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Battleship Texas s DOUSHVOLNST ot s ONRADO TONGHT, =i ppe By the Associated Press. The battleship Texas. which is taking _President Coolidge from Key West, Fla, to the Pan- American Congress at Havana, is equipped with apparatus which is the last word in radio com- munication. The radio room of the ship has seven vacuum tube transmitters, | some of them eapable of working soveral thousand miles. There are 37 men in_the radio personnel of the ship. The equipment was installed in 1926 when the T was modernized at the Norfolk navy The Paul Konchanski and Male Chorus of 16 to Present Atwater Kent Hour. sets for adcasts. RADIO LICENSES or former | he of ew York University | who were selected, organized | d Werrenrath. | a new chain in New York, also ¥ WRC in addition 1 membe Commission Delays Action Until‘ Senate Confirms Quorum. Federal Radio Commission an- chamber mus ple's Radio Confer- h 1 quartet | ission, the three commis.iion are o jes the re, he Sennte, other chunhges 1 planned to an- | have heen E |as ve the | St unce appointme New Yor Koerber on|and H resume Sunday sacred song | Commerce com ular attrac. | 48y 7 o'cloc! LocalRadioEntertainment | MODERN MUSIC oUT | Sunday, January 15, 1928 | | OF FftENCH PROGRAMS; ! Government Eroadcasting licenses wh Stations Brondcast'; Only Long-Published Works | Needing No Royalties. Correspondence of NAA—Washington Navy Yard (1313 eters). her Bureau reports. e signals. reau reports. i | 10:05 am.—W | e Associated Pross WRHF—American _Broadcasting Co. c and literature, on w there valties to be paid. are being | rnational t by French g sta- n: music and Radio stations were on and A. A. | been taxed to furnish fu alties, but Parliament 6 to 7 p.m.—Sacred song service. | money Early Program Tomorrow. | gram 10 am.—Talk on “January White| There was a certain amount of lib- Bales” by Bet Brewster. erty taks with modern works until| 10:30 a.m.—Kann Sons Co. musical. | recently, damages | 11 to 11:30 a.m.—Advertisers’ period | sessed aga government ©f music. for falure to pay royaltie e i s —Radio Corporation of America | e S Ncteray. LOEW RUMOR DENIED. | 11 a.mt—Service from Rhode Island | D i Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church.| vYarious rumors in theatrical trade icholson, pastor, Will|journals of recent date to the effect [that the future Loew-Metro-Goldwyn | Maver radio chain would be jointly mphony Of- | sponsored by the Hearst chain of news. |papers were denicd by orge L. 3 p.m.—Young People’s conference | Fecke, with an address by Dr. Daniel A. Pol-| " Mr. Fecke femarked that the Nation- 2. i | wide station hook-up would be spon- 4 pm—Service from Bethlehem | oraq solely by the Loew theatrical| (‘;hlpe Washington Cathedral. Rllh;‘and motion picture interests. 2ev. James E. Freeman, Bishop o RADIO’S BEST OFFERINGS Washington, will preach. 5 to 5:30 p.m.—Motion picture guide. §:30 p.m.—Acousticon hour. | € pm.—Arcadie Birkenholz, violin- | TONIGHT. 5:30—Accousticon Hour; Or- chestra and Male Quartet WRC. WEAF, WGY., WCA fet. and Mathilde Harding. pianist. p.m.—The Stetson parade with Am o Legion, WEBH, WOC, WHO, WOV KVOO, WDAF, WHAS, WSB WMC, WE WWwWJ. | 7:20—Capitol Theater Fam- ily: Musical Program—WRC, V AF, WJAR, WTAG, WCAE, WW]J, KSD, WHO, WOW, WHAS, WSM, WMC, WSB, WBT, WGY. to sp ess pro- Post, jcal program under Maj. Edward Bowes Theater, New York. | 9 p.m.—"Our Government,” by David — drama, “The | h Causes War.” ~—Weather forecast. 5—At er Kent Hour; Kochanski—WRC, ?, 'EEI, WFI, WGY, WTAM, WW), KSD, WCCO, WOW, WDAF, KVOO, WFAA, WSM, WMC, WSB, WET. 815 am.—Parnass 830 to 547 am —C 19 am—Dr. R E bour. 1620 am.—8 13] Pan-Ameri. | can Corgress. Addresses hy President | Cool nd the President of Cuba | 0. | Copeland srhees” Band; | | lar Melodies—WOR, , WNA W / o WAID, WGHP, MAQ, WCAO, WOWO, udio program. Food—A Question of | thur W. Thomas. | on tme signals, | . WJAS, WKRC, KMOX, RADIO SERVICE BER SERVICK I8 SUPEK SERVICE, B. Francis D i Bureau radio and scien- . 1 published s r Guide to NiGH LAY A “Lervicr, J. FRED HUBER 1T M ONT. AW e Frank. 36 Nite Frank. The New $88 Atwater Kent and Radiola No. 17 !fi Our Special CLus Club Inducements Join at Once Installation the Same Day You Join Piano and E MOLL,S Furnitwre Co. Twelfth and G Sts, THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. LONG RANGE RADIO ENTERTAINMENT SUNDAY, JANUARY 15, 1925, Programs preparcd by the Associated Press. Scheduled for Eastern standard time. Meters on the left of call lctters, kilocycles on right. 272.0—WPG Atlantic City—1,100 #65.0—WEBH-WJID Chicago—820 0:30—Cook_travelogue. 7 WBAL Concert Orchestra, B O0—ATtist recital 7:00—Million sing. & Correll and Gosden. twater Keni nhour, 10:15—"0ur Music Room. 314.6—WLS Chlcago—830 7.00—Litile Brown Church, g 53—WMAQ-WQI Chicago—030 reet Church. = e nt hour, e k b 0— - {i0—Eflervos Ay Evening Club, 4203 =WLW Clie —100 00—Golden Strand Group. N 13—oller hour 15—DBandbox hour 361.2—WSAL Cinclnnati—830 enian Church, Atwater Kent hour 315.1—WMAK Buffalo—330 ZA0—Church services 6.00—Same as WOR (2 hours). or Family. —WOR Newark-—310 3 00—Judson Orchestra FR ‘15— Neapolitans. 513.1—WFAA Dallas—330 00—Bible class twater Kent hour. 491.3—WEAF New York—610 3.0 ung peonle’s conference. 0—Yo 4 00—Menn conferecr program. pusiektional Chureh. Atwater Kent hour S—Biblical crama. 535 4—WHO Des Molaes—360 wer Famly. 'l Family, Kent' hous drama 430.3—WJIZ New York—060 Nden Strand G e —WON-WIR Detroil—080 Twilight hour. { —cCentral E’ Church. To—Collier hour 499.7—WBAP Fort Worth—600 s OU—\esprr sertices, 15 Dance music 361.2—WOS Jdeflerson City—830 8 30—Presbyterian Church 330.2—WDAF Kansas City—3810 15—Collier hour Io—Atwater Kent hour 203.0—WTMJ Milwaukee—1,020 15—Don Amaizo 2—WCCO Minneapolis-St. Py 710 4 Church of Chiiet Scientist + Kent hour WOW Omuba—390 lo studs period 7 u—Lapitor The Famy 8 lo— Atwater Kent hour 10.15=Ctab hour 49D.7—WOAI San Antonio—600 30—Travis Park Methodist Church Louls—330 Don Amaizo itol Thcater ¥ —Atwater Kent hour blical drama L I—WBZ Soringfield Woreester—380 5169—WTAG 4:00—Men's cont, St Pa Theater Family SOUTHERN S—WWNC Asheville—1.010 ¥ WESTERN. 9—KOA Denser—g20 )—Dinnes \ ational Church, = ’ o8 Angeles—ii0 7:20—Capito Theatrs ¥ r, Keat hour. 815" Atwater Kent hour 3 dua—allin oo, 243.8—WDOD s R K - 75b e 416.1—KHJ Los Anzeles—3i20 S0—Firet 00—Church services. 0 Ou—Concert ‘Grohesiva 336.0—KNX Los Angeles—890 384.4—KGO Oakland—780 8 30—Standand Symphony hour, 00—Atwater Kent hous 491.3—KGW 7:20—Capitol T FE ey oA oncert_orchestra \—Hallrom orchestra —KPO San Franclseo—310 3 4 Symphovy bour. 249.9—WC0A b E : « “Grehest s ST Eemmcsta onerl erbeuirn CENTRAL. i CONTINUES EXPERIMENTS. | Correspondence of the Awsociated Press. EAST PITTSBURGH, Pa.—Continu. ation of its intensive program of short wave experimental transmissfon has | been planned by Station KDKA dur ing the 1928 Winter months 4,352 RADIO ENGINEERS. | Institute Shows Membership In- | crease of 55 Per Cent. Corre nce of the Assoctated Press. NEW YORK —A membership in |crease of 55 per cent is shown in the Besldes its br 8t band position | annual report of the Institite of En of 315.5 meters, KDKA 27 and 62,5 meters, and occ 5 meters to send out its programs. | The organization, founded in 1912 .- - {tor the benefit of the radio engineer Largest Danish Station. [a1 Shis oo purkas The largest and most effcient radio | rolls station 10 Denmark is the new one|all quarters of the world. at Kalundberg, Zealand. It has an. | === tennae extended Letween steel masts 100 meters tall, between which, at the | base, {8 the station building with its engine room, The transmitter oper- cx on @ constant wave length of 1.153.5 meters. The cost of the whole extablishment was 000 crowns, gineers. Included are r If Is Not Right Bring It Back MASTERDYNE| Jou 0% T to work like new 1 Tube | 3 Tubes 35¢ (5100 trol Tuning Unit. . SE o, MID S 1S, 000 (ON 00035 [} T X SOCKETS CARTER A BATTERY SWITCH A aINen PRINCETON “B" BATTERIES - Just Out Cram’sRadio Map and » 1y Known Socket Radio DRY “A” rowes tNIT Bsarcey [ .49 4ol DUBILIER By Pasn Condensers 8 MFD Lint $8.50 KODEI. MIC SPEAKER SPECIAL . c, WRC 10 BE MOVED TONEW QUARTERS Studios in <National Press Building to Be Opened Tomorrow. hington studios and offices of the National Broadcasting Co. and sta- tion WRC will be moved tomorrow from the Riggs Bank-Tompkins Build- ing, Fourteenth street and Park rond, to the new National Press Building at Fourteenth and I streets. Activity In the old studios will end at 10:45 o'clock tonight, and will be resumed from the new quarters to- morrow mornink at 6:45 o'clock, when the morning health exercises will be put on the air. The new studios were designed especially for broadcasting purposes and repiesent the last word in acoustic treatment. There are two studios, the larger one taking in two floors. The studios are separated by a control room in which radio operators will be stationed New Quarters Impressive. Merlin_ Hall Aylesworth, president of the National Broadcasting Co., in a statement recently, declared that the new quarters will be ‘representative of the Nation's Capital, particularly in their quiet dignity and impressive- ness."” Thousands of dollars of new radio equipment, designed to improve the auality of broadcasting, have been in- stalled. This equipment is connected by telephone wires direct to the trans- mitting station. which will continue to he located in the Riggs Bank-Tomp- kins Building This week the National Broadeast. ing Co. will be hosts to the Rotary and Kiwanis Clubs of Washington, mem- bers of which have been invited to in- spect the new quarters of the Nation: Broadeasting Co. The Rotary Club will make its visit Wednesday, the Kiwanis Club Thursday. Has Leased 22 Rooms. The National Broadcasting Co. has leased rooms in the new Press Buiiding. the major portion of which has been devoted to studios. The lnrge studio, to be known as the green room. takes in parts of two floors and is 20 feet high, 20 feet wide and 33 feet long. It is treated with a special acoustic plaster. The small studio, to be known as the gold room, is 10 feet high. 20 feet square. It is treated with celotex. The control room fs 20 feet square and 10 feet high. An elabor- ately decorated and furnished recep- W tion room is provided for artists, with | the | ap studios. B The Washington studios will bé con nected by wire lines with the studios of the tional Breadcasting Co. in New York City. where programs are distributed throughout the Nation. ate corridor leading into Pharaoh Dogs at Bench Show. Descendants of dogs with which the | Pharaohs hunted thousands of years 180 were recently shown at a prom ench show in London. There . the long-legged, narrow vaisted gazelle hounds of Arabia and ypt. and they attracted much at ‘The canines resemble West and are much like grey. nd other coursing animals, of which they are said to have provided the orizinal stock. To introduce faith fully the Orlental atmosphere the Arab merchant in charge of the ani mals disp with products of Damascus. The lily has been known as the em- hlem of purity throughout history. JANUARY 15, 1928—PART T. OPERA STARS IN RADIO CONCERT John McCormack, tenor, who is re- turning from Ireland to sing in a | radio program, and Mme. Maria Jerit- za, soprano of the Metropolitan Opera Co. These artists take part in the second 1928 Victor concert to be broadeast Friday night by WJZ and its associated stations. JERITZA-McCORMACK CONCERT ON FRIDAY Havana Conference Broadeast to Begin | B j | Soprano and Tenor Will Sing in Tomorrow at 10.30 Broadeasting of the opening Second of 1928 Series of proceedings of the Sixth Pan- Victor Programs. American Congress in _Havana v, at which President idge will make a good-will address, is scheduled to start at 10:30 am. The combined red and blue networks of the Na- tiona! Broadeasting Co., includ- ing WRC, will broadcast the event The address of welcome of President Machado of Cuba. de- livered in Spanish, will be broad- cast throuzh the short wave itter< of WGY and . while a translation of it will be heard through the regular wave stations. Neveral precedents will be established by the broadeast of the proceedings. It will be the first time that the people of the United States are addressed by the chief magistrate of a foreign mm;-try speaking (Irnm hi}:"n om her famous oneratic | | capital, the first time a Presi- o the. sance hiva aho | | deng of the United States has | has presented with gr spoken to his people from for- ert. eign shores and the first time ler to be back in t that the tional Broadcasting lin time for the seco: Co. has originited a broadcast concert John MeC from off the continent. SERVICE day, spent on his estate in on all kinds of and is rushing back to New Y RADIO RECEIVERS The second of the 1828 Victor concerts, to be broadeast F | day night by WJZ and the blue net- work, will feature Maria Jeritza, so- | prano, and John MecCormack, tenor. The Victor Salon Orchestra will ac- | company then:. | Of particular interest will be Mme. | Jeritza’s singing of the “Seguidilla |and the “Habaner Bizet's Carmen.” an o ich she will | be heard for the t time at the | Metropolitan only a few days before ther Victor radio appearance. It is expected that her performance as the seductive Spa girl will cause as great a sensation as her portraval of Tosca, the role which has come to be 50 closely associated with her name nd fame. Her other numbers will series o | | ahoard the be heard in s selected from fa one of th cially de to have Open Home for Intellectuals. Promising quiet and pleasant roundings, a retreat for intell workers of all kinds has been opened in a suburb of Paris. It is called a home of study and repose, and special appeal writers, profe: wiah 10 rest or study. Guests be cared for ' for short periods. erienced ) our Call SMITH’S Battery and Radio Service 0k 103 2119 18th St NW. - ?»:r,,':'“‘:,‘::;,y“ Fasteat an Brst Radio Sersice in Tow “WHY CAN'T JOHNNY COME OUT TO PLAY?” ickness comes trom germ-laden hands Why risk toilet soap removes germs as well as dirt? ISN'T IT puzzling at times how children et sick? Perfectly well one day—tearing around with their playmates— handling everything = pets, games, trash— just reveling 1n dirc and germs. Then, pethaps, too long a wait hefore hands are washed—a chance for enter the system—a little &lisuc or expo- sure ~and before you know it—sickness! Germs—a constant menace Children’s hands, are always in danger of health authorities. Hiding books, pencils, money—and many other things we w/l must touch - these Rerms get on our handsand menace health, The Lite Extension Institute lists 27 germ diseases hands may spread. LIFEB e FOR ‘- PACE - ! 3 f | PROTECTS as well as grown-ups’, family health when this purifying . For healch's sake, children in ovee 63,000 schools have been tught to use Litebuoy — especially before eating. In mile lions of homes—tor groater safety — crerye ene washes with Litebuoy. Its anuseptic lather removes gorms, s Note its clean scent il O Children, men and women oo, quickly learn to love Litebuoy's caen scenc—yout proot thae Litebuoy pucities — yee which quickly evaporates after nnsing And the same gentle, antiseptic Litebuoy lacher that removes germs— purities pores Keeps skins teesh, Clear, hmnh\ Preveats embarrassing body odor, two. disease germs, say unseen on l())'.‘. Use Lifebuoy a week and you'll wse & tor hite, Get same today. LEVER BROS. CO, Comirnize Mas UoY | HANDS BATH - STOPS BODY ODOR CITY RESTRICTIONS ON AMATEURS V0ID Maunicipal Ordinances for Regula- tion Held Unconstitutional by Kentucky Courts. Correspondence of the Assoclated Press. HARTFORD, Conn.—Municipal ordi- nances designed to regulate amateur |radio transmisaion have been held un- copstitutional by a dist Kentucky. e Tuling was made By Judge A M. J. Cochran, who found against the | City Council of Wilmore, Ky., which had passed an ordinance requiring |that amateur stations be licensed at | fee of 3100 a year. In reporting the decis | cial publication the American Radio I Ne League, 1 at the dec xau considered impo t beca v | rious cities begun “to pass |oca ordinances seeking to restrict and eon | trot o ion of eur and | broadcast transmitters with: 1 limita." Judge Cochran in his decision stated ‘The tax provided is not on the Pprop- | =rty of tha radio operator. but on t hu s of radio broadeasting. Radio ‘ommunications are all interstat ough they may bhe intended only for transmission And in h communica- et eourt in 'n QST. oM. | munications intended {#tate transmission, s | tions admit of and req system of regulation — RADIO ON SIBERIAN TRAIN Soviet Wireless Trust Seeks Relieve 12-Day Journey. pond to = of the Aserclatsd Press RADIOLA *25" The famous six - tube Super - Heterodyne that needs no antenna or ground. List Price $165.00 Special Price With 6 Radiotrons Completely Electrified §125.00 Come In and Let Us Demoastrate Liberal Terms If Desired RCA Authorized Dealers ATLANTIC RARDWARE T0. 2014 14k sireet B0 LHA street aw. CARL W. DAUREX. €23 Prasulvasia ave GEORGETOW N ELFUTRI (0 ) ave ww 96 Coan ave GEOQ. C. MAVENNER. 1203 Good oad ¥ TN and ¥ 4 YRED RUBER. T N e aw S KANNS SOAN (0, WA a1 and Merked apace aw T LI et ww LITTLE & COMP AN AUN rnd Kve wimeeis aw. 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