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eat as RRA SERGE RAEASE iri WERE WT GE ato com TaN ' Metropolitan Opera |Their first number will be an oper- atic aria, while their second will be | of a more popular nature. Edward Johngon, general manager of the Metropolitan Opera association, again will officiate as master of cer- emonies of the program and intro- duce the singers each week. With him will be the eminent Dr, John Erskine and other officials of the Metropol- itan, Earle Lewis, Edward Ziegler, and Wilfred Pelletier. These chan- cellors of America’s greatest opera house also are the committee on au- ditions of the “Metropolitan Opera This Year; Continued Only | Auditions of the Air” program,, and | their decision at the end of the series 15 Weeks Last Year | is final. TRIO WILL SING EACH WEEK| Maestro Wilfred Pelletier. conduc- | tor of the Metropolitan Opera and| TWO CHANGES ARE MADE IN PROGRAM FROM LAST SEASON Program Will Last for 24 Weeks eee aren oe : | member of the auditions committee, Johnson, Erskine, Lewis, Zieg-/ also is conductor of the “Audition” | | “ io ic. | Program. ter and Pelletier Will Partic As was explained last year, the| ipate in Feature | | “Metropolitan Opera Auditions of the| Sunday, Oct. 18, the “Metropolitan Opera Auditions of the Air” program will return to the microphone for the second season. To be heard every Sunday afternoon from 2 to 2:30 (CST) over an NBC- the various amateur hours; strictly the regular auditions which! the Metropolitan Opera company| | gives to the singers of proved ability wae are agen! A piace within Je) anks, The 01 KFYR network, this new series will! these auditions, formerly held tn suit, continue for a period of 24 weeks. | vate, now are, for the first time in The structure of the program will | the Met's histor | ry, heard publicly. The remain the same as of last year, €X-' Metropolitan Opera Audition com- cept for two changes. One: the pro-| mittee will Judge each singer as| gram of last year was heard for @/ heard in these broadcast auditions, | Air” series is not a contest; it does| Light. precip not even remotely resemble any of| the Southwe it is} Total, Jan. ts: to date Normal, ‘Jan. Ist to date Accumulated defcy. to date NORTH DAKOTA POINTS Weather Report Ons Wk KORECAST i ! For Bismarck and vicinity: Some- | BISMARCK, cluw@y .... what unsettled ht and Sunday; | wis ie rising temperature tonight. For North Dakota: Unsettled: to- night and Sunday: rising tempera- cooler northwest por- 61 3 . 9.65 Pet For South Dakota; Geverally fair tonight and Sunday; rising tempera- ture tonight and southeast portion Sunday. For Montana: Generally fair to- night, warmer southeast, colder -central portions; Sunday part- ty cloudy Minnesota—Partly cloudy to cloudy, tonight and Sunday; probably show- ers northeast portion; not so cool to- night and east and south portion Sunday. WEATHER CONDITIONS barometric pressure is over the Great Lakes region, Mar Des Moines, jay cl Dodge City, Kan., ptcld, Duluth low 8. 8. 9.50 inches, while a high pres- area overlies the ‘ky Moun: tain region, Kamloo} i Minneapolls, eld Modena, Utah, cldy Moorhead, Min’ New Orleans . New York , , Ne Oklahoma’ City, Phoenix, Ari ‘| Pr. Albert, Sas Qu'Appelié, Sask. Rapld City, 8. D. Roseburg, Ore., «i Louis, ae the Great Lakes region to the northern Great Plains while elsewhere the weather is generally fair, Seasonable tem- peratures prevail in all sections, kK Sis wR SSN mH S. Bismai es: 28.17 M ft station barometer, t educed to sea level, 2 iver stage at 7 a, ur change, 0.0 ft. neh- 9. San oo Surin be Sunset 5 Weather Outlook for Period of October 19 to 241 | the upper Mississippi and lower | g™ gs. uri valleys and the northern al. Great Plains: Not much | s on of | § M and ¢ precip period of 15 weeks while this season | and in the semi-final and fi | faked it will be heard 24 weeks. Two: on| grams will select the Haga Intter ‘natt the previous programs four operatic | awarded contracts. A aspirants were heard each week, while | puiscseaas See a ais this year only three will sing. This! The favorite spectator-sport of 3 . | Winnipeg, Man,, cldy .. change in the show will allow the as-/Earl Sargent, U. C. L, A, guard, is pirants two opportunities to-sing. | water polo, | normal or | gw, colder t0- | ‘The Pas, Mai | Winnemne . 102 | Some species of cactus bear green 51 | flowers. jonth to date .. month to date WITH MAGIC BRAIN - MAGIC EYE METAL TUBES and MAGIC VOICE Illustrated at right. New Magic Voice; five-band Super- heterodyne. A world traveler—police, aviation and ama- feur calls; U. S. Aviation Weather Reports; foreign and U. S. broadcasts. Magic Brain, Magic Eye, Metal Tubes; Phonograph Connection. A glorious Duy f0F rico A S-tube, 2-band Su- perheterodyne. Do- mestic; short-wave: 8” Speaker; Phono- graph Connection. ning .... $29.95 A luxurious Console with 6 new RCA Metal Tubes, at ultra- low cost. Range: U. S., foreign (49m), police, aviation ard amateur . $ 49.95 Magic Eye—helps tune in on police, aviation, and amateur calls in addition to U. S. and foreign programs; Metal 3; phono- recon ® 91,50 graph connection bands... Medel 67-2 Rich “cabinet; 6-tube, S-band Superhetero- ‘dyne; brings in ma- jority ‘of world-wide jentertainment. Phon- Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc. Bismarck’s Pioneer Radio Dealer Est. 1914 Phone 700. MADE BY THE WORLD’S LARGEST RADIO ORGANIZATION KY K PHILCO WEEK Year’s Greatest Value Givi Wy fo 419 Broadway Biomarck ° ' Phone 762 — Swine National Favor| FAY BROWN Fay Brown, KFYR sports an- ; Nouncer, was notified this week that 3 | he had placed sixth in the National Contest conducted by Sporting News, the national baseball weekly, to find the country’s most popular baseball 9 | announcer. In crder that the contest would be 0; more nearly fair to all announcers, | two divisions were created. One di- vision included announcers located in + cities supporting major league ball clubs. The other division ‘included announcers located outside major, league cities. It was in the latter di- vision that Fay Brown gainéd sixth position. Brown's excellent showing was re- } markable because of the fact that Bismarck has» no league baseball games and also that Bismarck is by far the smallest city placing an an- nouncer in the final standings. CONTINUED from page one’ | POLITICS A By PERTINAX of the election and it has tetth to bite him if he doesn’t. Only a few of the ballots cast in this ‘manner to date have come in as & result of the solicitation of political workers. Most of them are. from people who také an interest in publiz affairs and who regard the privilege and duty of voting as one which obli- gates them to get their ballots counted. * ee THE NEW TECHNIQUE Whatever else may be said of this campaign there are plenty of innova- tions but it remains for the Republi- cans to tittilate the public interest by @ mystery announcement. Tt was sent out by the radio divi- sion of the G. O, P. national commit- ‘tee in the form of a declaration that Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg, in 9 Speech to be given Saturday night, Cct. 17, “promises to introduce a new technique in radio campaigning.’ There was no hint as to what the |‘ngw technique” would be; whether the dignified senator would sing a song, do a tap dance or present an act of ventriloquism, but the effect should be to obtain for him a larger audience than he otherwise might have. The public is just about reaching the stag® where a “new technique” would be welcome—if it really is new and dif- ferent. ‘Three-fourths of New York state, geologists estimate, was under water millions of years ago. National Philco Week Will Be Observed Here National Philco Week will be ob- served in sensational fashion at Tavis Music company in Bismarck and by dealers throughout the Mis- souri Slope Area next week, Oct. 19 to 25,:it was announced Saturday by W. E. Lohman, sales manager of the Bismarck distributor firm. Displays in keeping with che week have been arranged in the show rooms of Tavis Music company and win- cows have been painted elaborately, the ‘sales manager declared. Objective of the week, of course, is to make people throughout the na- tion radio conscious, to call attention to the great advances made in recelv- ing sets and to show how muth easier it is for the average parson today to acquire a radio. The week has many pleasant fea- tures for the average citizen, Lohman said, details of which may be secures either at the Bismarck store or from any Phileo dealer.—Adv. B a S ri iG TRAD r Your Old EASY TERM Rad — GCC T0 ENROLL 600 MORE ND, YOUTHS|szteeresast Enrollment of an additional quote @f 600 civilian conservation boys will! begin in Fargo Saturday, John Wil- Mams, field representative and CCC selecting officer for North Dakota, announced here Saturday. With 1.836 youths already enrolled in the Civilian Conservation Corps from North Dekots, the new addi- tional ‘quota will give the state a total Of 2,496, Williams stated. the new quota, was re- from the department of agriculture in Washington just as en- rollments to bring the force to 1,836 ‘were completed. Fargo's enrollment Saturday is ex- pected to total 205 while 200 will be enrolled at Minot Monday and the ) at. Bismarck Tuesday Fargo—Barnes, Sargent and Steele 5 each; Cass and Dickey, 20 each; Grand Forks, Gi , Richland and ‘Trail, 10 each, and Ransom, 25. Minot—Benson, Divide, Ward, Wells and Williams, 15 each; Bottinedu Burke, McKenzie, Pierce, 10 each; Cost $253,127 in N. D. Payments for old-age assistance to- tal $283,127 for the first_five months Willson, executive secretary of the board, showed old-age. assitance in- creased steadily until September's figures reached $84,234 for 5,464 per- sons, By months the number receiving payments increased from 227 in May, 2,289 in June, 3,808 in July, 4,721 in August and 5,464 in September. ‘To- tal approved for October payments is 5,544 as of September 30. Payments mounted from May's fig: ure of $3,168 to June $35,065, July $58, 112, August $72,008, and: September $84,234. The number of persons receving old y | FOOTBALL SEASON / ? REVOLUTIONIZES RADIO TUNING. PERFECT TONE! Automatically Assuares ma " {LAB it | YOU'LL be fascinated when you ' see the G-E Colorama Dial of this / new Focused Tone radio flash from red to brilliant green as you dial | 4 your station—visibly assuring ! that your radio is in Perfect | Forused Tone. But you'll get an‘ even greater thrill when. you listen | ‘to the whole new rai of tones brought to you for the first time by G-E FOCUSED TONE RADIO! Before you buy any redio be sure to and hear the new G-E's. The truly marks (astuiee ond omg will prove to your eyes, ears book that G-E is.the only radie for , f ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR OLD GLASS TUBE SET G-E MODEL E.95 Focused Tone Radio 1. Sentry Box. Sliding-rule Tuning Music-S; ‘control. Bass and Treble Compen- sation. 9-Métal Tubes. 3-Band. Tuning Range: Standard Broadcasts, Police Calls, Aviation, Ama- wait Vehime” Conuch 10 Wom ® OD DS GENERAL @ ELECTRIC I i. 88 SERVICE ELECTRIC CO. ‘}j 206 Broadway John B.' Kottsick Phone 85 RESEARCH KEEPS G-E for a home demonstration a [ ry - ¥100,000,000 ENTERTAINME: