The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 2, 1935, Page 2

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY Z, 1935 ‘ Monday, Feb. 4 7:00—Morning Devotions 15—William Meeder, Organtet 1:00—Markers and World Bookman H. J. Heinz Co., Josephine Gide ton Broadcast, ‘Talk on S. Dak, Legislation C Music Gulla m Flashes j—Markets 99—Oriental Gardens udio Singing Strings ty Dr. Bayard Dodge ety and Bob"—General Mills —Gale Page, Singer yaor's Own Ma Perkine rocter and Gamble “Camay” 0—Al Pearce and Gang Chico Spanish Revue Ann me Uotfonal Chita tee 'y & Produce C irry Turner and Orch. Ik by N. D, Legislator t Kassell and Orch. 30—Firestone Tire and Rubber Program. 00—Sinclair Minstrels 20—Colgate House Party 00—-Carnation Program 30—North Dakota Farmers Union er tive Highlichts ‘awiord, Organist 11:30—Harry 12:00—Silent ‘Tuesday, 1:00—Bradley K Le Mountain :00—Breaktast Club 9:00—Press Radio News 9:08—Johnny Marvin, Soloist 9:15—Clara, Lu and Em Colgate-Palmolive-Peet 9:30—Organ Program 9:45—Weather 9:50—Aunt Sammy :55—Markets 00—Studio Program 15—Your Child 0—U. S. Marine Band Perret) ‘Ket 00—Sam and His tees Fellers 30—Harvest of Soni SH5—Rnsthm Club with Babe and etty and Bob" — General Mills 2:15—Edna O'Dell, Singer '30—Oxydol's Own Ma Perkins —Congress Speaks Nursery Rhymes 00—Angelo Ferdinando and Orch. 15— Wonderloaf Rangers — Bis: marck Baking Co. 30——Press Radio News 35—To be announced 45—Little Orphan Annie ‘Kings Guard 6:15—Eb and Zeb—Mandan Cream- ery and Produce Co, §:20—Harry Turner and His Orch. :45—Talk by Legis! 00—Leo. Ret Enilip: Morr “MAGIC BRAIN" IS HERE! Brings you more foreign and domestic stations 942.“Magic Brain” euperheterodyne. re Mee tubes, $122.8 Real, true-to-life reception for the fiset time— because the “MAGIC BRAIN” in RCA Victor all-wave sets selects the station you want with rasor-sharp precision, weed- hg out other sounds—and bee cause it steps up tone fidelity to @ higher point of full, sich, lifes ike tone. Don’t miss hearing the sensational radio development - everyone's talking about! RCA VICTOR RADIO r Hoskins-Meyer Bt a. 1:30—National Farm and Home Hour 2:30—' —Press Radio News 5—Little Orphan cs 00—Phil Cook Show Shi 1SEb and. Zeb—Mfandas Cream: | ery & Produce Co, itudio 145—Boy Scout Silver Jubiice and Talk by President Roosevelt oer JED ‘Conse! ory Two Refreshes Alr’ 10:00—Late Evening Weather Fores vast 10: 05—Legisiative Highlights 10:15—Jesse Crawford, Organist —Tom Gerun & Orch. 0—Hotel Biltmore Orch. 5—Joseph Cherniavosky and Orch, 0—Don Pedro and His Orch. 5—Oriental Gardens Orch. 0—Morning Devotion: 5—William Meeder, Organist }0—Chi Rose Bampton, Metropolitan Opera contralto, travels by plane to her con- cert appearances between NBC broad- casts. Orch, featuring Phil Duey & Sally Singer io0—Smith Bros. Program 0—Procter and Gamble “Ivory” ‘The Gibs —Palmoll @ Beauty ‘Theatre of 10:00—Late* Evening Weather Fore st 10:05—Leeislative Highlights 10:15—Paradise Orchestra Press Radio News & Program Resume Mario Cozzie Brown String Quartet owes Capitol Theatre ty —Edna O'Dell, Popular Singer \—Radio City Music Hall of the Alr 2:80—Nattonal Youth Conference 1:00—Immortal_ Moments Dramatisa. ‘Stories—Mont- 9:30—Organ program S—Manchester, Weather and Mar- House by. the, Side of the Road" 6. C. Johnson and Son, Hi 00—Catholle Hour ets 9:00—Honey Mooners 5—Tony Wons 0—U. S. Army Band 5—Studlo 0—Markets and World Bookman 5—H. J. Heinz Co., Josephine Gib- in Broadcast jational Farm and Home hour Words and Music 0—RCA Victor Program featuring Victor Recording Artists ‘Bakers Broadcast”—Standaré Brani ase and Sanborn Hour 0—Dr. Lyons “Manhattan Merry- Go-Round” 0—Harry Turner and Orch, ontiac Program 0—One Man's Family 1 Evening Weather Fore- t enry King and His Orch. ress: She iChernieveky & Orch, 0—Abe Lyman & :30-—Don Pedro and Orch. Himber and Cugat to esident New York Stock change & Zeb"—Mandan Cream- ery & Produce Co. New York, Feb. 2—Richard Himber and Xavier Cugat, well known or- be ral coeane Om chestra directors, and their music- . Legislator fans; Fats Waller, Negro composer, O—Roval Gelatin with Mary — |singer and pianist; and Loretta Lee, popular young blues singer, will en- tertain listeners to the Radio City Matinee broadcast over an NBC- WJZ network on Wednesday, Feb. 6, when they come to the microphone in Radio City at 1:00 p.m. (CST). Himber and Cugat both favor ite radio and recording artists. The former is best known for his inter- .|Pretations of modern dance tunes and Cugat for his tango and rhumba melodies, many of which he has writ- ten himself. Waller, who also sings and plays his own compositions, Himber and Miss Lee make their second matinee appearances with this program. Other famous artists who have al- ready been heard on the Radio City Matinee, include Efrem Zimbalist, Giovanni Martinelli, Richard Crooks, Rudy Vallee and Nathaniel Shilkret. 00—Studio feo Wons ‘The College Prom program, fea- omen ta peteration cf turing Ruth Etting, was collegiate in name and fact at its premiere over NBC networks. In addition to Tom Hamilton, coach of the Navy foot- ball team, the microphone guests in- cluded W. P. Crowley, president of the Eastern Intercollegiate Football officials, and a group of newly- graduated “extras” who imparted collegiate exhuberance to the pro- gram. Brown, lissouri Sl evne “Lombardoland” Plough Ralston Purina OV—Late Evening Weather Fore- i slative Highlights ‘e of Romance Coburn and Orch, \—Paul Pendarvis and Orch, 00—Silent 1» Feb, 7 Kincaid, Singer of Mountain Ballads Don Hall & Trio Colgate-Palmo! 30—Organ Program 45—Weather 50—Aunt Sammy 55—Markets ir 1 a World Bookman 11:15—Me DOMNBO Mucle Guild i5—Farm Flashes 00—"Betty and Bob" Caneral Mille 15—Dorothy Page, Sini 30—Oxydol's Own Ma Perkins 45—Procter and Gamble A song written in spare moments by Robert Brains, NBC staff artist, will be played by the Radio City Nat'l Congress Parents ‘Symphony during @ broad- eGR ini cast Feb, 10. The song, entitled 45—Willie Bryant and Orch. 00—Angelo Ferdinando and Orch. ‘Ib—American Vocational Ass'n 3 Radio News and Walter n, Baritone §:45—Lite Orphan Annie 6:00-—Hal Ke & 6:15—"ED ery & Produce Co. :30—Hi Sagc talk by ND. Legislator city Station HJ1ABB 6.45 Berlin DIA 9.57 DJB 15.20 .bIC 6.02 DJD 11.76 0:80. seth Fae ie bers ian Bien. ise teas — uc! proce. Ales UES, Sg Cerecs V3 git ‘ophone Quart . —} encing in the Twin Cities Eindhoven POs 15.23 o—Silen: Feb. 8 Geneva, TIBP 7.80 0—sorning sgt ates Guayaquil HC2RL 666 Willers Mesder, Organist }0—Cheerlo Havana 6.01 0—B: ‘Huizen. 1.73 ‘Lisbon London O—Manchester Program j—Markets Music Appreciation Hour and World ins Coy Josephine Gib ‘son Broadcast 'EZIO PINZA, NOTED BASSO, CHOSEN FOR | LEADING MALE PART *!Mozart’s Famed Opera Was First Produced at Prague 148 Years Ago FARRAR TO BE ON PROGRAM List, Schipa, Mueller, Fleischer, | Lazzari and d’Angelo In Cast | | |. Mozart’s opera, “Don Giovanni,” ibringing the voice of Rosa Ponselle, {famous soprano, to the air for the first time in the current season's .|broadcasts of Metropolitan Opera, will be heard in its entirety direct from the famous opera house over combined NBC-WEAF-WJZ networks Saturday, Feb. 9, at 12:55 p. m. (C8ST.) Ezio Pinza, noted basso who will be starred in the title role, and Tito Schipa and Maria Mueller will be heard with Miss Ponselle in the three and a quarter hour broadcast, which will be carried to listeners from coast to coast. Don Juan, the reckless libertine of Spanish fable, hero of a hundred novels, poems, plays, operas, and symphonies, receives at the hands of Mozart and his Italian librettist, Da Ponte, the name Don Giovanni. First produced at Prague in 1787, the opera was an immediate success and has continued to grow more popu- Jar through nearly one hundred and fifty years. Geraldine Farrar, former prima donna of the Metropolitan, will con- tinue to act in her role of radio: raconteuse between the acts of the Performance. Ettore Panizza, new conductor who opened the season at the Metropolitan Opera House, will direct, and the opera will be sung in Italian with the following cast: Don Giovanni—Ezio Pinza, basso. Donna Anna—Rosa Ponselle, s0- baie Commendatore—Emanuel List, basso, Don Ottavio—Tito Schipa, Donna Elvira—Maria Mueller, ane Zerlina—Editha Fleischer, essen Leporello—Virgilio Lazzari, basso. Masetto—Louis D'Angelo, LOIS MILLER BACK WITH AIR HOSTES ‘Be Heard Wednesday Popular Organist Is Assisting Ago Josephine Gibson in Coun- sel Broadcast Pittsburgh, Feb. 2—Lois Miller, popular organist who has been |featured with Josephine Gibson in previous Hostess Counsel broadcasts, is back with Miss Gibson in the new series of programs heard over an NBC-WJZ network each Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 11:15 a.m. (CST). Presiding over the huge organ in the auditorium in Pittsburgh, where the broadcasts originate, Miss Miller supplies @ musical setting for each of Miss Gibson's talks. ‘Miss Miller is one of the real vet- erans of the air, having broadcast over NBC networks and local sta- tions in Pittsburgh for the past seven. years. Her recitals at the organ, one of the largest pipe organs in the country, have proven especially popu- lar with listeners. Miss Gibson’s Hostess Counsel talks have been heard on NBC net~ works at frequent intervals for sev- eral years. Through her broadcasts and writings Miss Gibson, who is the youthful head of a commercial eco- Nomics department, has attained @ nationwide reputation as a expert. Contented Hour to Feature Spiritual] Vic Young's modern negro spiritual “Let Me Be Born Again” will be featured on the “Contented Hour” Monday, Feb. 4, the quartet and the orchestra directed by Morgan L. Eastman using this robust song of jubilation as the program’s finale. Orchestral numbers will include ‘WEEK OF FEB, 3 3 8 fo 10, M, 5:15 to 9:15 P. M. to 7:15 A. M. oo 10:45 P.M. poumee siectertce wee; 5 Sunday PM. Batur day 9:15 to 11:15PM. ee sowmaneors SSssass ss Sun.; Z on os s ss >P ez 5 5 e PSs sass o 3 8 3 Es Aeearzaon ote | meres Kpg> ® & 8s en 3 4 & Eso reegpon sek! > rab Hwee s36e s8ésesn ma Ponselle Will Sing Leading Role in ‘Don Giovanni’ Next Saturday Famed Story of Samson |ANONYMOUS CHORUS LAUDED Immortal Drama Sunday} FOR ITS AID Brand New Local Program Planned A brand new local program, en- titled “The Missouri Slope Revue,” will be introduced over Station KFYR, Bismarck, next Wednes- “los progam "wit! be a fll Program a hour's entertainment, which KFYR directors believe will prove one of the most popular of the local programs. The cast of the revue will change from time to time and sponsors feel it will af- Much of Music of Saint Saens | 4. -Will Be Used by Sym- phonic Orchestra One of the world’s most famous istories will be offered to the radio ‘when the story of Samson is pre- sented over a coast-to-coast NBC- [WEAF network Sunday, Feb. 3, at 1 Ip. m, (CST), as the fourth of a ser- ies of “Immortal Dra! ‘The bitter disappointments which befall Samson, the powerful Israelite, when his Philistine wife, Raamah, is taken from him and then when the micro- | secret of his strength is divulged by Delilah to the Philistines, are handled authentically and with expert dra- Imatic treatment. Much of the music of Saint Saens, from the famous opera, will be used in proper balance by the symphonic orchestra, and an A Capella choir will sing several of the most famous rs. Sound effects will play an import- lant part in adding realism to the scenes where Samson sets fire to the Philistine city and again when he Pushes aside the pillars which supe Port the palace of his enemies, bring- ing death to all who have taunted him. Madame Sylvia of Hollywood Brings Spirit of Movieland to Manhattan the ugly duckling of my she says, My mother singer in Copen- She was beautiful. My Shop Quartet, Dick Burris as M. Cc. Skits. They will feature skits, solos and orchestral aL ee An informal program is plan- ned, with listeners-in requested to make suggestions and submit jokes. ‘The program will be on the air each Wednesday evening from 8 to 9 o'clock (CST). LOIS MILLER — 4 [She Boasts Vigor _| High in a swanky Manhatten hotel overlooking Central Park, there's @ bright bit of Hollywood. It’s the apartment of Madame Sylvia of Hollywood, and Sylvia is the gayest thing in it. With flannel slacks, white sweater, @ yellow chiffon hand- hagen. father was handsome, an artist. My sister was lovely. She was just what my mother and father wanted her to be. Me, I was the tom-boy — awkward, lost ina kerchief about her throat to parlor. Why, when I came to MADAME SYLVIA match her corn-colored hair, this country, I weighed 158 aa dr ee @ sense jumor ig as—as—peas. Not little coy “fa Serre | set cor versa | Sag ieee el , more pep, face. was phic pethomelinenty permite —— oo ing brahms Lullaby many ® woman less than at me. her age. She does # hop, skip, One looks st her and marvels. | New York, Feb. 2—The famous and @ dance routine around her For Sylvia, surrounded by her California plants, flowers, and Photographs of famous stars of stage, screen and radio, is the ‘Most incredible of all her “finish- ed_ productions.” Brahms Lullaby and an aria from “Tosca” will be the featured num- bers onethe program which Gladys Swarthout will sing when she again returns to the concert as the guest Sylvia's beauty advice is given jartist on Monday, Feb. 4. to @ nation-wide audience each The famous Metropolitan Opera! Wednesday evening at 9:15 jMmezzo soprano will join the chorus) (CST), over an NBC-WJZ net- fand orchestra, under the direction! work. of William Daly, in the broadcast over an NBC-WEAP network at nag and the bay. Another especially'7:30 pm. (CST), from the Radio arranged number will be “June in City studios. January” from the popular cinema, | Miss Swarthout wil sing “Vissi “Here Is My Heart.” \Drarte” from the Puctit opera anc “Ma Little Sunflower, Goodnight’ “The Nigh: ts ” ag sone, the is the song of the Lullaby Lady on Lullaby with the chorus and “By the {this occasion, and the recipe of con-| Waters cf Minnewonka” as a duet her pet cats—Finka-Finka and Kala-Kala—puts you in a whirl trying to keep up with her. She has no with women who let themselves be unattractive. the waltz “Unrequited Love” by Lin- cke, and the overture to “Rienzi” by biol aoa gi opens pabeny nitiey” ‘Temple's ricrs “Bright " with both orchestra and quar- Quartet numbers are “Camptown 'tentment will come from a woman with Margare Speaks. Races” by Stephen Foster, in @ spe-| whose beautiful songs have brought} “Speak to cial arrangement depicting the classic |contentment to millions—Carrie Ja-|night Gweethears” wil be sung by struggle between the passe Bond, ithe chorus alone. DON’T MISS THIS THRILLING DARING ROMANCE OF THE SOUTH SEAS! The Lady Dances pm et Pretty Organist j Deems Taylor Attributes Much f Love” and “ “Goods TO OPERA GUILD - of Success of Program to Vocal Group New York, Feb, 2.—Usually singing but unsung, the anonymous chorus, its 5 ‘Deems Taylor attributes much of the success the Opera, Guild and the work done has been of uni- formly high standard. It is entirely proper that native American singers have an important Lede in the med of presenting opera in our own al guage to the vast radio audience.” Members of the regular Opera aiid chorus include Lucille Berthon, Dickey, Ruth Horley, Lu- | % and Rosalie Wolfe, so- | pranas: Giadys Burns, Marie Edell jand Ethel Potter, second sopranos; | Beatrice Hecht, Burton heen and Amy Ponchon, mezs0-! Gordon, Clemence Gifford,” Hail, Normal tears are hundreds of times more effective in protecting the eye than solutions commonly used, labora- tory tests have revealed. Every Kind of HARDWARE For All Around the Home Also Compicto Line of Paints, ‘arnishes and Painting French & Welch Phone 141 306 Main | U Beautiful, exotic Vanya came to the South Seasto dance and forget. Mark, young, rich, handsome, came in search of adventure. Neither wanted to by MARGE STANLEY fall in love, but they could not resist its danger. ous fascination, under a tropical moon e Here is flaming, daring romance, with the alluring glamor of the South Seas for its setting—a thrill. ing, dramaticlove story with a beauty and breath- less suspense that will hold you from to end. Be sure to watch for The Lady Dances. Slide JA to 28, big-ti

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