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CAROLS FEATURE ON WCAP TONIGHT Mozart String Quintet Con- cert Outstanding on Program. A spectal program of ancient ¢ 2 smas carols sung by the Lyric Singers, n mixed quartet composed of Joanna p Russell, soprano; Miriam Leonard Stewart, contralto; Har T. Town nd, tenor, and Benjami Y. Morri =on, bass, will be broadcast ton WCAP. The repertoire inel *While By My Sheep,” “Glor { in the Highe “Lo, How i Rose Bloomin “Lie ill and Slum: and “Silent Night. nother outstanding mnu: will be the weekly concert the Mo String Quinte The guin am will be followed by Elmer Snider of the Army Music School, who will play selectic on the mar and a joint harp and violin ¢ Mary and Elizabeth Keyes. , Willi ". Bartholomew also will give & pl yecital, and Helen V. Harper, sopr: will sing. A flute obligato will playved by Howard T. Cole. The chief address will be made by Louis Rothschild of the Washing Petter Busine Bureau. He Speak on “Before You Inyvest—Investi gate. Other attraclion, cram include selection. Koernstein's Trio, Christy . rod Falconer Sir Hob Goblin y B lizabeth Wade regular Friday night dnm\ pro- | ¢ the Wardma or will close the i Ihc Mayflower Hotel Orch frs. Nina Reed will givo WRC rnoon pre , Which scheduled in at Reed will talk on boc 1] feature LocalRadioEntertainment Friday, Dec. 18, 1925. NAA—Naval Rad.o Station, Radio, Va. 3.45 p.m.—Weather Bureau reports 7:45 to 8 p.m.—Public Health Serv 15 lecture, broadcast No. = b Suggestions for the Holidays. ~ 10:05 p.m.—Weather Bureau repor WRC—Radio Corporation of America (1685 Meters). 3:30 p.m.—Concert by the United States Marine Band, Capt. Willlam 1L Santelmann, band leader; Taylor Bran- son, second leader, broadcast from the Marine Barracks. 6 p.m.—M\ayflower Orchestra, broad- cast from the Hotel Mayflower. 5:40 p.m.—Book talks by Mrs. Nina Reed: “‘Diaries of George Washing- ton,” by John Fitzpatrick Great Woman § * by B. Paul, and “Thunder on the Left,” Ly Christopher Morley. Farly Program Tomorrow. 11:55 a.m.—Arlington time signals. 13 noon—Organ recital from the, Homer L. Kitt studios. 1 p.m.—Hamlilton Hotel Orchestra. @ CAP—Chesapeake & Potomac Tele- phone Co. (468.5 Meters). 6 to 6:45 p.m.—Musical program by the Mozart €tring Quintet. 6:45 to 6:55 p.m.—‘Dafly Market Bummarles,” under the auspices of| the Department of Agriculture. 6:55 to 7:10 p.m.—Elmer N. Snider, marinba artist of the United Stat JArmy Music School, in a short recital. | 7:10 to 7:30 p.m.—Misses Mary and | Flizabeth Keves in musical eelections, for the harp, violin and voice. 7:30 to 7:45 p.m.—“Sir Hob Goblin Etories,” by Blanche Elizabeth Wade, story-teller for G. R. Kinney Co., Inc., from the studio of etation WEAF, New York City. :45 to 8:15 p.m.—A program of an- clent Christmas carols will be sung by the Lyric Singers’ Quartet—Joanna Best Russell, soprano; Mirlam Leon- nrd Steward, contralto; Harvey T. ‘Townsend, tenor; Benjamin Y. Morri- £on, bass; Mrs. John Milton Sylvester, | director and accompanist. 1 $:15 to 8:30 p.m.—“Prophecles in | Prospective,” by Dr. W. J. Hale, re- gearch chemist for the Dow Chemical | t'o. and chairman of division of chem- | fotry, Natlonal Research Council. §:30 to 845 p.m—Wilmer T. Bar- tholomew, concert planist, in a short pecital, | 8:45 to §:55 p.m.—“Befors You In. vest—Investigate,” by Louis Roths- ehtld, under the auspices of the Bet- ter Business Bureau. 8:55 to 9:15 p.m.—Helen V. Harper, goprano, artist of Paul Bleyden stu. €lo, in a group of songs, accompanied at the plano by Mrs. Paul Bleyden. Flute obligato will be played by How- erd T. Cole. 8:15 to 9:45 p.m.—Mausical selections by the Irving Boernstein Wardman ;"n-k Hotel Trlo, Moe Baer, conduct ns. 9:45 to 10 p.m.—W. Alfred Falconer, reader, in Christmas dlalect stories. 10 to 12 p.m.—Dance program direct | from the Wardman Park Hotel. Early Program Tomorrow. 5:45 to 745 an.—“Tower Health ¥ixerclses,” Ly the Metropolitan Lifo Insurance Co., direct from Metropoli tan Tower, Madison avenue, New York fty. ————— WBAL TO BROADCAST ! ON NEW WAVE LENGTH | Baltimore's new high-powered st fon, WBAL, will begin broadcusting | n 246 meters Sund. WBAL's previous wave length of | £75 meters was an experiment on the part of the Department of Commerce | to determine the amount of interfer. | enee that would be caused by xo lirse 4 station working on that wave. The etatlon was aselgned this wave with | the understanding that if undue in-| terferonco resulted re-allocation would be necessar: Observations made during the p: few weeks, in which the station ha: been operating on meters, -have gemonstrated the impracticability of continuing on the temporary assign- ment, due to the close proximity of other high-power stations near and on that wave. RADIO’S BEST OFFERINGS i TONIGHT. program by the ring Quintet, WCAP, 5 o'clock. Concert by the WOO O chestra, WOO, 8:15 to 9 o'clock. a Musical Mozart 0 to Child Study Association America program, WNY 8:30 o'clock. Hardman hour of WDMCA, 10 o'clock. music, Dance program by Wardman Park Hotel Orchestra, WCAP, 10 to 12 o'clock. Jack Meyers' Musical tects, WCAU, 10:30 o'clock THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, LONG RANGE RADIO ENTERTAINMENT FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1925 Programs of Distant Stations Scheduled for Eastern Standard Time Meters. Miles. 280.3 s 4543 P i 4 TO 5 P. 0—Boston: Shopard Colonial Orchestra New Yerk: Voeal and instrumental ew York: Poems: 4 'U_“f?'x JAsricultural program G ] phia ug] Daned " Orchestra . 4.40—Philadeiphia: Police uo'n,ar: rumpeis 5 TO 6 P.M. ino_Orchestrs Ve program b taik Orenesira 2 stories; organ recital . Curnie's Orchestra: readings: news fmicago; Tea time at WGN; musical 30—Dallas: Woman’s hour . ... 15—Springfield: Auatio Jim's jott Station. Hotel Astor Orchestra . ris; 5:00—Chicago Moosh Minne Tiay Chie Lowsville Soloists; L. Vals L Childr e : Child Life ‘from across the eea. 6 TO 7 P 3:00—Scheneetads produce a News anklin Hotel Orchestral WP = WREQ WTAM WGBS WMCA : WWJ JIWNAC JWMAQ ther Jule ‘Anzel's O Oleott Vail and his Hotel M, mole ‘and_Ernie Golden's Orchie Dinner "cone , o New York: Yorik Santi Claus: {al 23S rmkhield . Market. reporta :10]”0”1 Conn.: il Dis aricet” bigh Epots g SWNYC SWOR WEZ WTIC WET WG N WIZ Weeo WE v copeert Voung St half ho el Orchestra “Court of Gold Chimes concert AVenpOr Cits® Orsan recital Atantic 5 b 7 TO 8 P.M ton Trio 1o City: Hotel M ? ws bulleting; : Sport new s . LWPG bedtime stories by JWGY - WIP ntllc:” French lesson | roll call and birth- ~oncert: hoa o Wip's bodty " banjo duets ..... ¢ Altar League ik: Jule An, 1 “Golden Orchiestra . . Hotel MeAlpin Orchestra; th ‘Santa’ Cla n Gersheoson, Shelton "Fi Stratfond Hotel Orchestra Yitow's Hotel Commouore Orchestra: 5" Howd Ph ladelphia New York talic by El Bond” Tri her concert by Drake String_Quintet ner con Orchestra Kansa WeCo WDAF B WNMBE Trio: Santa Claus g W address: story: mu: Concert program Rauland-1 sports: markets Goldkette's Orchest Instrumenta SWIR on .. WIID WEAK d . WHT Tetroit: Jean Mooseneart, 111 Hotel Trio Cleveland: Hotel ‘Statier Conce Orhestra Chicago = o String Trio] c-Condon” "Trio 3 Abrams’ Kni. m—m.\m- NS phia: Dream Daddy, Ph i inn i ol —Philadelplia: Cla: ad Dallas 8:00—PLATAdeIphia: Seaman’s Orchestra: Fetroit: "News Orche nte City: Talk { Voral and instrumenial soioists . masket “reports: ewater Beas o Fimicy. Ingtrumental Trio: Chicago: Ralph Williams and his orchiestra; strumental soloists; trio e e St. Lows: Fur Commerce ‘hour: violinist : Denver: Market reports: news bulletns: dinner Conce: Brown Palace H S Porto Rico: Concert pi oston: Concert program hiladélphia theart, tra: vocal soloist E Philadelphia conpert’ program’ & Atlantic” City:~Seaside Hotel Trio Richmond Hijl, N Y.: Artist recital Sprngfield: McEnelly's " Singing Orch: the Fla.: News: policw bulletins 3 Opera Co.: soloist 1 conce ensembic oist: WOO € LWAHG WRZ concert 2 + Traveier mphon; Estey hour n Neuman, piani ‘address’ music: solos Candy Boys: trio .. vocal and instrumental so! rileld & Hecht presentations _ Minneapol Dinner ert: 1 lecture 8:16—Memphis: Musical program k= Scheneetad; 1sh drama. B.30—New Vi Tos Angeles ;" Child wm.u \sw\m 55 IWHAP 15 Cotgred Tadies' Quaricy .- taville: Glee Club and Jefferson County’ Chil program: talks: news .. ;0: Musical program: n's Home eiee... WHAS Alamo’ Orchestra’ . SWHT 9 TO 10 tion Band .. vocal and” instrunicntal ‘ar Qreyston SWHO Wiy LKPO WCCO 2:00—Des Moines: Grand New York: Musical program ists; Carl Freund's Hot San Franisco: Talk: orche: Minneapolis: Health talk: musical p: New York: Hardman hour of mus New York: Spea~ & Co.'s home ent New York: Musical program . New York: Radio talk: Hollander's ofi hestra . Richmond Hill. N. Y oval soloists and Philadelphia: Tos, Anzeles: Springfield fnstrumental artists: trio ... Pittshurgh: Tea berry time ... Ohieao: Musical Incture: Whitney Atlantic City: Hotel Traymore Or Detroit- Dan W ea.mm- : auto talk: raciotorial . yrosram: Christmas cdr Wos g e K<D Philadelnhia: Musical pro his faxaphone Fai Kiefer. radio humorist o Harmony For 1 ieart. 111 Childr Davenport: Musical pro Baltimore: Vocal and in mm«mx prozra Portland: Dinner, con Kansas City: OU Chieago: Tip Trio: Manhattan Quartet Voeul and instrumental artists: solos Angrles: Children’s program . Tnigtrumental artists .. is: Musical prosram Vocal and instrumental program . *’International Sunday schoel lesson.’. 10 TO 11 P. 00—Denver: Studio program: band: eoloists: tall o Philadelphia: Musical program: Jack Mers' Musical Amhl tects. B st. Louix: ‘and irstrumental ‘artist Atlantie City: Nick Nichols' Dance Orch Chicago: Leeture from University of Chicago: Christian_Endeavor program . . Springfirld: Weather and missing pcrsnu report Loe Angeles: Examiner program. 2 l"mlulfllVrrhla Organ recital: dance’ program by Ril Orehestra - Wi WCAT WENR SWAID DLwWoe WBAL LLEGW S WDAY Oriheatra’ WBEM KH.Y LWFAA SWMC IWGN KOA rumental cnloists Mo Denve .EOA Utonla Dance WAHG WEAF WMCA Pianist port: violimist .. Martford. Conn.: Le Bal Philadelphia: Meeting of the Jance Morning Glory L.ub Arcadia’ WLIT ~ich Hotel Oriole Orchestr: : Dauce progran: Orchestra Hot_Springs n Hotel O; recital . Tos Angeles 10:30—Chicago: Lof it Alamo. Orchests Thiladelphia: Rufns and R ady: WGY Orchests X Entertainment 1 1. 0. 0. F. Lodg York: Hotel Lorraine Orch T\eather: market ani 3 hiétra: eli ‘solos: organ srofestra ) vocal and m:lrum!‘nlal Quartet, orchéstra and soloists, 11 PM. TO 12 MUDNIGHT. Western Auto Co. program. .. .. —T.os Angrles 21:00 Musical i ngeles Chicago: Ralph Willams and the L instrumental_soloists . Richmond Hill. N. ¥.: Utopia Dance Orcl Mooseheart. program :_soloists. Francisco: Hotel Orchestra: olo. “imes: Yocal and instrumental artist lty: Strand Theater organ rucital . Drake Hotel Orchestra; wongs. . Don Rameay's Four 12 MIDNIGHT TO 1 AL ifistrumental ~soloists: Zenith Opera joke contest. i S Ltra. 11:30—0hicago: Hartford, Conn.: 2:00—Chicago: Vocal and , Company Tob Angeles: Ukuleie welections Los ‘Angeles: Musical program Portland: ‘Concert program . Chicago: Flgewater Beach Hotel Ori Ties Moines. Babkers' Life Corn Cleveland: Wormack's Memphis: Fro 5—Kaneas City: loists: lo Orchestra: s ukar, Orchestra inging Syncopators. Uthawk 1Toli 1 Musical program: soloists: Orchestra. : Pat Barnes. " Your Hour League ' Art Hickmas's Danes Orchedtra’ “Plantation Player: . TO 2 AM. Yickers Tp hour Belle Mooseheart, ettin 1:30—Portland: Hoot' Owls M. 1:00—Chicazo: The Ginger Hour: Ibdn)\ wu lams and tho Littls Skylarks. Stock Brokers Bankrupt. NEW YORK, December 18 (P).—The stock brokerage firm of Alfred Ben- scher & Co., whose head, Alfred Ben- <cher, has been missing since Decem- per 1, was petitionéd into bankruptey vesterday and a receiver was appoint- | ed Ly Federal Judge Knox. The at-| torney general’s office has estimated that Benscher owed hi: r‘us(omers‘ 500,000 when he dlsappeared. Stations Divide Wave Length. ‘WJJD, Mooseheart, is now dividing time with WEBH on the 370-meter wave band. The Mooseheart station formerly used the 303-meter channel /RADIO SERVICE ‘We'll Fix Your Set or No Charges Rafio Eleetritian recommended by Loomis Raudio GOl vtmental Radio Sh partmen op 1736 Pa. Ave. N.W. Fraukitn 9684 | Swanson’s | rangue on the World Court in the § B3 {he will ‘(:nuvprnpur Hoes that (BLOOM PLANS SALE OF PATENT OFFICE| {for a modern fireproof office building ! which will provide sufficient accom- | mated future requirements of the RADIO STORY TELLER ‘W. ALFRED FALCONER, | Dialect reader, who will tell some| { Christmas stories to the radio audi-| ence tonight through station WCAP. ! ADVENTURES OF D. C. FIFTEEN MINUTES OF RADIO EACH DAY BY JOSEPH CALCATERRA, Noted Authority on Radio. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction Prohibited The Sine Wave in Alternating Cur- rent Theory and Practice—Part IV. In the dlagram shown today the radius of the circle represents the maximum value attained by an alter- nating current. This value may rep- resent voltage or current and is drawn to scale to represent the number of units of voltage or current. As one leg of the coll passes from any point, in this case wo will take “A” around for a complete revolution back to its starting point, the current goes through a complete cycle, going from zero at point “A” of the circle to a maximum in the positive direc- tion at “G,” then down to zero again at “M"” and then to its maximum in the negative direction at “S,” and finally back to zero or its starting point at “A."” The number of revolutions per A BROADCASTER BY FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE, Radioscribe. Microphone bchedule for Spellbinders When T was to Senator 3-hour ha- n ate yester I thought how splendid a thing it would be if politicians had to talk on a micropgone schedule. More than once I've been. tempted to broadcast bevond my allotted time at | WRC. But the studio clock is tick-| ing a —immediately in front of} me, 4s a matter of fact—and through u glass partition to my left and rear n sce the operator in the sending | room with one eye glued on me, and the other on his watch. I know what that means. It means that a studio manager has to work on as exact a schedule as . train dispatcher. When “talent” (that's We, Us & Co.) over- stays its assigned number of minut there's a slow-up all along the line. Lonz-winded speecl in_ Congre slow up the line along which the train of state travels. If Dawes can't re form Senate rules so as tp choke them off, somebody ought to make Senators talk before microphones. avd fix ‘em. listening 36,000-word, * Take my new_colleague of the air, Representative R. Walton Moore of Virginia. Night before last he dis- coufed for_exactly 20 allotted min- utes from WCAP on “The Opening of Congress.” He was down for 8:10 and billed to conclude at 8:30. kept both dates, almost to the second. He told an interesting story in the least possible number of words. I con- ddently expect the next time Mr. Moore addresses the House that his microphone style will prevail, that he will talk strictly to the point, and that t down when he has said That's as far what he started out to sa: what radio teaches speakers, as my experience goes. * * Had the refreshening experience this week of being told by M Rose she has neve Representative Renews Bill Which Provides for Transfer to New Site. Representative Sol Bloom, Repub- lican, of New York, vesterday reintro- duced in the House his bill providing for the sale of the present Patent Office «ite and the acqu n of a new on which mode fireproot ling, spe designed to accom th Office, would be d bu i atent erected Mr. Bloom conferred with Chairman Elliott of the House commitiee on this bill has been referred, seeking 4 bill hearing on the project, which he estimates will immedlately yield 2 clean profit of -at least $7,000,000 to the Government, besides providing suitable quarters for the Patent Office. Mr. Bloom emphasized that all of the important industrial enterprises in the country are behind this propo- sition, because the business of the Patent Offico is now seriously delayed by _tmproper housin; The Bloom bill would direct the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secre- tary of the Interior and the architect of the Capltol, acting as a commis- sion, to acquire by purchase, com- demnation or otherwise a suitable site modation for the present and esti- Patent Office. This commission would be author- ized {o enter into contract for the construction of the new bullding, in- cluding adequate fireproof vaults. ¥or the purposes of effecting this demolition of the historic building now occupled by the Patent Office, this commission” would be authorized to employ technical and engineering service. - Mrs. Dolly W. Hawkins Dies. Special Dispatch to The Star. HYATTSVILLE, Md., December 18. Dolly W. Hawkins died Wed- nesday - night at bley Hospjtal, ‘ashington, D. C., at the age of 42 He | public buildings and grounds, to which | yet heard me talk over the radio. Mrs. Hoes, who is a great-great-granddaugh- ter of President James Monroe and is active in the Jefferson Monticello Me- morial work, flateering enough to say that she is “one of the conspic s hundred or two people in Wash- ngton” who never listen to me. Then she explained that, for some unknown eason, she has not succumbed to the modern passion for radio. She ac knowledges herself in hopeless minority, and concedes she is begin- aing to weake * One of the reasons I last night se- ected the “Children of American Blood i the Philippines” for my annual radio Christmas appeal is that a com- rade of Chicago cub reporter days, Cramer, is prominently identified the campaign. He is now in hington, interesting men and women of aff; in as worthy a na- charity as ever pulled at the artstrings of the American people I remember Cramer as the ideal Amer- ican reporter, who came up to ail my boyhood imagination of what a news- paperman (Richard Harding _Davis type) ought to be. He was on the Chi cago Tribune, and I on the Chicago Record. 1 always felt myself up against a tough job on an assignment which required ‘matching_ wits with Cramer. This week, while he was call- ing at office, there strolled “Jim” O'Shaughnessy. the Chicago Chronicle in the days of | Cramer and myself. O'Shaughnessy is now executive secretary of the Asso- clation of Advertising Agencles at New York. The three of us ‘‘remi- nisced"” for hours. * % ¥k Capitol Hill is on the threshold of with drenched our hard-working members of Congress. For it has been sug- gested that members of the radio audi- | ence (conservatively estimated to nun ber 50,000,000 men, women and chil- Iren) forthwith bombard Senators and epresentatives with app for the White bill. The bill, which was introduced by Representative White of Maine this week, provides or ‘the establishment of a national radio commissi to which the Secre- tary of Commerce mayv refer any mat- ter of interest to the radio public. The bill in most respects carries out the recommendations of the national radio conference at Washington in Novem. ber. The object of inviting Congress- men’s attention to the bill is to secure lay. for perfect i ; radio reception Zxperts are agreed that wet *B™ batteries xlflr ‘Then keep them fully charged with the FRANCE SUPER-CHARGER. It charges both “A™ and “B™ batteries in less time than any other. Contains no harmful acid or expensive bulbs to replace. It is quiet and will iast indefinitely. For the money, it is esaily the biggest value offered today. Yo-dnl"flllmum'h4 ‘THE FRANCE MANU!AcrUlmc Co. 10321 Berea Road . She was the wife of Jay C. Hawkins and is survived by four chil- dren besides him. Funeral services were held this afternoon at Gasch's undertaking parlors, conducted by Ruth Chapter, Order of the Lastern Star. Burial was in Fort Lincoln Cemetery. It’s Guaranteed for ances. racy of Franchise. Territory Now Open. John C. Rau, Certainty of performance. lute clarity of reception. Great power to overcome atmospheric disturb- RECEPTON 2 All You Want In Radio Abso- Absolute selectivity. Accu- tuning. Perfection of work- manship. Beauty of casing. Reception Radio Corporation Philadelphia 324 12th $t. Distributor in | to vote | action on it with the least possible de- | a reporter on | the biggest deluge of mail that ever | | i | FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1925. “A,” “BlL"” “Cl,” etc., gives the sine wave curve, every point of which rep- resents the instantaneous value of current or voltage at that particular Instant. The abscissa or horizontal distances along line “AX" represents the time or part of the cycle, while the ordinates drawn from any point on the line “AX" to the curve repre- sent the value of current or voltage. Values above the “AX" line repre- sent positive values, while thoss be- low the line represent negative values. second gives the number of cycles through which the current will pass in a second. The sine curve, by means of which it is possible to determine or repre- sent the Instantancous values of voltage or current in a circuit at any instant, can be plotted as follows: Draw a circle whose radius repre- sents the maximum value of voltage or current obtained when the great- est number of lines are being cut by the conductor in the magnetic fleld. Take point “A” on the circle, which represents the moment when the cur- ent or voltage is zero, because the number of magnetic lines which are being cut {s a minimum. Divide in Degrees. Now project a line passing through he center of the circle and the poin f zero current or voltage, point Next divide the circumference of the ‘ircle into equal distances passed through by the wire in equal inter- Is of time. Since there are 360 de- ees in the circle, it is convenient to divide the circle in terms of degrees; the greater the nymber of divisions the more accurate the curve obtained. Tor our purpose divislons of 15 de- grees will be satistactory. Starting with point “A™ on the straight line, lay off the arcs of the circle on the line so that “AB" on the line equals the length of arc “AB" cn the circle; “BC” on the line equal tc “BC” on_the circle, etc., so that the length of the line “AX'” is equal to the length of the circumference of the circle. Erect Perpendiculars. arting with point “B" on the line, erect perpendiculars upward from line “AX" up to point “M,” and downward trom point “M"” on to “X.” Next pro- ject each point on the circle to its cor- responding perpendicular to get the points shown as “B1,” “C1 .. h th ints A curve drawn through these points, Fin o 135 volt model 800-A (complete) $47.50 Dubilier NDENSER_AND WADIO CORFORATION Arrange Now for Your Christmas ATWATER KENT RADIO SETS Plus Grove Service HARRY C. GROVE, Inc. 1210 G st We carry the following line of Radio Sets in stock: R. C. A. Superheterodyne Freed-Eiseman Five and Six Tube Sets Atwater Kent Five-Tube Sets Crosley One, Two and Three Tube Sets $25.00 Radio Tables....... .$19.98 $3.75 Eveready 45-Volt B Battery. . .. 2.59 $2.00 Eveready 22/,-Volt B Battery. 1.49 $3.00 Spitfire Head Phones 1.95 Spitfire Loud Speaker, adj. unit. 4.95 40c Columbia Eveready A Batteries, 3 for. 1.00 Howard A. French & Co. 424 9th St. N.W. 7zrrzzzzzzzZzzzzz 77 When you purchase a Radio Set—you expect satisfactory results. You want—and need—assur- ances that the set will work—and that the com- pany is a reliable and stable organziation that really guarantees what it sells you in radio. 0%, truth. WE OFFER “RADIOLA RADIOLA III A (without tubes). 4 TUBES (3 power tubes) 4 ADAPTERS 2 45-VOLT BURGESS BATI'ERIES 1 22-VOLT BURGESS BATTERY. 6 A BATTERIES ... 1 C BATTERY & 1 BRANDES TABLE TALKER 1 ROLL ANTENNA WIRE ... 1 ROLL “LEAD-IN” WIRE . 2 INSULATORS ... 1 GROUND CLAMP i 14th and C Sts. NW. 7 WM. P. BOYER CO. RADIO—SERVICE ELECTRICAL CONSTRUCTION 812 13th St. M. 842 KEYSTONE SAFE, RELIABLE, UNFAILING LIGHTNING PROTECTION, $1.50 Squmped with adjustable unit GET A RADIO HERE PAY FOR IT ON FUTURE LIGHTING BILLS $6 1 .00 $15.00 Down (no additional carrying charge) == $6.50 Monthlv on Next 7 Manthlv Lichtine Rills Here is what you get in this really good and guaranteed set: This is our suggestion for a worth-while Xmas gift POTOMAC ELECTRIC APPLIANCE CO. Acoustics by Brandes means better radio. The pew Speakers are truly remarkable—the result of seventeen years of intensive research in the Brandes laboratories. Brandes Experts in radio acoustics since 1908 Distributor National Electric Supply Co. 1330 N. Y. Ave. 2.2 2K \ _Here at “Electric Headquarters” you are guaranteed that your set will do just what we say it will do—no extravagant claims—just plain Il A” SET Z N 2 % $35.00 10.00 3.00 6.50 175 3.00 .60 10.90 50 25 20 Main 7260 This Company Stands Behind Every Appliance It Sells I 40k