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C—S§' : _THE EVENING PEAGOCK BALL WRC Today on the Radio . FEATURE: TONIGHT One of New York Society’s Smartest Events on Air Between 12 and 2 A.M. One of New York society's smartest events, the Waldorf-Astoria peacock ball, will be broadcast tonight over an extensive network of National Broad- casting Co. stations, in which WRC is | to be a link. ‘The program will be on the air from | 12 o'clock mignight to 2 o'clock in the | morning. The entertainment will be provided by Rudy Vallee and his Con- necticut Yankees, Emil Colexan’s Or- chestra and four stars of Harry Rich- man’'s Club—Helen Morgan, Ruth Ett- ing, Mitzi Mayfair and Hal LeRoy. S.! L. (Roxy) Rothafel will describe the | scenes at the ball. ‘WRC Program Varied. WRC's program also contains all of the regular N. B. C. attractions and several originating in its own studios. From New York will come the Service hour, with Bourdon's Orchestra and Jessica Dragonette, the Eskimo Club program and dance music by Leo Reis- man’s Orchestra. Dorothy Stone, eld- est caughter of Fred Stone, will be the guest soloist with Reisman's Orchestra. She will sing two numbers—“I Love That Man” and “Rhythmic Feet.” Jchn F. (Ch Meahan, head coach of the New Ycrk University foot ball team. will present ihe “Famous Coacles* program fonight at 10:30 over WMAL and a network of associ- ated Columbia Broadcasting System stations. Another talk will be made at 9:45 o'clock by “Casey” Jones, radio’s avia- tion columnist. He will discuss avia- tion developments between North and Bouth America. Pageant Program Features. Distinctive arrangements of popular dance melodies and violin solos by ‘Toscha Seidel feature the Pageant pro- gram at 10 o'clock. Seidel will play “Zapateado” and Drdla’'s “Souvenir.” ‘Theo Karle, vocal soloist on this pro- gram, will contribute “The Song I Love” and Toselli's “Serenade.” ‘The Columbians, directed by Freddie Rich, have arranged a fast-moving pro- gram for their ‘broadcast at 8 o'clock. ‘The selecticns include “New Sun in the Sky,” from “The Band Wagon”; “Riff Song” and “Alabammy Bcund.” A dramatic sketch by the Northern Dramatic Co., a presentation by the Jones Family and recorded solos by Rudy Weidoft, saxophone virtuoso, fea- ture the WOL program. ‘WJSV announces as its major attrac- tion a presentation by Uncle Tom and His Hired Help. Dance music will be provided by the Ioannuo Orchestra at 8:45 o'clock and the Shoreham Orches- tra at 11 o'clock. | Major Radio Features l CLASSICAL. Tito Guizar, tenor, WMAL, 10:45. DRAMA. Myrt and Marge, WMAL, 7:00; North- ern Dramatic Cos., WOL, 7:30; March of Time, WMAL, 8:30. VARIETY. Bing Crosby, WMAL, 7:15; Alice Joy and Van Lean's Orchestra, WRC, 17:30; Morton Downey, tenor, WMAL, 7:45; Service Hour, WRC, 8:00; The Columbians, WMAL, 8:00; Eskimo | Club, WRC, 9 Leo Reisran’s Orchestra, WRH 0; The Pageant, WMAL, 10:00; Silver Flute, WRC, lll‘));’:, ‘Theater of the Air, WRC, DANCE MUSIC. Vincent Lovez Orchestra, WRC, 11:02; fiug;n Biltmore Orchestra, WMAL, HIGH LIGHTS ELSEWHERE. 6:00—Raising Junior, sketch of domes- tic 1if=—WJz, WBAL, WGAR and WHAM. 6:45—Topics in Brief: Lowell Thomas —WJZ, WBAL, KDKA, WBZ, WRVA and WLW. 7:00—Maj. Bowes and His Capitol Theater Family—WEAF. WJAR, WLIT, WCAE and WWD. 7:15—Mme. Frances Alda and Frank La Forge—WJZ. WBZ, WBAL, KDKA, WHAM and WLW. ley in “Believe It Z. WBZ, WBAL, WRVA, KDKA and WHAM. 8:00—Marion Harris, stage star, and Nat Brusiloff's Orchestra—WJZ, WBZA, &;’HAM. WREN, WBAL and WLW. 8:30—Billy Hillpot and “Scrappy” Lambert—WJZ, WBAL, WHAM, WBZ and WJR. 9:00—Billy Jones and Ernie Hare, and Will Perry’s Orchestra — WJZ, WHAM KDKA, WREN, WBAL, | WBZ, WHAS and WJAX. 9:30—Joser Koestner's Orchestra and | soloists—WJZ, WHAM, WMC, KDKA, WBAL, WJAX and! WREN. | 10:00—Paul Whiteman and His Orches- | tra—WJZ. KDKA, WBZ, WSM, WBAL, WHAM and WJR. | 10:30—Clara, Lu and Em, humorous | sketch—WJZ, WHAM, WBAL, KDKA, WLW and WREN 10:45 —Waves of Melody; Victor Arden’s Orchestra—WJZ, WBZ, WBAL, WHAM and WJR. 11:00—Slumber Music; Ludwig Lau- | rier's String Ensemble—WJZ, ‘WBAL and WBZ. 1 | | | The Dl Los. [ Stations Heard in Washington Regularly. Autoist Prosecutes Self. ‘To avert an adjournment because of the absence of a police witness at po- Mce court in Tottenham, England, re- | cently, & young autolst said he would Tepresent the police and himself. He said: “My car muffler was noisy. That is the lice’s case, I admit it. That is mine He was fined and thanked by the magistrate for his sportiness. Sound Advice to Pile Sufferers Blegged ef Almost Instantly— Yool Fine in w Days UNGUENTINE CONES | Don't neglect piles—often they | like mushrooms and the mad- !uun.- itching—soreness—the burn- ing and distress bring on nervous trouble. ‘When The Norwich Pharmacal Company (makers of famous Un- guentine) decided to give the world a real pile remedy you may rest | assured that nothing but the best would do—it must be supremely ef- | ficient. now you can get soothing, ‘Unguentine Cones a any w WMAL (AUl programs scheduled L gttt 3:00—Woman's Radio Review. 4:00—"'Decorating Notes,” 5:15—Fireside Sonzs. 5:30—Mrs. Thomas Koon, soprano. 5:44—Correct _time. 5:45—Santa Claus. 5:59—Correct time. 6:00—The Serenaders. ¢ 6:15—Al Kamon'’s Dance Orchestra. 6:45—The Stebbins Boys. 7:00—Amos 'n’ Andy. 7:15—Southern Orchestra. 7:30—Alice Joy and Paul Van Loan's Orchestra. 7:45—Radiotone Quartet. 8:00—Service hour, with Bourdon Or- chestra and Cavaliers’ Quartet. 9:00—Eskimo Club. 9:30—Leo Reisman's Orchestra. 10:00—Silver Flute. 10:30—Theater of the Air. 11:00—Last-Minute News. 11:02—Vincent Lopez Orchestra. 11:30—Jack Denny's Orchestra. 11:59—Weather forecast. | 12:00 to. 1:00a—Broadcast from New York's Charity Ball. Early Program Tomorrow. 6:45a—Tower Health Exercises. 8:00a—Gene and Glenn. 8:158—Morning Devotions. 8:30a—Cheerio. 9:00a—Le Trio Charmante. 9:15a—Tom Waring's Troubadours. 9:45a—Food program 10:00a—Mrs. Blake's Radio Column. 10:15a—Breen and De Rose. Sonata Recital. 12:30—National Farm and Home hour. 1:30—Rhythmic Luncheon Concert. 2:00—Mme. Gainsborg, planist, Godfrey Ludlow, violinist. 2:30—Tuneful Tunes. 2:45—Northwestern - Minnesota ball game. . 475.9 Meters. 630 Kilocycles. 3:00—Columbia Salon Orchestra. 3:30—Arthur Jarrett. 3:45—"How Digestive Disorders M by Dr. will by Betty | Moore. | 4:15—"Hamlet,” Part I, by the Radio Guild. and foot for Eastern Standard Time.) Gerry Morgan. 4:00—Light Opera Gems. 4:45—"The Stage and Screen,” by An- drew R. Kelly. 5:00—Curtis Institute of Music. 5:30—Herr Louie and the Thirsty-five. 5:45—Correct time. 5:46—Flashes from The Evening Star, by Doug Warrenfels. 6:00—Weather report. 6:02—Abrams’ Barn Orchestra. 6:30—Earl Burtnett's Orchestra. 6:45—Interview with Clarence Birdseye. 6:50—Marimba solos by Fleming Orem. 7:00—Myrt and Marge. 7:15—Bing Crosby, baritone. 7:30—Jimmy and Jane. 3 9:00—Radio Reproductions. 9:15—Liberty hour. 9:45—"Aviation News,” by Casey Jones, 10:00—The Pageant, with Toscha Seidel, Theo Karle and Sam Lanin's Orchestra. 110:30—Talk by Chick Meehan, coach of New York University. 10:45—Tito Guizar, tenor. 11:00—Wardman Park Orchestra. 11:30—Cuban Biltmore Orchestra. 11:45—Ann Leaf at the organ. 12:00—Weather report. Early Program Tomorrow. E Morning Devotions. | -Melody Musketeers. | —Something for Every One. | 9:00a—The Commuters. 9:30a—Tony's Scrap Book. 9:45a —Morning Minstrels. 110:00a—Jewish Art program. u ventures of Helen and Mary. York Philharmonic Chil- en's cert. 12:30—Don Bigelow's Orchestra. | 12:45—School “athletic pregram. 1:00—Taft Orchestra. | 1:30—Foot ball souvenir program 1:45—Harvard - Dartmouth foot ball game. WOL 228.9 Meters. 1310 Kilocycles. 3:00—Variety hour. 4:00—Tea Time Tunes. 4:30—Nonsensicalities. 4:45—Songs by Grace Jolley. | 5:00—One-time Opportunitie STAR, WASHINGTON, 5:15—Program by Rea Chapter, Dis- abled American Vetérans. 5:30—Paul Gable, organist. 5:45—Musical Menu. 6:00—Sportorial, by Bryan Morse. 6:15—Howard M. Cooper, planist. 6:30—The Jones Family. 6:45—"Uncle George,” the Town Crier. 7:00—Dinner Music. 7:20—News flashes. 7:30—Northern Dramatic Co. 8:00—Deacon Brown's Peace Makers. | 8:15—Gillum and Atterbury. 8:30—Armistice Jubilee program. 8:45 to 9:00—Recorded solos by Rudy Weidoft, saxophonist. Early Program Tomorrow. 7:00a—Musical Clock. 8:00a—Chimes and Birthdays. 8:05a—Musical Clock (continued). Cross. | 10:15a—Musical Interlude, Association. 10:45a—Request program. | 11:15a—Walter Reed Hospital request| New York Town Hall proved to be the | program. 11:45a—Organ interlude. 12:00m—Luncheon Music. 112:30 to 1:00—Dance Musie. 205.4 Meters. “7JSV 1,460 Kilocycles. 3:00—Organ Music. | 00—Ballad Hour. 00—Where to Get It. 5:30—Gaithersburg program. :45—Frederick program. :00—Jimmy Nichols. 20—News flashes. :30—Insurance program. 00—Mrs. Sandman. 15—Nutty News by Bob Trout. :30—Sports Views and Reviews. :00—Concert Orchestra, :30—Health talk. :45—Dance Orchestra, :15—Uncle Tom and His Hired Help. 0—News, flashes. —Les and Low. | 10:30—Dance Orchestra. 11:00—Shoreham Orchestra. Early Program Tomorrow. | 9:00a—The Treasure Chest. | 10:00a. ints to Housewives. . ealth talk. Olmsted Grill's MUSICAL MENU 23-Piece Dance Orchestra 5:45 P.M. Tonight and Every Wednesday and Friday, WOL A Sensational Selling of Fine Jewelry! E.G. Hines Co. Washington’s “Old Reliable” Jewelry Store Established for Over 35 Years 921 F St. N.W. GOING QUT OF BUSINESS Entire Present Stock on Sale at Drastic Reductions Including Recent Purchases of Importance to Gift Buyers Starting Tomorrow (Saturday) 10 A.M. Continuing Until Stock Is Liquidated After 35 years of serving the jewelry-buying public, we have decided to retire from the retail jewelry business, and offer our entire stock to the public at most remarkable price reductions. The sale will embrace only such high quality mer- chandise as has earned our reputation of many years’ standing as merchants of fine jewelry. No change of ownership or management has taken place —the same interests that have con- ducted the business for many years will carry on until the doors are locked for goecd. DIAMONDS Lovely sparkling diamond rings of exquisite design and workman- ship offered at sensationally low prices. Buy Christmas Gift diamonds while the selection is complete. ATCHES Reliable well known makes of watches will be sacrificed. Nearly eve:y watch carries the regular manufacturer’s resale price tag, from which a most generous price reduction has been made. Christmas gifts should be purchased early while the stock is still complete. ILVERWARE Sterling and plated silverware will be offered at most remarkable prices in a gigantic effort to clear the entire stock in the shortest pos- sible time. Buy for all coming gift occasions while these prices pre- vail. (Flat silver will not be on sale until Monday.) IFT Suggestions Rings, mesh bags, bracelets, pendants, cigarette cases and scéres of other lovely gift items are marked way down, in many instances far choice. 1 for Repairs Cal C o4 disposed of). 921 F St. N.W. below our actual wholesale cost: Early buyers will, of course, have first tore Fixtures A complete equipment is offered for sale at about one-third of the actual present-day worth. Show cases, wall cases, fireproof safe and many other pieces are priced to sell very quickly (subject to delivery when the stock is See Sunday’s Star for Detailed List of Monday Specials E. G. Hines Co. Est. 35 Years— Noted for Fine Quality B. [10:00a—Program by the American Red | tation all over the Continent of Europe 10:30a—Program by the Tuberculosis|for a performance there, starring in D. €. FRIDAY, NOV} Folks Behind The Microphone BY THE RADIO EDITOR. ICHARD TAUBER, the German operatic and lyric tenor, who recently scored an outstandin success in New York, wi make his first radio appear- ance in this country in the program, “Music Along the Wires,” over the Co- lumbia network on Sunday, Novem- ber 15. For years Tauber has had a repu- as the successor to Caruso, but not until last Spring did he go to England the new Lehar operetta, “Land o' Smiles.” His American debut in the musical event of the season. ‘Tauber probably is unique among 10:45a—Melody Men. 11:00a—Sacred hour, 11:30a—Gospel choir, 11:59a—Correct time. 12:00m—Luncheon Music. 12:30—Organ Melodies, 1:00—Concert_Trio. 1:30—Dance Music, 2:00—Concert Orchestra. 2:30—Nell Lewis Stafford, reader. 2:45—Dance Music. 3:00—Salon Music. NAA 45 Meters. 690 Kilocycles. 7:45 to 8:00—Public Health Service Broadcast No. 397—"Headache.” 9:55—Time signals. 10:00—Weather report. T:33 VW YoRK OTHER CONVENIENT SCHEDULES DAILY Round Trip %20 A Day in NEW YORK and home for dinner Via 18-passenger Curtiss Condors, with crew of 3—pilor, co-pilot and | hostess. Largest and most luxurious airliners in service in America. For reservations call any Postal Telegraph Offce, hotel, travel bureau, or EASTERN AIR . inc. (National 364é) f North American Aviatien, Ine. daily schedules to New York, Phil- 2 Richmond, R R R R R R R (4 ° % ° Delivers a Radio 1931. <3iBER 6. at artists in that he was gree.m in 'a by radio two weeks before he sailed to begin his first con- cert tour here. His singing was not broadcast, owing to contractual restric- tions applying on both sides of the Atlantic, but enough was heard to give hearers a foretaste g:, ‘:dhn they On the Metropolitan Opera, studio during the presentation of “Mu- sic Along the Wires” and called up Tauber in Berlin by transatlantic tele- phone. Just before the program began a test was made with the Berlin cir- cuit and Tauber talked to the engi- neers and production men gathered in the studio. At the request of his man- ager, he sang & verse of “Dein Ist Mein Ganzes Herz"’ for the limited ludlen:el 1!5 the it\ld.lo, ‘who heard it on_the loud speaker. ‘The sponsor was so impressed by this impromptu audition that before ‘Tauber landed in America he had been booked exclusively for two radio ap- pearances after being heard only across 3,000 miles of ocean. * ok kK lGY CLARKE returns to the air Monday after an absence of three months, but over WJSV and not WOL, where she had been connected for lo, these many years. She left WOL to become assistant program di- rector of the Mount Vernon Hills Sta- tion. Miss Clarke is bubbling over with ideas about how a radio station should be run, and we may now ex- pect some improvement in the quality of the WJSV broadcasts. B CFITHE QUEST,” ce Coolidge’s poem, set to fusic by Maury Madison, newspaper man and A NEW CONSOLE THE MOST RADIO EVER OFFERED FOR THE MONEY : 859.50 WE ALLO Up to 350.00 on your OLD SET OKAY RADIO CO. 417 11th St. N.W. 1760 Pa. Ave. N.W. Philco Baby Gra Balanced Superheterodyme 4 Seven Tubes (Pentode and Screen Grid)—Tone Control—Electro-Dynamic ” ¢ S R O TR AT e ARt nd 9 95 Speaker—Illuminated Recording Dial. X o) &) ) Philco Highboy Complete with Seven Tube: Balanced Superhetero- $ dyne, equipped with Tone Control — New Electro- Dynamic Speaker—Illuminated Record- ing Dial. Every Philco is a balanced Superheterodyne See them at The Hub q 3 s .d X D ’ $149. 5-Tube Baby Grand A complete TRF Radio with Pentode Tube and Electro- Dynln:ie Speaker in a Genuine Mahogany Cabinet. Complete with § ? Tubes 5 78 Easy Terms | Every Radio Complete With Tubes composer, is to its have its air pre- miere Monday night at 6:30 over an N. B. C. network. It will be sung by James Wilkinson, baritone. . . . The boadcast of October 18, it is now dis- closed, was the last of the Atwater Kent classical concerts, although the finals of the fifth national radio audi- tion are to be put on the air....Little Jack Little, formerly with N. B. C. does his first Columbia program Mon. day night as guest artist with Guy Lombardo's Orchestra...Nat Brusilofl's Orchestra has been replaced on Co- lumbia by a group directed by. Fred ns. * ok ko ATHRYN PARSONS,. Columbia’s ““Girl o’ Yesterday,” received a let- ter from a Midwestern banker the other day who had heard her singing over his radio set. He wanted to know if she was the same Ka Parsons who had deposited a $200 Liberty bond in his institution back in 1918. It's the same Kathryn, all right. She had forgotten all about the bofd. * oK% OL. CHARLES LINDBERGH, mak- ing one of his rare broadcasts, joins in aiding President Hoover's unemployment relief cam in a special radio program _Sunday night | § over the combined N. B. C. and Co- lumbia networks. Gen. Pershing, Ger- aldine Parrar, Mary Pickford, Irvin S. Cobb, John Charles Thomas and Kath- leen Norris are among the other celeb- rities to take part. Ten thousand people recently at- tended a meeting in Glascow, Scotland, called to protest against any reduction in the dole. At Lowest Prices Ever GENUINE RCA and CUNNINGHAM TUBES 201a ) 45¢ 226 ) 227 Bonded Radio 171a 403 11th St. N.W. Open Evenings THE SALES—SERVICE Adame 3803 | —”""1803 Columble Resd !. The Fastest and Best Service in Town o w2 | o D R s PHONE DISTRICT 4700 12 Experts at Your Call Day and Night STAR RADIO : SERVICE DEPT. 409 11th St. N.-W. | 5. HUB! 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