Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON. D. €. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5. 1928.° STARS GIVE REVUE ON WRC TONIGHT Famous Microphone Enter- tainers Will Be Heard Over Local Station. Another radio revue of famous micro- phone” stars will be broadcast tonight by WRC and its associated stations as the weekly offering of the National Broadcasting and Concert Bureau. The artists scheduled to take part in- clude Mae Singhi Breen, the “ukulele lady,” and Peter de Rose, her radio running mate; Gitla Ernstinn, soprano; Jack Parker, tenor; Torre and Biviano, the “piano twins”; Walter O'Keefe, mas= ter of ceremonies; the National chor- isters, the Mediterranean Dance Band and Vaughn de Leath, the “original radio girl.” The outstanding features of the Cities Bervice hour at 8 o'clock will be the beautiful score of Sigmund Romberg's operetta, “Blossom Time.” Another high light of the program will be two swift moving xylophone solos by Sam Herman, virtuoso of the chromatic wooden bars. At 9:30 o'clock WRC will broadcast proceedings of the New York Safety Conference at which Col. Charles A. Lindbergh is scheduled to make the principal address. The program of the Wonder Bakers Includes the old favorites, “The Jolly Coppersmith,” “The Man I Love” and “Blue Grass.” ‘Two political speeches under the aus- pices of the Republican national com- mittee are features of the WMAL broad- cAst. One this afternoon at 3:45 o'clock will be given by Assistant United States District Attorney Camalier, who intends to answer Gov. Smith’s statement with respect to intoxication among members of the Washington police force. The other speaker, who will broadcast to- night at 8:30 o'clock, is Louis Marshall of New York. ‘The northeast merchants’ hour of music, a recital by Grace Shannon, pi- anist, and a concert by the Westbrook ‘Trio ar: WMAL'S only musical attrac- tions. WTFF will start. its broadcast at 6 o'clock with a new sponsored feature, which will bring before the microphone 2 number of its popular artists. This program will last until 7:30, when the regular Friday evening entertainment schedule will get under way. LocalRadioEntertainment Friday, October 5, 1928. NAA—Washington Navy Yard (434.5 Meters—690 Kilocycles). 3:45 p.m—Weathsr Bureau reports. 7:45 to 8 p.m.—Public Health Serv- fice broadcast, “After-care of Infantile —Arlington time signals. —Weather Bureau reports. WRHF—American_Broadcasting Co. (322.4 Meters—930 Kilocycles). 5:45 pm.—The Town Crier. 6 p.m.—Dinner concert. 6:30 to 7 p.m.—Bran Hughes and his orchestra. E Early Program Tomorrow. 7:30 to 8:30 a.m.—Musical clock. 10 a.m.—Household talk by Peggy lark. 10:30 a.m.—Advertisers’ period. ‘WMAL—Washington Forum (241.8 Meters—1,240 yeles). 3 p.m.—Brunswick Panatrope “pop” concert. 73:45 to 4 p.m—“Important Facts of the Presidential Campaign—An, Answer to Gov. Smith's Statement on the ‘Washington Police Force,” by Assistant United States District Attormey R. F. Camalier. 6:55 p.m.—Thirty Club, conducted by A. Cloyd Gill. 7:15 pm.—Jimmy and Jane. 7:30 p.m.—Correct time. 17:31 p.m.—Northeast merchants’ hour ©of music. 8:30 pm—Talk by Louis Marshall of New York, under auspices of the Republican national committee. 9 p.m.—Grace Shannon, pianist. 9:15 p.m—“Where to Motor Over| the Week End—Fredericksburg, Va.” by George E. Keneipp of the American Automobile Association. 9:35 p.m.—Westbrook Trio. 10:15 to 10:30 p.m.—News flashes. WTFF—The Fellowship Forum (202.6 Meters—1,480 Kilocycles). p.m.—Talk by Charles 1. Stengle. 5 pm.—"Old King Tut.” p.m.—Market report. pm—Dr. A. H. Moore, violinist. Kile, :40 pm.—Talk on farm news, :50 p.m.—Piano recital. m.—Talk on world dairy confer- 5 p.m.—Come t by Bal #nd Doehrer. ’ L 7:30 p.m—Howard Lowd and his or- hestra. 8:30 p.m.—Clarence 'Walker, tenor, It 6 6: Y T G 3 19 b e 25888 © 8 2 g " g o ¥l 8 - v. Leon Lacy. 9:15 pm.—Request program, 9:30 p.m.—Speaker, 9:45 p.m—Melody Boys. 10:15 p.m—Barn dance. ‘WRC—National Broadcasting Co. (468.5 | Meters—640 Kilocycles). 4 pm—“A Task for Science,” Winter Russell. 5 4:15 pm.—The Gotham Trio. 4:45 pm—“What India Can Teach Us,” by Brian Brown. 5 p.m.—The Marionettes. 5:30 p.m.—Jolly Bill and Jane, 6 p.m.—Motion picture guide 6:02 p.m—Base ball scores, courtesy of the Associated Press and The Evening Star. 6:03 p.m.—Waldorf-Astoria Orchestra. 6:15 p.m.—Palais Royal children’s party. 6:30 p.m.—Waldorf-Astoria Orchestra. 7 p.m.—The Happy Wonder Bakers, 7:30 p.m.—Mayflower Orchestra. 8 p.m.—Cities Service Cavaliers and Concert Orchestra. 9 pm.—An evening in Paris. 9:30 p.m.—Correct time. 9:30 pm.—New York Safety Confer- ence; talk by Col. Charles A. Lindbergh. 10 pm.—National Broadcasting and Concert Bureau hour. 11 pm.—Slumber music. 12 pm.—Weather forecast. Early Program Tomorrow. 6:45 am.—Tower health exercises. 8:15 a.m.—Parnassus T 8:30 to 8:50 a.m.—Cheer 10 a.m.—The Bluebirds. 11 am us Trio. Radio Household Insti- 11:30 a.m —Studio program. 12 noon—Orpheus Trio. 12:30 p.m.—Waldorf-Astoria Orches- a 1:30 pm.—Park Central Skylarks. 2 p.m—Studio program. epublican national commit- LEGION PARLEY FEATURE. ©ld Gray Mare Band to Play at National Convention. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., October 5 (#) ~—The Old Gray Mare Band, the old gray mare and that pretty girl from Brownwood who rode the steed on num- erous. noisy parades through Conven- tion Hall.and the Rice Hotel at Houston last June ere back in the news. The band and “cavalry” that the Democratic national convention dele- RADIO’S BEST OFFERINGS ‘TONIGHT. p.m.—Cities Service Hour; “Blossom Time"—WEAF, WEEI, WLIT, WRC, WGR, WCAE, WTAM, WWJ, WSAL 8 pm.—Old time dance music— WJZ, WBZ, WBAL. WHAM, KDKA, WJR, WLW, KYW, ‘WHAS, WSM, WSB, WBT. 8:30 p.m.—Quake orchestra and vocal—WJZ, WBZ, WBAL, WHAM, KDKA, WJR, WLW, KYW, WHAS, WSM, WSB, WBT. 10 p.m.—Goncert Bureau Hour; microphone stars—WEAF, WEEI, WTIC, WTAG, WCSH, WLIT, WRC, WGY, WCAE, WWJ, WSAL WGR. 10 pm—United Opera Co.; “Samson and Delilah” in Eng- lish—WOR, WCAU, WNAC, WEAN, WFBL, WMAK, WCAO, WJAS. WADC. WAIU. WKRC. WGHP, WSPD, WICC, WHK, WLBW. BLAMES ‘SPITE WORK' FOR THEFT CHARGE Chisholm Will Be Brought Here to Face Grand Larceny Indictment. By the Associated Press. SAN FRANCISCO, October 5. —Robert Chisholm, an engineer arraigned in Federal Court here Wednesday on a charge of theft preferred by his father- in-law, Lieut. Comdr. Charles R. O'Leary, U. 8. N, of Washington, D. C., said he was arrested for stealing his own wedding presents. “Spite work,” said Chisholm. “The sflver was a wedding present from Mrs. O'Leary to us. We eloped, and so the commender is trying to get me into trouble. “He and I get along like a pair of strange bulldogs. My wife has the sil- ver. She is now in Panama.” Chisholm %as held on $250 bail, and will be taken to Washington to stand trial on the charge, Federal authorities d. i Robert Chisholm was indicted by the grand jury here on September 10 last on a charge of grand larceny, it being alleged that he stole a number of silver knives, forks and spoons from his father-in-law’s house at 2069 Twenty- eighth street. According to the testimony before the grand jury by Lieut. Comdr. Charles R. O'Leary, his father-in-law, Chisholm took the goods and later pawned them in Virginia for $130. Comdr. O'Leary is stationed at Indian Head, Md.. Painter Hurts Ankle in Fall. While painting at 637 Norton place northeast yesterday, Eugene Geany, 32 years old, of Oakland, Md. fell from a second story window to the ground, spraining his ankle. He was given first aid_at Casualty Hospital. SONATRON TUBE COMPANY Chicago New York CARROLL ELECTRIC . COMPANY, INC. Distributor for District of Columbia, Maryland, Vir- ginia and the Southeast. 714 12th St. NW. Main 7320 The whole with proven directions, gates always will remember will be here next week for the American Legion na- A tional convention, & AIMEE 1S RIGIDLY QUIZZED N LONDON Mrs. McPherson Interviewed by Press in Advance of Evangelist Campaign. By the Associated Press. LONDON, October "5.—Mrs. Aithee McPherson, Los Angeles cvangelist, was the subject of a rigid and rather hostile cross-examination last night when she granted her first interview to London newspaper men preliminary to her opening an evangelical campaign at Albert Hall Sunday night. ‘The American woman preacher's un- ostentatious quarters at the Hotel Cecil were jammed with reporters who had been baffled for several days in finding trace of Mrs. McPherson, and with all the directness usually attributed in England to American news hunters, they pried into her private life and per- sisted in knowing how much money she makes. Mrs. McPherson, whose presence in England has met with hostility in some Let Us Demonstrate the KOLSTER RADIO CONVENIENT TERMS J. C. Harding & Co., Inc. - 1336 Connecticut Ave. N.W. Dupont Circle Bldg. Decatur 2821 There’s No Gamble With a KOLSTER Free Home Demonstration Without Obligation Dorians 704 10th St. N.W. Main 774 “Just Around the Corner fromy Palais Royal” for Sore Jhroat Serious trouble may develop through neg- lect of sore throat. Take no chances. Take a dose or two of Tonsiline as soon as you notice irrita- tion, inflammation or difficulty in swallowing. For over 30 years, Tonsiline has been rec- ommended, sold and used for this one ailment —nothing else—and for this pur pose it has given satisfaction. At your drug- Hospital size $1.00. TONSIILINE Tie Netions! Sy st Bamsey = v/ N gists, 35¢ and 60e. world knows Aspirin as an effective antidote for pain. But it's just as tmporlant to kiow that there is only one genune Bayer Aspirin. The name Bayer is on every tablet, and on the box. If it says Bayer, it's genuine; and if it doesn't, it is not! Headaches are dispelled by Bayer Aspirin. So are colds, and the pain that goes with them; even neuralgia, neuritis, and rheumatism promptly rclieved. Get Bayer—at any drugstore— Physicians prescribe Bayer Aspirin; it does NOT affect the heart Asplria is the trade mark o’\!uu Magufacture 88 Mouoaceticacidester of Salicylicacld 3 church quariers, maintained her ulm! and affability, carrying the intimate questions with witticisms and quite holding her cwn, The reporters had so heavily piled on her sitting room table that the table finally crashed under the burden, cre- ating an amusing diversion in the midst of of the inquisition. Tully Answers Wife's Suit. LOS ANGELES, October 5 (#).—A general denial of charges made by Mrs. Margaret Tully "in her divorce suit against “Jim"” Tully, former pugilist and “hobo,” who is now an author, was HUSBANDRY PIONEER WILL BE HONORED Maj. William M. King to Be Re- membered on 96th Birthday Anniversary. One of the pioneers of the Patrons| ;o{ Husbandry, popularly known as the | vard, Baliston, Va. His fellow grangers will plant an evergreen in honor of Maj. King's birthday in the late after- noon. Maj. King spent 35 years in the De- partment of Agriculture in Washingion, and since his retirement, in 1918, has devoted his time to the Boy and Girl Scout movements and to furthering the cause of the farmer. On the threshold of a century, Maj. King is remarkably virile and clear-thinking, his friends declare. He was born on a farm nine miles | southeast of Gepeseo, N. Y., on October 5, 1832, and served in the Civil War. He is a past commander of George G. organization. In the Department of Agriculture, where he had such long| service, Maj. King was chief of the| seed division and a clerk in the Bureau | of Statistics. | Maj. King became a personal friend | of O. H. Kelley, founder of the Patrons of Husbandry, and plunged actively into the work of assisting agriculture. He has been 45 years a Mason and a mem- ber of the Grange for 56 years. This vigorous veteran is a member of the executive committee of Troop 101 of the Boy Scouts and Troop 16 of the Girl Scouts, both of Ballston. He makes his home with his daughter and son- in-law, Dr. W. C. Welburn and takes an active interest in affairs of the day. filed by him yesterday in answer to the | Grange, will suit. Tully proclaimed that he never was guilty of cruel treatment and that h> never inflicted bodily harm upon his | 1, wif e charged. M. King at his home, 726 Wilson boule- when members of Potomac Grange, No. of Washington, visit Maj. William | veterans, Maj. King q Wherever you go you hear the matter-of-fact remark “Kolster is a fine set.” (It is but the natural public ac- knowledgment of such faithful tone reproduction, rare selectivity and distinguished appearance.' In thousands of Kolster-enlivened homes throughout the land deep satis- faction and confidence are thus quietly voiced. be honored today on |Meade Post, No. 5, G. A. R., Department his ninety-sixth birthday anniversary, |of the Potomac, and when that post, i | due to decreasing numbers of Civil War RS ECRT joined with Burnside came a member of that Tt you need work, read the want col- | umns of The Star. Post QThe set pictured above is Kolster model K21, a 7 tube table model for A. C. electric operation. Model K6 Kolster Synchron- ous type Reproducer, also pictured, is recommended for this set. Cabinet is of Ridge walnut designed by M. Bianfi. Price, less tubes and Reproducer, $160. Model K6 Kolster Synchronous type Reproducer is priced at $35. g Kolster offers distinctive models in a wide range of prices for A. C. or D. C. operation or for batteries. KOLS T IR RADIO | Enjoy the Kolster Program every Wednesday evening at 10 P. M. Eastern Standard Time over the nation-wide Columbia Chain. COMMANDER BYRD selected Kolster Radio and Kolster Radio Compasses exclusively for his South Pole expedition, What finer tribute could begiven to Kolster dependability? O 1928, Kolste: Radio Corporatios We Can Arrange Payments if You Desire Expert Installation Adams 3803 uy GROVE = - HEAR THE FAMOUS KOLSTER RADIO - OPEN EVERY EXENING UNTIL 10 P.M. See us about arranging a demonstration on the Kolster. We have -the new models in stock and invite your inspection. 18th and Columbia Rd. N.W.