stapling device, made from the sturdiest of ‘materials, which will clamp to- gether your papers and documents “tem- porarily” or “perma- nently”, according to your desire, without damage. AND MARKWELL STAP- LING MACHINES ARE GUARANTEED AGAINST DEFECTIVE MATERIAL OR WORKMANSHIP FOR 10 YEARS!!! Just the thing for school teachers, bookkeepers, cashiers, accountants, sten- ographers, lawyers, doc- tors, dentists—in fact, any- one in any type of office. IT WILL. CLAMP YOUR PAPERS TEMPORARILY OR PERMANENTLY, WITHOUT DAMAGE, AC- CORDING TO YOUR DE. SIRE. through its all times repair FREE OF CHARGE MARKWELL STAPLIN MACHINE which does not ve 100 Per Cent SATIS- ‘ACTION AND SERVICE. ALLOWANCE WILL BE MADE ON YOUR. OLD STAPLING MACHINE, REGARDLESS OF ITS AGE OR CONDITION Order These Handy Devices From The Bismarck Tribune Company Bismarek, N. D. Telephone No. 32 , Exclusive Markwell Hosienee Dealers for Southwestern (Carrying large stock of fasteners and clips af all times)

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