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36 BROADCAST CAREER OF OLD IRONSIDES Secretary of Navy Adams Will Be Principal Speaker in WJZ Program. The career of the historic frigate Old Sronsidles will be depicted in music, | lM—-"Wmmn in the Nursing P:;; addresses and drama tonight in a spe- cial radio program to be broadeast by WJZ and associated National Broad- casting Co. stations. ‘The program will be picked up from the gun deck of the frigate Constitu-| tion, in dry dock in the navy vard at Charlestown, Mass. It includes ad- dresses by Gov. Frank C. Allen of Massachuset's and Melcoim L. Bichols, mayor of Boston. The musical setting will be provided by the Aleppo Band of 150 pieces, a 50-piece Navy band, the Boston Salon Orchestra, composed of members of the Boston Symphony, and the Meister Singers. Dramatic Sketch Feature. Cne of the principal features will be | a dramatic sketch of the activities of | Old Ironsides during its Tripoli cam- Today on 3156~ WRC—950. National Bmd sting Co.) 2: 30—The Melody T! 3:1 5—open amn by Perc) and Juhe 3: !Hmdlc prorrn 4:30—Tea_ music, Orchestra. by Park Oentral fession,” by Annie dean of nursing, Yale University, under auspices National Wom- an's Party. 5—Sky Sketches.” 30—"The Lady Next Door.” 59—Correct time. 6:00—Northeastern finals_of Atwater Kent Foundation Radio Audi- tion. 8:00-—Mobiloil concert. 8:30—Happy Wonder Bakers. 9:00—Halsey-Stuart hour. 9:30—Palmolive hour. 10:30—Salon Singers. 11:00—Weather forecast. 11:01-11:58—Le Paradis Band. Early Program Tomorrow. 6:45a—Tower health exercises. 8:00a—On the 8:15. 8:15a—Morning devotions, 8:30a—Cheerio. paign against the Barbary coast pirates. WRC's outstanding musical attraction | will be a two-hour broadcast of the Northeastern finals of the 1929 radio audit’on of the Atwater Kent Fcunda- tion. in v hich Miss Florence Yocum and | Giltert Fracer. Washington's represen- | tatives, will compete against the 23| other finolists of 15 New England and Middle Atlantic States. The program will come from New York. The vote of the radio listeners will count 60 per cent in the final award. The Happy Wonder Bakers, the Mo- biloil concert and the Le Paradis Band also are among WRC’s major presenta- tions. The Mobiloil program is made up entirely of the compositions of Franz Schubert. Lois Bennett, soprano, will be the guest soloist. The Bakers have arranged a vnflctfl program, which in- cludes en unpublished number, “Lore- lei” from “This Year of Grace” and “The Dance of the Sugar Plum Fai- ries” from Tschaikowsky's “Nutcracker Suite.” Novelty musical numbers dom- inate the dance program of the Le Peradis Band. “A Sailor’s Sweetheart” will be one of the specialtirs. Vocal numbers will be interpolated by Phil Diamond and Marty Reubens. Dramas Over “’MAL. “King of the Cattle Ring.” Hal Reid's melodrama_of frontier days, will be presented by Hank Simmons and his show-boat company tonight over WMAL and other Columbia Broadcasting Sys- tem stations. ‘The WMAL program also contains another drama, “Temples of Desire,” to be Presenlzd during the MacFadden | Real Seal hour. The story is based on a Rumanian farmgirl who became a world-famous prima donna. In the Kolster hour, scheduled By WMAL at 10 o'clock, Ben Selvin and hjs orchestra will introduce Rube Bloom, composer, playing one of his own num= bers, “The Song of the Bayou.” This is the. composition which won second prize in a recent Nation-wide contest for original works. - The specialty of Selvin's Orchestra will be a medley of the song hits from the “Show of Shows.” opening tonight at the New York Winter Garden. Another WMAL- musical feature will come during the La Palina smoker. An orchestra and Mme. Nicolina and Adye Koutznesoff will provide the program, Program for Red Cross. Prominent among WMAL's attrae- tions of local origin will be the w program by Radio Joe and his Budg Bo to be dedicated tonight to the American Cross. Ed Callow, who is better known per- hlpacei! T the Barber, " wfll intro- “Hew ‘foature tonight at WJSV. This famous imitator of an Italian tonsorial artist will be assisted by a quartet, to be known as the “Mussolinis of Melody,” and Angela Plcoollnl. a vocalist. ~A novel program is promised. Sue Kennedy, contralto, and Carl Conrad, baritone, also will take & prom- inent part in the WJSV program, as will the Shenandoah Ramblers and Ray Acton’s Modernistics, a dance orchestra. Dr. Thomas E. Green, chairman of the speakers' bureau of the American Red Cross, will speak from WOL tonight on the organization’s 1930 roll call. A dinner concert and a late dance pro- gram also are Annefluled SEA CAPTAIN TO RETIRE. Commodere. of Holland-American Line to Quit After 54 Years. HOBOKEN, N. J, November 20 (#). —After 54 years at sea, Capt, Piet Van Den Heuvel, commodore of the Hol- land-American Line fleet, will retire when the amnuh!g Statendam reaches Rotterdam. Then he is going to make 2 tour of ports at which his ships have called. Born on his father's freighter he has spent the 60 years of his life on the water except for nine years at school. - Yale Fence Is Stolen. NEW HAVEN, November 20 (#)— A scction of the original Yale fence, an antique valued at $10,000, has been | stolen from a photographer’s quarters. For a half a century it has been used with every picture of a Yale captain, LR * 99 Major “Chain” Features TONIGHT. 7:00—Twilight melodies; Los Angzles Trio and Concert Orchestra — W, WLW, W) d 7:30—Westinghouse Salute; in- dustrial dnmn of America —WJZ, KDKA, WBT, WJAX, WIOD and others, [10: :30a—Songs by Pauline Haggard. 9:00a—Morning melodies. 10:00a—Cunningham’s musicale. 10:15a—Hits and bits. 10:45a—National home hour. 11:00a—"Your Child,” by Grace Abbott of the Children’s Bureau of the Department of Labor, 11:158—Radio Household Institute. 11:45a—Studio feature, 12:00m—Farm flashes, 12:10—Sunshine Carolers. 1:00—National Farm and Home hour. | 1:45—Talk by Louis Rothchild, direc- | tor of Better Business Bureau. 2:00—Studio feature. 2: 15—"Penona1mes in Tree History,” by O. W. Spicer. 2 SD—Tne Melody Three. 228.9~WOL~1,310. (American Broadeasting Co.) 5:45—The Town Crier. 6:00—"What's on the Alr ‘Tonight.” 6:08—Muslc. 6:15—Edith Reed's Entertainers. 6:45—Talk by Dr. Thomas E. Green, under auspices of American Red Crass, 7:00—Dinner musie. 10:00 to 12:00—Dance music. Early Program Tomorrow. 7:30a~—Reveille. 7:35a—The musical clock. 8: nu—!lnhd‘ys—n thought for the 8: M&—Jmhll clock (continued). 8:15a—Breakfast brevities, l(o) oow—Hou.:’l'x‘?ld gh“E 16a—Something for Everybody, 11:00a—Helpful hints 11:158~] pic. By 454.3—~WEAF New York—860. 6:00—Black and Gold Roam Qwralhzatu—m WTAG, %‘g:g 7:00—The Family fi ”_‘A::Vznture"—mno k& lden Gems, lnd n.rlnl 1unml—Allo 9 'J, WGR. ke 8:00—Erno Rapee Concert orchum.— WTAG, WOBH, WLAT, 'V o' WOR. WOAA“F. wwJ, ltb—h‘awy Baken. Pnnk Luther, tenor, telo — Also 9:00—01d Coumelor — Auo WJAR, WTAG, WCSH, m WGY, WSCBAE. WWJ, WBSAI WHAS, W! 9:30—Olive Palmer, Paul Oliver, Rev- eries’ Quartét, Orchestra and others — Also WSM, WEB, WBT, WJAX. | 10:30—Floyd’ Gibbons, Headline Hunter | —WEAF and stations. 11:00—Organ recital — WEAF; Phil | Spitalny—Also Ww.J. 12:00—Hour of dance music. 348.6—WABC New York—860. llo—umhndo Orchestra — _ Also C 9 WWNC, WKBW, ADC WDOD, WBRC, W.YA!B. WKRC WMAK, WDBJ. 7:00—Entertainers and comedy duo (1 hour) — WABC only; ensemble hour—Only to WLAC, wmg«' WDOD, W'BRO. WKRG, WCAU, WKBW, WAIU, 8: 30~’X‘r|wlln—A\.w WADC, WCAO, NAO. WKBW, WMAQ, WKRC, w WLBW, WCAU, WJAS WIAN. ‘WFBL, WHP, 9: 00~Mng-zlne program—Also WCAU, 'NAC, , WFBL, WMAK, \VCAO WJAS, WADC, WKRC WGHP, WMAQ, WSFPD, WHK, WLBW. 9:30—Smoker — Also WCAU, WNAC, WEAN, WFBL, WMAK, WCAO, WJAS, WADC, WOHP. WMAQ, WSPD, 10:00—Orchestra and tolouu — Also WCAU. WNAC, WEAN, L, WMAK, WCAO, WJAS, WADC, WKRC, WORD, WMAQ, WHK, WLBW, WSPD. 10:30—In a Russian Village — Also WHK, WLAC, WGHP, WOAO, WWNC, WKBN, WLBW, WNAC, WEAN, WSPD, WADC, WMAQ, 11 OO—ShowboaL—Also WHK, WGHP, WCAO, WWNC, WKBN, WLBW, WNAC, WEAN, WSPD, WBRC, &JAB. WCAU, WMAK, WDBJ, 8;00—Mobiloil concert; com sitions of Schubert— C and N, B. C. network. 8:30—Forty Fathom Trawlers; dramatization of a sea aml’Y—-WMAL and C. 8. network. 9:00—Red Seal hour; “Temples of Desire"— WMAL and C. B. 8. net- work. 11:00—Hank Simmons’ Show; “King of the Cattle Ring,” melodrama—WMAL and C. B. 8. network, drama, ~'—-n.m|||ll|||IIIIIIlll||IImlIIIII|II||IllllIIlI|IIIIIlllH|I|l|l|||IIIIII||I|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||II||||||I|IIIIIIIIIII|I|IImu—m.u Conservative in KRC, 13:00—Specht’s Orchestra; midnight organ melodies. 394.5—~WJZ New York—760. 6:00—Hotel Dinner Orchestra with ‘WBZ, YW. ki ID—MWM ‘melodies, Los An(eleu Trio—Also WBZ, KDKA, WJR. 7:30—The salute—Also WBZ, WHAM, KDKA, KYW, WJR, WRVA, WPTF, WBT, WJAX, WIOD, WHAS, WSM, WSB. 8:00—Harry Kogen's Orchestra—Also \\ DOD WBRC, WJAS, WKRC, | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1929. the Radio PROGRAM FOR “’EDNESDA{NO\"EMBER 20, 1929. (Meters on left of eall letters, kilocycles on right. All time p.m. uniess otRerwise indiczted.) LOCAL STATIONS. 475.9~WMAL—830. (Washington Radio Forum.) :00—Columbia Ensemble. 0—“Our Little Playhouse.” 0—Musical album. 0—Primer for town farmers, 4:40—Club Plaza Orchestra. 5:15—Hawailan Melody Boys. 5:46—Thirty Club conducM by A. Cloyd Gill. 6:00—Correct time, 1—Flashes from The Evening Star. 5—Dinner concert. {oed An Eye for An Ear,” by Rufus Lusk. 7 .‘lo-nafllo Joe and his Budget Boys; Red Cross program. 8:00—Grand opera concert, -highlights from Wagner operas. 8:30—Forty-Fathom Trawlers, 9:00—MacFadden Red Sea) hour. 0—La Palina smoker, 0—Kolster hour. 0—"In a Russian Village.” 0—Hank Simmons’ !hew ,Boat— King of the Cattle Ring. 12:00 to 1:00a—"DX” request program by Stanley Bell and m Colvin. Early Program Tomorrow. 9:30a—"Just a Little More of Some- thing Else. 10:00a—~Radio Home Makers. 10:30a—Morning Merrymakers, 11:30a—Du Barry beauty talk. 11:45a—Columbia Noonday Club. 13:30—Yoeng's Orchestra. 1:30—Ambassador Orchestra. 2:00 to 3:00—Patterns in Print-Va- riety program. 205.4—WJISV—1,460, (Independent Publishing Co.) 3:00 to 5:00—Midafternoon musicale. 6:30—Dinner music, 7:15—Children’s program. 7:30—Graham’s Dance Orchestra, 8:00—Lona Vogt, soprano. 8:15—Shenandoah Ramblers. 8:45—Carl Conrad, baritone. 9:00—Sue Kennedy, contralto. 9:16—"Chick” Godfrey, tenor. 9:30—Tony the Barber and Mussolinis of Melndy vd 10:00—Charles H. D 10:30 (lr;uu :00—Ray’ Acwnl Msdm-n- Early Program Tomorrow. 8:00 to 10:00a—Helpful hints to house- wives; muste. 11:30a—National Farm program. 11:45a—Marmola program. 12:00—Time signals. 12:15—Farm features. 12:45—Musical program. 3:00 to 5:00—Midafternoon musicale. 434.5—NAA—630. (Washington Navy Yard.) 3:45—Weather Bureau reports, 9:00-~Time signals. 10:05—Weather Bureau reports, . OUT-OF-TOWN STATIONS. Programs prepared by the Assoclated Press. Scheduled for Eastern standard time. WBZ, WHAM, KDKA, WJR, WLW, 8:30—soresters Aiso WBZ, WHAM, KDKA, WLW, XYW, WJR, WB 9:00—Lambert and H vocalists— Also WBZ, . KDKA. 9:30—To be announced—WJZ and sta- flnnKDIKANllpolil.l.n—M.lo WHAM, 10:30_Guy Fraser Harrison's Orchestra FORESTERS ARE ON TONIGHT[ They come again with "the vocal and instru- mental delights you love., Over Station WBAL! and the NBC Net- work. Tune in at 8:30 Eastern Standard Ti! On the Crest of the Radio Wave Jince 1915 CHARACTER Our Methods Liberal With Our Service ‘What a bank can consistently do this bank will do for its customers. Your business can- not extend to too great a dis- 4ance for our facilities—even if it is world-wide. And the service we render will be with a whole-heartedness that will make your relations here both agreeable and adequate. The Bank With a Smile hington Savings Bank 719 Tenth Strect—At Grant Place Tlios, E Jarrell, Pres. 1. D. Leonard, Vice Pres. & Treas., lllhluum.... this loan is that your small return pay- ments build up a savings account for you that ine creases monthly. The loan itself is obtained without collateral or se- curity. Proof of your good character is accepted by “Your Bank” for the amount borrowed. THE DEPARTMENTAL BANK 1726 Pa. Ave. N.W. Dn(nfl 2709 Under U. S, Government EHE unique feature of o !\.fi:—‘\ —Also W'BZ KDKA, KYW, WRVA, WHAS, WsSM, WSB, V\'BT ' WJIAX, WIR, WHAM, WAPL 11:00—Slumber music by Laurier’s String Ensemble (1 hour)—Also KDKA. 272.6—WPG Atlantic City—1,100. 8:00—Dinner music. 8:30—Jane and Jimmie; vocal. 9:00—Concert orchestra; Singing Cop. 10:00—Beach Combers Quartet. 10:30—Dance; frolie; dance (113 hours). 282.8—WBAL Baltimore—1,060. 5:00—Talk (15 minutes); salon music. 6:00—Merrymakers; fantasties (1 hour). 282.8—WTIC Hartford—1,060. 7:00—WEAF (30 minutes); news; or- chestra. 8:00—Hour from WEAF. 9:00—Parker’s Singing School. 9:30—WEAF; musical, news. 422.3—WOR Newark—710, 6:00—'Cellist; sports talk. 6:30—Uncle Don’s stores. 7:00—Red Nichols’ Orchestra. 7:30—Town Crier; Midpacific. 8:30—Muslcal overtones. 9:00—Playera; Angela and Jazzet. 10:00—8hades of Don Juan. 11:00—News; dance; Moonbeams. 256.3—WCAU Philadelphia—1,170. 5 00—~Avlawrs news; orchestra. stra; finance; act. B oo—wuc programs (2% hours). 10:30—Dance music. 11:00—Hour from WABC. 305.9—~KDEA Pittsburgh—980. 6:00—U. of Pittsburgh; orchestra. 6:45—Dixie Steppers. 7 OD—Wngrograms (5 hours). 12:00—Don Bestor’s Orchestra. 260.7—-WHAM Rochester—1,150. 6:30—School of Music. 7:00—WJZ (15 minutes); orchestra. 7:30—Same as WJZ (3} hours). 11:00—Owl Club. 3°7.5—~WGY Schenectady: 6:00— “ame as WEAF (2 hours). 8:00— Joncert orchestra. a-ao—\\ EAF programs (2 hours). 0—Musical program. 11 :00—Albany dance hour. 302.8—WBZ Springfield—950. 6:00—Markets; dinner musie. 6:30—Ple time. 7:00—~WJZ programs (24 hours). 9:30—Old Ironsides. 10:30—8ame as WJZ (30 minutes). 11:00—News; Loewe's Orchestra minutes). CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN STATIONS. 428.3—WLW Cincinnati—700. 6:00—Hour of orchestras. 7:00—Educational; scrap book. 7:30—Radiolet presentnlon B :00—WJZ programs (1 hour). 00—Champions; fiddlers. 10 00——Nilh! club hrevmes 11:00—Two on the Als 12:00—Dance; Hu\urd Melaney hour). 280.2—WTAM-WEAR Cleveland—1,f 6:15—Hotel orchestra. 7:00-—~Orchestra; Coffee Artists. 8:00—WEAF (30 minutes); The Boys. 9:30—Feature (30 minutes); WEAF 2!z hours). 12:00—Dance hour. 398.8—WCX-WJIR Detroit—750. 6:00—Dinner music; Forecasters. 7:00—WJZ programs (2 hours). 9:00—Rainbow Man; feature. 9:30—WJZ programs (1 hour). 11:00—News: dance music. 12:00—Organ and dance hour. 405.2—WSB Atlanta—740. ; WJZ (30 minutes). es. a 9: 11:00—Concert; hotel orchestra. 2'[1.6—WIT Charlotte—1,080. 7:00—Aunt Sally. 7:30—WJZ (30 minutes); studio. 8:30—WJZ and WEAF (2% hours). 365.6—WHAS Loulsvilie—820, 7:00—Dinner _dancers. 8:00—WJZ (30 minutes); players. 8:30—Cellist; Xylophonist. 9:00—WEAF and WJZ (2 hours). 11:00—Reporters; U. of Kentucky. 12:00—WHAS dance orchestra. 461.3—WSM Nashville—850. 7:00—WEAF and WJZ (1 hour). 8:00—Craig's Orchestra. 830—Mixed quartet and orchestra, 9:00—WEAF and WJZ (2 hours). 11:00—Musical movic news; dance. 270.1—WRVA Richmond—1,110. 6:00—William Byrd Trio; talk. 7:00—Everybody’s business. 7:30—WJ2Z (30 minutes); News-Leader. 0—WJZ Fro{nm (30 minutes). 9:00—Variety hour. 10:00—Dixie Eplrllull Singers. 10:30—Same as WJZ (30 minutes). 11:00—Orchestra hour; Old Fiddlers. Feasibility of an interisiand steam- (45| ship line in the Philippines 1s being in- vestigal AGTION AGAINST KWKH 1S SOUGHT Chain Stores Protest Alleged'a Abuse by W. K. Henderson to Radio Commission. BY MARTIN CODEL. These are busy days for the lenl division of the Federal Radio Commis: sion, for all of the public's umplslnu against broadcasters, as well as the maze of litigation in which the commission is involved, come within its purview. ‘The latest complaints against an al- leged abuse of the broadcasting privilege are being registered by chain store op- erators in connection with the vigorous campaign against chain stores being conducted by W. K. Henderson over his radio station, KWKH, Shreveport, La. ‘The newest litigation is a court ap- peal by Station KYW, Chicago, owned by the Westinghouse company, from the proviso of its license designating its wave length for allocation to the second zone whenever application is made for 1t by stations in that zone. ‘The campaign over KWKH, which has an extremely wide listening range on its cleared channels, evoked scores of individual protests from the chain stores in and around Shreveport. Na- tional Association of Chain Stores has llno asked the commission to take ac- tion, No Power of Censorship. To all the protesting parties the legal division is replying that the commission has no power of censorship over what is broadcast, but that action to suspend the license of the station can be insti- tuted if proof is furnished that its operator is violating the section of thi law applying to the utterance of “ob- scene, indecent or profane language” or otherwise failing to meet the “public interest, convenience and necessity.” ‘The KYW case, filled as two separate actions in the Court of Appeals of the District pf Columbia, is chiefly impor- tant in that it challenges the constiu- tionality of the amendment of the radio law g radio facilities among the several mnu ud lhul It also raises the property rights issue. Essenf it seeks to enjotn the com- mission from depriving KYW of its present wave lennh tanponrfly “bor- rowed” by -the from the second zone's -uotmenz unde'r the 1928 reallocation. Five second zone stations have made pplication for the present KYW chan- f ‘They are WCAU and WPEN, Phil- adelphia; , Oil City, Pa.; WLA.P Lexington, Ky., ahd WWJ, Detroit. The latter station has recently asked author- ity to bulld a 50,000-watt station on a néw channel. Seeks 1o Retain Channel. It is to forestall possible action commission in taking away its p channel that the icago station has sued in the appellate court. The same court In recent decisions denied that| ny station has property rights in the | sf.her by virtue of possessing and oper- ating broadcasting equipment. 'Allike. contention 15 made 15 the briet filed this week by commission counse: | in the WGP appeal, which will be argued before the Supreme Court of the United States some time in December | by Bethuel M. Webster, jr.; chief coun- sel, and Paul M. Segal, assistant coun- sel of the commission. (Cobyright, 1020, by North American News- Cranberry Betty Hear Ida Bailey Allen, President of the National Radio Home-Makers Club, broadcast this recipe for The American Sugar_ Re- fining Co. at 10 o’clock tomorrow morning over Station WMAL. American Sugar Refining Company IRXZIZIBIRIBIBIRIXZBIBIRIBIRJB X% The HUB—Best In Radio Second to None in Servige and Terms! “MAJESTIC” ‘1316 MODEL 91—Early§ English de- NAEEIINHA X o PN > T e O} G g2 PR fn‘:\ Less Tubes sign cabinet of A Instrument panel overlaid with gen- vine imported Australian lacewood. Escuteheon plate and knobs finished in genuine silver. POWER DETECTION makes « . more than ever . . . the finest receiver you can buy. In model 91 you get the wonderful re- production of type 45 power tubes super-dyn free of all hum, “back~ ground” noises and squeals. Majestic . and the speaker . Majestic Less Tubes No ina sensation of 1929. Nothing could have made the C. A. Earl a best seller but PER- FORMANCE. Performance in the home, under every difficult local amount of adverti amount of “past reputation,” gle season have made a new- comer like the C. A. Earl the radio ican walaut. MODEL 52 . . . Employs nine tubes, ineluding rectifier. designed screen-grid circuit . ble push-pull audio amplification. Specially . dou- Genuine sutomatic tuning. Super- size, 12-inch THE HUB Seventh and D Sts. N.W. sing, no an could among popular-priced radio Zenith Syntonic-dyna- mic type speaker. Linear power de- tection, Self-healing filter condenser. Simple selectivity a matic phonograph switch. ing low-boy eonsole of butt walnut with overlays of English satin oak. stment. Auto- Charm- '] All-electric Radio which has proven the sensation sets. Cabinet finished in genuine walnut with bird's-eye maple and Oriental a Phileo borhood) radio buy on condition—such as no other radio offered. Neutrodyne. Push-pull dynamic cabinet. speaker. Four tuned circuits. amplification. Walnut Inductor Until you finish walnut panels. Ask the owner of (there's one in your if it ien't the best the market. bave seen and heard the performance of a Philco, you have not seen all that radio offers. DE MoLL Co. TWELFTH & G STS. WE ARE DISPLAYING THE LATEST MODEL RAbios Victor— Majestic— Atwater Kent— Radiola— Sparton— Stromberg-Carlson— and others. $10 Delivers Any of the Above - Balance payable in 12 monthly Elymnll— Imslnllnl' De Moll's “PHILCO” 50 Less Tubes $10 Down Payment Puts a Radio in Your Home—No Finance Charges!