The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 26, 1935, Page 2

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anne eAs aa — ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 1935 Daniel in Lions’ Den Next in Radio’s ‘Immortal Drama’ Series IKFYR. NBC Program ‘ (Subject to Revision) Monday, Jan. 28 9:00—Morning Devotions 2:15—William Meeder, Organtet }0—Cheerio gate- aimolive-Pest 9:30—Organ Program 5—Weather J—Aunt Sammy Markets Hour of Memortes Markets and World Bookman Higoit Heinz Co., Josephine Gib- eerondcist, tional Farm and Home Hour —Singing Strings 45—John Martin Story Hr. 8:00—“Betty and Mills 15—Hokum —Oxydol's la Perkins Tuendny, Jan. 29 0—Bradley aa m 1 ~Palmolive-Peet Program 1 1 rine Band and World Bookman iy y and Bob” — General Meredith Willson & Orch, Congress Spea ursery Rhymes —Angelo Ferdinando and Orch, #15— Wonderloaf Rangers — Bis- marck Baking Co, s Radio News nounced Zeb—Mandan Cream- ery and Produce Co. 6:30—Harry Turner and His Orch, 6:45—Talk by N. D. Legislator 7:00—Leo Reisman’s Philip Morris Orch. featuring Phil Duey & Sally Singer “MAGIC BRAIN" IS HERE! Brings you more foreign and domestic stations Console Mode! 92. “Magic Brain” euperheterodyne. i Reel, trusto-life reception forthe [11:5 1 firet time—because the “MAGIC BRAIN" in RCA Victor all-wave |! Sets selects the station you want with rasor-eharp precision, weed fing out other eounds—and be- cause it steps up tone fidelity to @ higher point of full, rich, lifes like tone, Don't miss hearing the sensational radio development everyone's talking about! RADIO Hoskins-Meyer The Home of KFYR 000 Fourth St. Bismarck Phone 19 2 . i Bob"—General | 2:99—Marke' 1 te | Pancreat Club rf , 1OH5—KFYR 8245. 7:00. 8:00. 9: 1 12:00—Silent $122-75}, 12:40—"Die Walkure”—Lambert 7:20—Lady Esther Serenade $:00—Premier Pabst—Ben ‘Bernte 8: d Wynn for Texaco Beauty Theatre of o Hivening Weather Fore: ‘ast egisiative Highiights y Marvin, Tenor a, Lu ‘nt Em Colgate-Falmolive-Peet an program nehestcr, Weather and Mar. Wons Aimy Band kets and World Bookman Heinz Co., Josephine Gib- roadeast Farm and Home hour and Music Victor Program featuring or Recording Artists and Farm Flashes Romancing With Ed- son NY Babe and thm Club with dy r_Traveler"—Philco Own Ma Perkins ter and Gamble “Camay” nm & His City Fellers thmic Serenade cation In the News —KFederal Income Tax Report Little Orphan Annie Talk by Henry Morgenthau, & Zev"—Mandan Cream- y,& Produce Co. alk by N. D. Legistator Roval Gelatin with Mary Pickford —Harry Turner & Orch, Phyllis Wolverton Plough Ry-Krisp Program 30--One Man's Family 10: Oo—Late Evening Weather Fore- —ieeistative Highlights —Voice of Romance Lise ilu Roosevelt's Birthday Ba: 30—Paul Pendarvis and Orch. :00—Silent ‘Thursday, Jan. 31 :00—Bradley Kincaid, Singer of Mountain Ballads —Don Hall & Trio —Cheerto —Press Radio News db. State Federation of men's Clubs cE Bulletin Board of the Air Markets and World Bookman ue Harmonies Rhythm Club with Babe and eddy 00" Betty and Bob” General Mills Hokum Boys Oxydol's Own Ma Perkins —Erocter and Gamble “Cama ‘Nat'l Congress Parents Te: ers m & His City Fellers dinando and Orch. Ass'n Press Radio News and Walter Preston, Baritone fandan Cream. ery & Produce Co, Turner & Orch, N. D, Legislator elschmann Hour Maxwell flouse Coffee Hour— General Foods ‘Kraft Program Evening Weather Fore- 1 Bob" General Mitte] } slative Highlights deast from the Schooner xophone Quartet neing in the Twin Cities Friday, February 1 00—Morning Devotions William Meeder, Organist 30—Cheerio 8:00—Breakfast. Club Press Radio News Johnny. Marvin, Tenor ara, Lu Golgate-Palmolive-Peet 30—Or; an Program thi nehester Program —Markets 00—Musle Appreciation Hour 00—Markets and World Bookman 15—H. J. Heinz Co. Josephine Gib- son Broadcast 30—Natfonal Farm and Home Hour 30—-Words and Music & His City Fellers S. Marine Band 00" Betty and Bob” General Mills 15—Hokum Boys 30-—Oxydol's Own Ma Perkins 45—Consumer Time 1e—Thubeday Music Club 30-—Studio To—Mehue oGonservatory Two tano Ti :00—Merr; Orch. et ing’s Pennsylvanians 9: 80—Cora golee-"The eee that o:00—Late, easton Weather Fore- crigtiignte Cresniet 0:05—Legistative i1b—Jeuse Crawtor Gerun & Grech. i ‘boHotel Biltmare id His Li 45—Orlental "Gardens Orch, 2:00-—Bilent a 3 Lane tf ‘World Boo! riova, Soloist HomNational Farm snd Ho 12:30—Words and Music ter Builders pa 8 the ve :30-—Sam o— Smit \* Bros. '30—Procter al The Gibson }0—“Let's Dance"=-National Bis- cuit Co. 0 A. M. Silent, ae jay, Febru o—NHC e Children’s Hour rt oom So o—Morning Musicale 10: bame f5 3 Press Radio News ry yeu Resume 10:08—Ray Heatherto in 10: 1b—Roger B, Whitman, the Alling | Hout 10:30—Major Bowes Capitol Theatre arty 11:18—Edna O'Dell, Popular Singer, 11:30—Radio City Music Hall of the Alr 12:30—National Youth Conferenco 1:00—Immortal Moments Dramatiza- tion of Bible gomery Ward 1:30—Lux Program 2:30—National Vespers 3:00—United Drug Program 3:30—Knights of Columbus Program 4:00—Hoover Sentinels 4:30—"House by the Side of the Road” 8. C. Johnson and Son, ne, 5:00—Catholic Hour 5:30—Singers Guild 5:45—Marguerite Kennedy eee Foods with Jack recat Broadcast"—Standara Stories—Mont- Sanborn Hour 5 “Manhattan Merry- Een and Orch, 9:00—Pontiac Program 9:30—K-7 10:00—Late Evening Weather Fore- iz —Henry King and His Orch. Press Radio News 5—Joseph Chernievsky & Orch. —Abe Lyman & Orch. 11:30—Don Pedro and Orch. 12:00—Silent SHORT WAVES BRING HUNGARIAN STATION Pontoise, France, Station Is Broadcasting Series of French Lessons 8: a Here is a new European station to listen for. It is HAS at Budapest, Hungary. This station has long been expected inasmuch as various /our scenes as Daniel's the handwriting on the wall and the (TALE INSPIRED BY OLD TESTAMENT TO BE PROGRAM THEME |New Venture in Field of Radio Receives Praise of Public and Press ABANDON COMMERCIALISM Oldest Thing in Our Common Literature Becomes New- est Thing in Drama Chicago. Jan. 26.—Daniel in the Lion's Den, a@ tale inspired by the !Old Testament account of the Hand- ‘writing on the Wall, will be present- led on a coast-to-coast NBC-WEAF network as the third of a series of “Immortal Dramas” Sunday, Jan, 27, at 1 p.m. (CST). The dramatic qualities of such interpretation of episode of his being thrown in the tion's den are further enhanced by appropriate special song effects by an A Cap- Pella choir. symphonic music and “Immortal Dramas,” @ new ven- ture in the field of radio, has been receiving the praise of the public and press alike. Ashton Stevens, veteran dramatic critic of the Chi- cago American, stepped out of . his immediate field of the stage to laud the production of David and Goliath. the first of the series. “I heard over a_ nation-broad broadcast ... the oldest thing in Ola common literature, the communications from radio head-|Testament, become the newest thing quarters in Hungary have promised that this station, together with its in- drama,” what might be called the mental writes Stevens. “ sister short-waver, HAT, would soon | visibility of the piece was the highest be in operation with increased pow-|I have known in the air since Maude er. listeners in this country and schedule is now definitely known. Both have now been logged by, Adams last season radioed ‘The Lit- its|tle Minister,’ and ‘Peter Pan’.” “This illusion ... was obtained by Listen for HAS on 15.37 megacycles |the enthusiastically articulate enact- on Sunday from 8 to 9 a. m. (EST) ment and rich musical embellishment and for HAT on 5.40 megacycles on Sunday nights from 8 to 9 p. m. (EST). A new schedule for the English broadcasts from station RV59 at ‘Moscow has been obtained. You can hear these programs on Sundays,| Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays | from 4 to 5 p. m. (EST) on the reg- ular 6 megacycle frequency. RNE broadcasts English programs from 10 to 11 a. m. (EST) on Sundays on 12 Mmegacycles. This latter station also is reported testing with other stations regularly from 5 to 7 a. m. (EST). Station OXY at Skamlebaek, Den- mark, is not one of the European short-wave stations heard consistent- ly in the United States. However, it occasionally is heard on its frequency of 6.07 megacycles during the after-) noon hours, Although KNRA, the pee-noli transmitter aboard the Seth Parker, no longer is providing regular week- | ly broadcasts for the edification of broadcast listeners, it has been heard | recently testing with stations at’ Bolinas and Dixon, California. KNRA | has been most frequently picked uP | @t 8.84 megacycles. A devoted broadcast listener re- ports hearing station TGW at Gua- on City announce it would soon on short-waves with a frequency of 5.94 megacycles. Here's good news for you who thirst. for knowledge. The “Radio-Coloniale” stations at Pontoise, France, are| broadcasting French lessons for the| benefit of the world. So if you hove a hal to “Parlay Fransay,” just tune to 11.90 megacycles at 1:45 Pp. m. (EST) or to 11.70 megacycles at 8:45 p. m. (EST) and you'll be able to patronize French restaurants with perfect ease. If your children are talented mu- sically encourage them, says Harry Kogen, director of the orchestra heard on NBC's Greater Minstrels. Kogen foresees & dearth of musicians in the coming years because children do not take piano lessons any more. They grow up in homes without pianos, lis- tening to radio music rather than learning to produce it. The Meple City Four heard from Chicago on the Minstrels, the Na- tional Barn Dance and the National Farm and Home Hour broadcasts on NBC, get their name from the fact that three of the quartet are natives of La Porte, Indiana, a town fam- ous for its maple trees. They are Fritz Clark, Arthur Janes and Leroy G. of a nervously dramatic script by Lloyd Lewis . .. It was, anyway, an author's pioneering job, discreetly and dramatically served.” Referring to the absence of @ com- mercial announcement on the pro- gram the review continues: “And I, hope I am not exceeding the liberty jof the press by congratulating the sponsor for sponsoring it without trying to tell an ether-sickened world whether that establishment deals in Bibles or breakfast foods.” Gladys Swarthout to Sing Varied Program New York, Jan. 26—Gladys Swarth- out will sing selections from such Widely separated fields of music as grand opera and contemporary mu- sical comedy when she again returns to the air as guest soloist Monday, Jan, 28. “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes,” from {Jerome Kern's “Roberta” and Puc- jcini's “Butterfly” duet are two of \the numbers in which Miss Swarthout will be heard during the broadcast jover an NBC-WEAF network from 7:30 to 8 p.m. (CST). In the duet she will be accompanied by Margaret Speaks, Miss Swarthout’s other solos include Bixio’s “Parlami D’Amore Mariu” and “The Rosary,” by Nevin. The chorus will be heard in “Blow, Gabriel, Blow,” from Ccie Porter's current suce cess, “Anything Goes;” “Winter Wone derland” and “Trees.” The orchestra will play “I Get a Kick Out of You,” also from “Anything Goes.” Little Orphan Annie Program to Continue Chicago, Jan. 26.—Joe Corntassel, Daddy Warbucks and all the other members of the Little Orphan Annie cast including, of course, Annie her- self, will continue to bring their dra- matic adventures to juvenile radio listeners for another year. The sponsor has contracted to con- tinue the program through 1935. Little Orphan Annie is heard daily except Saturday and Sunday over an NBC-WJZ network at 5:45 p. m. (EST), with a repeat broadcast at 6:45 p.m. (EST), 5:45 (CST), for western listeners, The program was first introduced to radio listeners locally in Chicago Dec. 8, 1930, and beginning the fol- Jowing autumn it was produced for Patterson. The non-Hoosier is Al Rice, a Bloomfield, N. J., boy. NBC network iisteners and has been ‘a regular network feature since, | Tune in on One of These Stations WEEK OF JANUARY 27 Frequency City Station Megscycles) Hours (ST) HJ1ABB 6.45 to 10 PM. Berlin DJA 9.57 A to 11:30 wh M.,, 5:15 to 9:16 P, M. DB 15.20 3:45 to 7:15 A. M. DJC 6.02 Noon to DJD 11.76 = Noon to 4: Brussels ORK 1033 2:45 to 4:15 PM. Buenos Aires LSX 1035 9 to 11 PM. sealers Caracas Yval 611 5:15 to 10 P. YV3RC G15 5 to 9:30 PM. Eindhoven POs 1522 8 to 10 A. M. Sunday Geneva TBP 780 5:30 to 6:15 P.M. Saturday Guayaquil 4IC2RL 666 5:8 APM, Sun.; 9:15 to 11:15 PM. e5. Havana coc 601 5to9 P.M. Huizen PHI 11.73 8 to 10 A. M, Mon., Thurs, Fri; 8 to 10:30 A. M. Sat. & Sun. Jeloy LoL 955 Noon to 6 P.M. Lisbon CTIAA 9.60 4:30 to 7 P, M. Tues. é& Fri. London GSA to 5:45 P. M.; 6 to 8 P.M. GsB 5 A. M. to Noon;'1 to 5:45 P. M. Gsc fe ie: M. asp oon to 1 .; 1 to 4:30 P.M. GSE 7:30 to 9 A. M.; 9:15 to 10:45 A. ML 1:30 A. M., 81 I. Madrid EAQ 5to7 PM, Melbourne VK3ME 5 to 6:30 A.M. Wed.; 5 to? AM. Sat. Moscow id pie 11 A. M. Sunday 5 P.M. Paris @ontoise) 11:15 AM, to 6 PM, cFontols) Toit aM Rabat 5b Me 9 5 1 Kennedy Crowns His Failures With Three Singing Stewart Sisters and social +. .» Man- er Of apes te orl) grammatic public... ; ak ee” « Irish Herbert Hoover in relief’ work mother... Came charge of Knights ments for war work... Was managing editor of Collier's ‘Weekly, and associate editor for many years before joining NBC. « + One of countty’s foremost iterpreters of current political demned murderers . . . Favorite pastime is talking to old-time Broadway-ites . . . Plays grand game of golf... Swims with a Tope . . . Smokes a pipe, in bed and out ... Does his writing in slice when he’s allowed s Snapshots from NBO's family al- bum: Richard Crooks, the Metro- Politan Opera star featured on the jair, is married to the former Mildred Pine, a school day sweetheart, They have two children . . . John Bar- clay, leading man of the Beauty Box Theatre, is the husband of Madame Dagmar Rybner, the pianist-compos- er. They have a five-year-old daugh- ter . . . Pat Barrett, who imper- sonates Uncle Ezra, operator of my- thical station EZRA, is married to Nora Cunneen, for seven years his partner in vaudeville. Annette McCullough, NBO blues singer, is a Paul Whiteman audition winner. New York, Jan. 26—The three Stewart Sisters (above), fre- quently heard with Rudy Vallee during his Variety Hour broadcasts over an NBO nation-wide network, are a trio by accident. Judy and Julle were singer and accompanist, respectively, until Julie's tonsils were removed, and presto—the girls were a duo. Together they were given a spot on a small Pacific coast station, and moved to a larger station when they attracted favorable atten- tion. About this time, Jean, who had been leading an orchestra, turned vocalist and joined them, and the duo became a trio. Then Vallee, on the west coast on a picture making engagement, heard them, and brought them back east to sing with his orchestra on the air. Clara, Lu’n’ Em Cannot Agree on Location, Color of Mythical Home Chicago, Jan. 26.—Clara, Lu 'n’ Em, the gossipy girls of the air- ‘waves, will begin their fifth year of broadcasting over NBC net- works Monday, Jan. 28, but the girls still can’t agree in their im- aginations either as to the loca- tion of the mythical double house in which they live, or on the color of the paint, which side of the house each of them occupies and whether or not there is a garage in the rear, And as for their ine floor geagE | i 3 af EL a i i Es ry g aginary floor plans leave the en- tire house without windows, but Clara’s floor plans of her own downstairs apartment do, not fit Lu’s conception of her (Lu’s) up- stairs apartment, and, for that matter, do not even coincide with Clara’s own idea of Lu's apart- ment. A Little Confasion In real life Clara (Louise Star- key) and Lu (Isobel Carothers) live within two blocks of each other in Evanston, North Shore suburb of Chicago, and Em (Helen i g3 i i I i e282 gf Ft i i Every Kind of HARDWARE For All Around the Home Also Complete Line of Paints, Varnishes and Painting fe i 8 5 i a i i g i bE gf E 5 3 8 g aL ! i French & Welch Phone 141 306 Main e & 8 F E bee respecting arc! hysterical, Not enly do their ine Success Through Wide Experience - » FOREIGN BROADCASTS ITH GREATEST VA Vow- FINEST FOREIGN RECEPTION. AND UNEQUALLED TONE AT SENSATIONALLY LOW PRICES’ ISTEN to the magnificent tone of the new PHILCO on both American and foreign programs! Operate one of these mar- velous new 1935 models and note how easily and accurately it tunes-in more stations from all over the world! You will be amazed by its y “greater volume and thrilling performance! And compare PHILCO’S amazingly low prices. The leader for five consecutive years, PHILCO again offers the world’s greatest values. You will be proud to own a PHILCO, @ musical instrument of quality. Ask your dealer to explain his trade-in and easy pay- ment plans. PHILCO 118X ba NEW PHILCO 16xX—5175 fc Rod Si Rrcelacleds Shedow Tes- . RESULT: All music sigue Value! $4Q:50 att over | iii : The Worlds ° Hilbed cablact of gorgeous, comly woods. THE WORLD HILCO 66S-—This powerful oew Baby Leading Ered i yd Radio Generous Trade-in Allowance . sera and Easiest Terms at All PHILCO Dealers the TUsESs For 4 demonstration, phone your dealer—or the PHILCO distributor: PHILCO & iMeROVE (a4 LISTEN TO THE PHILCO PROGRAM: - ARV ave Aorial OF ANY RADIO Tavis Music . Boake Carter €115, (CST) week nights _ for Best Result mad GSES pa en KFYR, “Tues Dp mm. (CST) Con) Wenner

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