Evening Star Newspaper, September 16, 1922, Page 8

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8 : THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER. 16, 1922. N AV AL R Anl[] \VURKI RADIO RALF AND HIS FRIENDS— O i e B ( Al Pmr—‘—_.m Scheduled for 6'WAN RuN HOME BE GENEROUS, MY BoY! AND | SMALL PIECE,G'W/NG THE ONE - 10 GINE MY APPLES TO Eastern Standard Time. AND TELL MOM i REMEMBER THE ONE WHO IS~ THEY'RE DIVIDING WITH THE > MY BROTHER AND LET HIM WOULDN'T LET You LARGE, PIECE! Now WA SHARE 'EM WITH NAA—Naval Radio Station, Radio, Va. HAVE 7! 3:45 to 4 p.m.—Closing live stock markets. Places America in Fore of| ¢ to 415 pm—Hay and feed mar- kets. iati i 5 p.m.—Weather report. t Awatlon and Ae”al 5:30 to 6 p.m.—Dalily marketgram. 10 p.m—Time signal; weather re- Telegraphy. port; xhip orders; 2430 meters, _ 10:30 p.m.—Naval press news on 2,630 meters. < FLYERS DISCARD PHONES |, xcept where noted, sending is CW 30 meters. : ' WWX—FPost Office Department. Transmitters on Planes Capable of | 3:30 p.m.—CW marketgram tele- .. grams on 980 meters. Sending Message More Than p.m.—Wholesale dairy report on i 1,160 meters by radiophone. ' 400 Miles. 30 and 8 p.m.—Market report on 1,150 *meters by radiophone. T 9:30 p.m.—Weather report. - The Navy's development of radio| ywu (o pue pecht Co. (360 Meters). pparatus and equipment for use Inj ot AFIRE ECtt o e service aircraft has been one of theanq tne following program of music: == | money was particularly boring. It|of that dreadful Skunk smell, which |2gain he grew hungry, his mother was | tillation of alcohol. This overplus / greatest contributions to the progress |Sclections played on the phonograph 1 1 ¢ | has been thrown on the British mar- O e sextet from Lucia,” “Silver Threads | spoke of it as casually, but never as |to take him any food for his break- | bushes and chuckling inside. She was | ket, the only one which will admit it Advancing the @ ¢ fl itself. ng the Gold,” “No Use Crying” | reverently, as If it were bricks or|fast tomorrow. We will let him think | quite 2s proud of him as he was of | without heavy ¢ s, and it has been ancing e act of \Dyingy Itac jeorgi ep on Building Castles mortar. One gathered that a rather |we have forgotten him.: Then we will | himself. sold for what it will fetch. As Both of these facts, experts in radio|in the Air,” -~Just Because You're | livable sort of shack could be “run |find out if he reallw is what a smart | She longed to go over to him 2nd |sult the unfortunate British fa up” for something under a hundred | Fox should be. We will find out if he | tell him that she was proud of him, |is bei & reduced to something “ was nothing in his young life. He |none of us can stand. Iam not going | beeping at hin from behind so 5" EXPERT ADVICE ON RADIO and aviation believe, are gradually | You,” “Royal Italian March,” “Sliding . s . : e e naval et ot thix | Trombone Back My Honey: | . 102.—Radio Railroading. thousand-—or a hundred thousand and | is smart enough to try to be inde-|but she didn't. No, sir; she didn't.|near d nd in some 2SR S {moon,” “Geors ' “Hot Lips.” Se- W |2 guarter. pendent.” She didn't go near him. She kept|refusing to market his crop.” country in the very fore of flight and{jections played on_the piano—“The |{== “And I've just aebout got the| So that is how it happened that the |out of sight. Ycu see, she wantcd Dt e e aerlal telegraph |Speak,” “Rose of Bombay,” “I Cer- : quarter,” John Interpolated crudely | young Fox had found no breakfast him to contirue tc feel independent e s Tod: th rely solely | tainly Must Be in Love,” “Blue Danube For the past few weeks the rail- | extending the intercommunication be- | one evening, greatly to Merry's dis- | that morning, and, finally, had made |She wanted him to feel t he could and operated wholly by on radio telegraphy n Blues, roads,have occupied a prominent place | tWeen dispatcher and train. tress. “And when I say a quarter, stand on his own feet, as the saying Y | Now, of course, we have the auto- | mean two-bits” he added bluntly. is. She knew what he must be think- ing with other planes tions or ships, t ing of her, but this didn't matte: That little Fox was learning one of in the national mind. What With |matic’ train control to insure that |~ dont mean a quarter of a million ’ | N i X 3¥N—National Radio Instit | phone | mnal Radlo Institute (360, 0 problems, and other hazards, |engineers will do with their trains | doljars. Which reminds me,” he con- aving been practica Meters). X ],',;:\v'u'}*,.',. 2 practically Qiac el G20i0 B D Ra i) spaskc codle % |ihe roads find it more difficult than |What tho signals dictate they must do. | tinued good humoredly, “of a youns the greatest lessons in life and she e Ao b Her i Th 2 ki TR L £ ever before to put their “safety first” | HWever, with the best of signal sys- | lawyer I heard about the other day didn’t intend to spoil it. The time pilots found that telephone re | WalHl—White & D 3 | ! et tems and the most reliable of auto- | who managed a case Very Success- would come soon when he would have impr al. They were too heavy SRl O¥exCoxu (300 MeC [islogan; Intojpractice. matic control, the fact remains that | fully for his first English client, to go out Into the great world and ! ters). The first and foremost thought of |a fallible human being is propelling | And when the client asked the young take care of himself, with no one <. besides being | peatd INE 1 4 to 4:30 p.m.—Summ uggestions for hou id instructions for ac and had inferio ceurate_and ference orn diophone A to help him. Mrs paring him for this. All this the little Fox didn’t know. He was more than ever sure that his father and mother had forgotten him And from feeling bad he began to feel a little angry. He would show them that he didn't need them. He would show them that he could get along without them, all of which was actly what his father and mother wanted. an engine at tremendous speed with [lawyer to let him know what the only intermittent communication | bill was, the poor kid was fazed be- ngers, and while it would |ith those who might warn him of | cause he didn't know just,how much hat the modern road is equip- |danger or tell him why he should |the Britisher would stand for. Final- h every conceivable device for |StOD. ly he stammered out something the safety of life and limb, at the | 1t is generally understood that the lubout a thousand. ‘Dollars or | WMU—Doubleday-Hill Electric Com- | same time accidents continue to oc- (matter of radio railroading, as it has|pounds!” asked the Englishman. i pany (360 Meters). cur at the most unexpected times |been popularly termed, is under seri- | ‘P-p-pounds’ gasped the lawyer. 0 to 5:30 pm—Tass ball sdores|ond places ous consideration, and the news of | And he got away with it"! ! & T o breores | “"\What is the remedy for this condi- |the installation of a radio system | John chuckled with delight at his p R L sl i “That 18 what the big officials |should not come as a surprise to any- [own ingenuity in butting into the p king today, and in order to help | One. conversation. Reddy was pre- time recive | any railroad is to safeguard the lives dents; | O pa eem 0o 6 p.m.—Dinner-hour music. | ped w using much inte they admit, munication was Te not te . known to require s recently re- units of irons to the 1s. squ exclusion of all other meth Home” (Lewis-Young-Mey- |1 2 o wersation. e Better Sets Availahle. nnees de Pelerinage,” piano | Solve the problem, they have consult- orsees Its Success. “The English are ra % b iiont S108s s o All naval scouting planes are Little Song. \mhn u;, m.ird w -\t;-x the radio engine g -<,:[Amer | ’l'lln-rod is nulrrlnsolnd whyblhe radio E::;h K. Worthington agreed, lan- (Copyright. 1 by T. W. Burgess.) St i A Ll L emittere | bTosio)} “Old-fashioned Girl,” fox trot | ¢a. After many weeks of conference, |railroad signal whould not be as suc- | guldly. \ e ot i ik amaas Top | AT Jolson): | predictions are being made that the |cessful as a similar svstem now be- | “But a clever little people, eh GERMANY AS A “DUMPER.” e it e the At o on DHanG, (¢H { next step ahead in railroading is to {ing used on ships. The Department |grinned John. el e | THEY saw Tt caTes T o the sea. While the ¥ is not s fox trot {be radio routine communication be-|of Commerce has been experimenting | K. Worthington said nothing. He PI1G MEADOW MOUSE. 3 g e R aBou e e violin tween train and dispatcher. With five radio beacons for sending opt | seemed to have weightier things on Reduces Price of P o e i ing much about them, it is Know ok H £ . ] K ¥ ind._ He began to talk learned Ny ce of Potatoes in Eng- | that better and more powerful radio Rano (¢ When 1 | At any rate the question is being |warning sign, in fo s mind. He bega 2 up his mind to go hunting by himself. B e a cerve, | Meet Again” (Kgan-Whiting): “Wa- |8 those who see the future jheavy weathe c 1y of English architecture, oriel win- f B B8 mind to £0 hunting ov e land to £2 a Ton. | omy, the o el h Blue fox trot (Meinken): |significance of the Interstate Com- [the outcome the depart- | dows, —bricked terraces, stairway the time that he had been hunting ¢ 5 : | e e . But I Hate to Go Home Alone,” |merce Commission’s final orders to [ment ordercd five more such sta- | with dog gates, Gothic windows—— | Grasshoppers and Mice down on the| LONDON, September 16—Potato | e ey e Iniand. (Hant Song.” violin | forty-nine railroads to establish au- |tions. The new beacons will be i S Green Meadows two pairs of sharp |dumping the latest accusation | e e Eios RuEnea) { tomatic train control devices on their [stalled at Boston, ntucket, Cape [ Merriam drank it all in greedily. jeyes had been watching him. They|made against Germany by the tariff | civen tis: e STl | lines before January 1, 1 Chartes, Columbia’ river and Puget |She withdrew most reluctantly when | wero the eyes of Reddy Fox and Mrs, | reformers who for some’ time h SR Ta- e tiahéss of Dlanes tn the $):“You Won Traine Ran “Wild." sound. one of the twins howled. . |Reddy, his father and mother. Had |been clamoring for the imp ! Air were ieansmittiae simultaneousty. | rot (Burtnett g : e Meseign ships are being equipped | K- Wortheington lighted a cigar-lany “danger appeared they would | of higher dutic inst_ imports from Recently developed radio apparatus | (Youns - Lewis T drstuen ran “wild” with 101 (ith direction finders to enable them | €t : - promptly have gone to his rescue. Germany. Not lo: o British farm N me il £ n that of the engine- “By the way, Lindsay.” he drawled, | They saw him catch that frst big|ers were getting from £10 to £18 a am,” piano ( {to tell the direction of the warning cons, and foreign authorities are vatehing America lead the world in abled seaplane on | Dre nsmit up to 300] - “I'm a bit shoft this month until m rings sent from | WIAY—Woodward & Lothrop (360 remittances come in. 1 was jus n. When two trains used th me ctions, the first today permits a d the water to low Mouse. They watched him|ton for their potatoes w they ly take it behind a bush on the|find them a drug in the market a ck in opposite diry | | |other control | | miles. Comp control was through synchronize wonderi; ould you loan me, say, a ! cdg Pas vh ices as low Frar Rave e Meters). X 8 gh_ 3y s niew. developme O ience | wondering could you o . say, @) cdge of the Old Pasture, where he|prices as low as iz, nee of jave been | { watches. But en s like other {this new development of the science (/10" and a quarter? {could eat it without danger of being | “The explanation of t says HAVE YOU & on th o- { men, are only human, and failure of : John's retort was neat but brutal n. They saw him catch tw | one authority, “is whole limping nt the five stations which nd Dutch by German (Raff); (b) {patience of e dumping nn); Mr. D Le- {collisior and wa rowers. Tl Helen Brandow nd the light its resulting |at Ambrose, no solos (a) “The | intermittent communication between Temple Bells” (Finden); (b) “Song | dispatcher and engineer. As the air urers to the jof India” ( akoff): ' Miss Irene | brake was perfected and speeds and @atent. Bt fous onc en bidders Drake: Mr. Charles ngerd, weights increased, the block sig airplane s wh nist. Baritone sol ) “Amer- | system, and later the automatic inte: G:E1 milea whitic an): (b) |locking signal s less than 1 st Heart” from the opers <t step in the de (Gounod); “Toreadd { Jong-distance radio for/Song.” from the i sulted in the orderi : Wengerd, di- « sets divided among the lrecto i four pioneer bidders. Mis: Gorier Sound-Proof Ree {solos ) y ot The same vear the su from. the son_and 1 e jingled all that he ever hoped | Mice and followed him as he to have left by Friday nizht as hejthem home. They chuckle thrust his hand into his trousers)saw how proud he was..And even ing the war, stimulated t pockets. he lay there on his doorstep, gloating | of potatoes in order to provide s and San Francisco, | POSKe chi ; % ¢ ave when | serv ) ignals are sent by auto- ). \\ellile 'v::l!d :;;[hlm‘-clumll) speak- over the supper he would have whenlserve of food and also for the matic devices which operate at resu- lar and frequent inter: (Copy st are located nd Sea Gir teh on our « Fire Island TRIED “IT?” v Herndo ccompanist. cial wi mani (Copyright, 1922.) (Continued in Monday's Star.) The Wife Who Wouldn’t || ITTLE STORIES tem came into usi aho [ Commercial National Bank ' Fourteenth at G r—To Our Mutual Benefit " (Tosti); (b) “Ea u Le Stelle,” from the opera Toscw” (Puccini); Mr. De Melgio upil of Mr. Wengerd; Miss Gertru mallwood, accompanist. Piano solos “Wild Rose” (McDowell) {“Minuet in G" (Beethoven); Helena Smith. Bass solos (a) of the Desert Am 1" (Philips); Kashmiri Song” (Finden); M Moore; Miss Helen Brandow nes w radio equipped. and due » improvements made by the nav: Xperimenters planes now communi- cate with ships 100 miles distant and with other planes up to 150 miles away. velopment of sound-proof R xa (Saint | ' fi'BEDTl é coiver sesbure e il 15 pagt (st Sl hoon e ettle Down! JEDTI! IE . It's a good thing for us to have x propeller and wind. Tests R0t (Guricighy; (by CBirth et | : ou make your remittances drawn so made with the radio com- {\yvSE," (BUEISIER): (b) WHIrAh of ) 3 Ry - PP pRLT) idn’ y i Mounted in an airplane and @ 27, (HONDi Gl Naney Suillvell: | A Sequel to “Brides Will Be Brides What the Young Fox Didn’t| | LACorsmercialiBank heike: S e s tor | Reading (a) selected; (b) selected: Know. i i made avaiable during | M- C. W. O'Connor, of the O'Connor | . . It carries much personal prestige iade avalistle dirtoe ! c’:ng’lr“}'naprpsflnn. Tenor solos @ By Lucille Van Slyke BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. g for you to have the Commercial Some things that must be learned by each | Experience alone can teach. g —>Mrs. Reddy. : i house, and who was very well col t B Architecturally Speaking. T e o Wi in he modest opd | The young Fox who had been forced WORTHINGTON ~ W IL-| Pumpkin_ Shell at its delightfully |to live by himself had his first lesson LOUGHBOY was a youtthul | {I0GeRt Fenial, would rim some more in independence. He had been out by | architect, who was out 100k- | ing, while his pretiy little wife agreed | himself and caught his own food. ing for prospective clients. | that it wag no uSe building unless | Very proud he felt. He had a right to | one could do it well. feel proud. To be proud of independ- known as “your bank.” Even as one is “known by the company he keeps”—so is his business standing judged by his banking affiliations. The Commercial is a strong and R T t of the radio development work in the Navy has been done in a small but highly e adio labor- atory at the Anacostia naval air! stati ne Washipgton and clos Which was a perfectly commendable H . i 1 Prans soToo Cye 3 ich was a perfe ab o we to NC : anced desizn ano solos (a) “Humor- | HVE WO8 & B K. Worthingtan, | It ¥as humiliating to John to have | ence is always right. There is no finer influential Bank. transmitters and receivers are a a ak); (b) Berceuse ; repeatedly to admit that he couldn’t i 9 P 7 able when new apparatus is required (radie = Steff repro- | But he was a very new architect. and [ aford to_ give his darling even the | eeling In life than the feeling of lin; We'll be glad to have your ac- for service uses. Among the prob-| 1 piano. Soprano solos (a) “Per-|{y. had not learned to conceal his)most modest of houses. And modest | dependence. How that little Fox did E . ’ lems now receiving attention is the |fect Day? (Bond): “Sunshine of Your | (@ W7 N ST P COE T houses began to look very insignifi- | wish his mother could know what he | count—and we promise you'll be design and test of radio compass Smile” (Cooke-Rav); Mrs. Violet An- S S cant, indeed, to a young woman who |pog gone! The 't a doubt in| [ highly satisfied with the service we equipment for aircraft capable of derson; ) uth Arnold, accompan- i dared to think that they didn't know | \Wak’ heing ‘taken “day after day. to|had done! re wasn o ; y receiving bearings up to 1,000 miles. ist. Baritone solos (a) “Eri tu Che ' very much about architecture, butsec superbly built ones. |his mind that she had forgotten him o EL R A special low-lying antenna for the Macchiavi’ from the opera “Masked |y, .\ what they wanted in their own| For K. Worthington had an artful | that day. She brought him no food render and the cordial way we ren- big airship field at enurst was Ball”, (Verdi); (b) “Sylvia’ il way of telephoning to Merriam that |and he was certain that it was be- der it ntly (.]r‘fl‘tlln:'d( z:nd"n»h"n::\ orm(r;‘s(.: (e, A\R}.;otn( ,_ID“N( ;ohknm: slinonges. /. y _Ihe had something “rather entertain- cause she had forgotten him. He % e Alie Sutor B S e Sk | he would admit grudgingly |ing to show” her. Which meant that | would like to show her that he could | {§ hips. Some of the work lin, accompanist. Violin when the prospective client dared to | Merriam would give the poor little |take care of himself even if she did | |5 ¢ is confidential and is re- |“Smilin’ Through” (Penn): (b) “The | advance a meek wish for anything | Pumpkin Shell a “lick and promise. | forget him. | Bl served for military use only. jRosary” (Nevin): Mr. Robert H. Mont- | so_crude as a_ sleeping porch, “Iland either dump the twins in the| But there were some things that| (B Life-Saving Value. jgomery; Mrs. Harris Sackrider. | dGare: that ]"'th‘l lm_wqtrk-»d into } back of her newly-acquired car, or|little Fox didn't know. Had he known . e Almost all the development work is:gopyey oo the scheme; but doesn’t it Seem a l leave them with Susan Sue. while | them he might have had an altogether | |5 —_— i 4 ent A—Westinghouse, East Pitts-, pity, rawther, to intrude it? For, on | she dashed off to the oth i of the |different feeli 1t didn’ h Pr. of bene ) o i : _ other end of the |different feeling. It didn't enter his esi AH0 o e o e burgh (360 Meter, the whole, from the architectural |island to enthuse over some palatial | head that he had been given a lesson | [§ ident Kite antenna and radio equipment for | § pum-—-Base ball scores: standpoint, it doesn't seem exactly | “cottage” that K. Worthington | in the school of life, but he had. Yes, | [§ i R G foream dowr. fom e p.m—"TUnder the tent” And, in his sweet, little | thought might be reproduced for the |ir. he had. The night before Mre E‘ has great commercial life-saving 5 arts way hie would completely | Lindsay_family. Reddy had aid to Reddy, “It is high | 2 £ gas s p.m.—Government market re- squash the idea For K. Wortningon was shrewdly | time that that little scamp of ours| | H il . J B. molds, V. Pi alues. & 2 g 5 . ames B. Reynolds, V. Pres. Y he landing field indicator and summary of New York Stock| Merriam Lindsay was much im-[aWware that Merriam possessed a|should learn to take care of himself. Harrington M!"s' Ist V Pres. @ Rey g o | S piloting cable for aircraft is appli- - iunse “d with him. He was a good- | Wealthy father, and it seemed to him | His brother and sisters have been out | | J. H. Baden, V. Pres. & Cashier Laurence A. Slaughter, V. Pres. D ity air lines and trans. ¢ P m.—Base ball scores; special . voung man. had much time|an eminently proper thing for that|hunting with us every day and havel |8 sntinental air routes. It gi features. | on hi§ hands, and his microscopic [ $ort of father to build a house for |learned a great deal, while he has had sp___ e « tle made | his young married daughter. But he | to Stay over at the old house, because @" = == ing tle mad an audible signal, making it pos :30 p.m—Bedtime stories. {mustache and’ his 1l for the pilot t darkness or fo ti pplic nce ae p.m.—Concert; base ball scores. - ¥ 1 her feel as if she had a truly Parisian | 2nnoved John and fretted John and 5 to 10 p.m.—Time signals. escort. worried John. John was fed up But John Lindsay had very little With K. Worthington's condescending wd. A short while teletype was b i £ ) KYW—Westinghouse, Chicago (360! use for him. He thought him a |manner. At 3 o the aircraft ] Meters). | pretty poor excuse for a man. And, The architect’'s attitude toward =fully - demon-; 3 pm.—Base ball team line-ups;| quite naturally, he didn't like to strated between & aplane and the progress of games every half hour | have him dangling at Merr heels. ¢ route in| A ia lahoratory. This scheme | {pereafter until close. This time John wasn't jealous; he en offered to the world for 415 pm— News; market and stock | was apprehensive. He could feel Stromberg-(.:arlson commercial ion. { reports. { trouble ahead. No. 2A Radio Head Sets vs; For K. Worthington was insidiously No. 60 Universal Plugs o | planting very grand ideas, indeed. No. 147 Radio Jacks 7:15 p.m—Base ball reports; bedtime | into little Mrs. Lindsay's impression- g 4 8 able thoughts. No. 148 Radio Jacks 8 p.m.—Concert. “For, after all, from the archi-| Pedestal, Panel and 9 p.m—News and sports; special | tect's standpoint,” he would murmur, Hand Microphones | Such are of the radio de-] “Botts < i velopments, wh is believed, are | e News ar;)anlrzarke& finan establishing th val aireraft of the | 2 Tnited St features. is quite unfair to delude the client with the idea that cheap construc Soidiiang Toliysusranteed by INDIA MASONS FLOURISH. ! | oE—westnghone, Sewerk, . 3.t 0, e oometl, Speetritc: || John J. Odenwald, | Order Represented by English, e e B fon Even Irish Lodges. 2 p.m.—Scores by innings of base| 0T houses ousht 1o be done as per- Factory Distributor Scotch and ball games; fashion news; closing | [€Ctly as possible. o Franklin 6903 1209 HN.W BOMBAY, September 16.—Free Ma-|prices on active bonds, stocks, grain,| AnNd John, who hadn't a penny in W, 5 TPin a highly_prosperous | boftcs ond” suser. 2 | the world with which to build any z to the Indian Ma-| 4.3 p.m.—Final reports and prices | sonic_ vearbool, which has just beenfon farm products; weather forecast: issued. _ = music. | All three constitutions of the United | 6 pm.—Final base ball scores; cur- | Kingdom are represented, England by | rent topics. | five district grand lodges, Scotland by [~ §:19 p.m.—Bedtime stories. i a separate grand lodze, and Ireland by | §:30 " pm—-Under the Evening a number of def d lodges not under | Lamp, a separate jur i 7 p.m.—Location of ships at se \ i USE N\ At Bombay ; se-ball scores; current topics. : e e Masone T, thity- o heing | "0 D O htons L S Variometers ............$3.00 200 Tubes..............$4.50 3l 7 v inglish. There are twenty-three Eng-| 7.15 = p.m.—Whistling concert by | 3 % % sh lo in Calcutta, in addition to|Mary Scott Withers. i} Variocouplers . ... ...$325 Mounted Galena. ... ...20c Each KZ 7 7 zht Al Arch chapters in India | 7:45 p.m-——Dance music by the Wil- | - Dial: in. 60c; 4 4 7 A t divided among five tubordinate juris- Novelty Dance Orchestra. 23-Plate Condensers $1.85 s—3-in., 60c; 4-in.....80c 7 A Z {mnnn- “:m;. }Fn ish I l)(;xsonr}‘ m.—Talk on_“Lighting (or; CEECHES L0 100 ft. Antenna Wire. .. 55¢ ‘ f // // %, s represented seventy-six lodges. % ¢ D. H. Tuck. | i Qg b Dinnar s Gerved” by || 43-Plate Condensers......$2.15 Headphones 4 $5.75 Vi Vrorars roseats Greirs e 5 pm Chief Steward Green of the Berengaria of the Cunard line. THE "STANDARD'™ -0IL L 4 — (Can’t advertise make. Spaghetti Insulation. . .13c Yard «p» Batteries, Gunnhed.)Sl.'IS CHILDREN TO BE AIDED. T to 10 p.m.—Time signals. P 10:01 p.m.—Weather forecast. 201 Tubes. .............$5.10 tal Detectors. . ... .$1.00 U, Hottnd to Fet Tuowsanas o Oy | 0P e sl ~ FOR MOTOR LUBRICATION { dernourished Russians. ke Dt e O I MOSCOW, September 16.—Holland, 2 p.m.—Concert by News Orchestr: . —— which cared for thousands of under-| 3:30 pm—Weather forecast (455 awson ba y e y A Rourished German children during and \WiErS) oo since the war, volunteered recently to| 5 pm. rt 1ts. Z > o o 3 e " e v hoviand | O orenes Complete with Stromberg-Carlson Phones, Switch, Wire, - if the sovis Ve - B P ey Tt ool pon the hun]s;?e z;i v | Insulators—ready to hook up. Positively the greatest ] rting the youngsters to The Hague. |waI—, % 3 g = PO The” bolcheviki have agreed to the | Wenramerioan Redle and waersaes || bargain ever offered in Radio apparatus. . proposition. _This is the first time that | (ze Rt o8 the soviets have accepted help of this 5 pm—Wee‘kly erop Teport (435 G % 8).. | Everything at the lowest prices. . gn countries. kind from foreign countrie: Siatern). o st 5:30 p.m.—Boston police reports; late | Hel news flashes; sport news. ‘When your sewing machine gives| 3 pm.—“The Family Circle”; final put and needs mechanical attention base ball scores; concert by Miss you may not know where to turn to | Nellie Rainey Gay. get it repaired properly. That's what the.Recommended Service Column in | wWsB—Atlanta Journal, Atlanta, G Classified Section of The Star is for— (360 Meters). to guide you to reliable specialists in[ 5 oo concert every line of personal and household | ¢ J7= U ONTCRL po ) (oores: tate L o T e owing " | news flashes; bedtime stories; music. chine in g0od Funning order. Every | J1:43 pm. to 12:30 am—Late con advertiser in the Recommended Serv- 2 ice Column guarantees satisfaction to R R RERT Star readers—so you can safely call The Canadian Federation of Univer- upon them.—Advertisement. sity Women has 1,353 members. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (NEW JERSEY) : Western Phones, Loud Speaker, Westinghouse Aeriola- Sr., De Forest sets at cost. : Hines Auto Supply Co., Inc., 920 D St. NW. 421 Tenth St. N.W.

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