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—— GULLI EASILY BEST INDUCKPIN LEAGUE Bowling at Record-Breaking Pace in Women’s [" " "ot Loop, With 112 Average. Lorraine Gulli, with a record-breaking pace of 112-32, is leading the Women's District League in high individual aver- age, according to figures released today by Jim Baker, official scorer, Lucy Owen is second with 105-42. Rendezvous is three games in front the team race. eam Standing. Rendezvous Bill Wood Jdohn Blick King Pm G'raetown Rec Deal Service INDIVIDT Strike Park ver Davis Recreation Forteney Babcock Leaman Young Scott Fleming BILL WOOD. 42 36 2 a2 2 JOHN BLICK | Owen 4 Whitbeck Hofman Veihmeyer Kelloge Updike Palmer Miltner Cox Yarnell i ‘ - ‘ KING PIN | Gent | Creei Bros s | INDIVIDUAL AVERAGES. | GEORGETOWN., 42 8 8 % 4 DEAL SERVICE .42 ) 421 3 1 Anderson Quigley Levy Ream Ann Ford Mischou D42 a2 bt CONVENTION HALL 36 14 39 15 3 14 39 13 3 9 COLUMBIA 4 Q2 Q 4 39 LUCKY STRIKE 4 21 5 36 » 36 TAKOMA PARK 4 39 el 36 w0 MEYER DAVIS. 33 i3 D39 3 36 RECREATION. Gude Brunelie [ Matthew .. Purdy Minson Fischer Kohl| P. Ford Goodall Meyer 30 Burton H. Hiser C, Hiser Al Williams. Shugrue Lohnes . Youmans Dobson Mills Dove Rogers Kirk Moore . Licberman Limerick Jurrett Johnson Burke Haynes . Perry Iseman Ellis B B. wiliiams. MAYHEW BOWLS BEST IN HOLY NAME LOOP Has Mark of Close to 115 for 13 Games in Section B—St. Stephen's Team in Van. Mayhew of the second-place Holy Name team is leading the bowlers of the Holy Name League, section B, in high average, with a mark of 112-9 for 13 games. Slegfried and Nee are run- ning second with 109-5 and 109-14, re- spectively. 538 528 510 500 511 495 Individual Averages. 8T. STEPHEN 5. HS 341 9 330 321 308 NAME. 340 345 345 325 294 120 276 TRINITY 125 320 12 315 11§ 290 130 299 123 308 PETER 74 St. Stephen’s holds a two-game lead V. L. HG % Peter i Josepn . m'ac’late C'nc'p'n ever Holy Name. Team Standing Stephen . ly Name . 584 loly_Trinity . Prancis Xavier ‘Anthony it Thomas t. Paul Assimption 8t. Ann MacGregor ... G Srith . v a JOSEPH 1% 332 12 318 320 280 282 = 308 108 288 106 279 IMMACULATE CONCE! L Demeza 15 133 33 Coye 115 116 298 O Hanlon 15 102 264 M. Demeza ... 15 93 254 BT. THOMAS. 130 353 116 325 112 200 128 319 122 226 MPTION. 138 349 12 291 100 286 114 289 ANN 10 300 302 291 ue Records. Holy Name, 584 Stephen. 1,599 average—Mayhew, i wame 8t thony. 146 High individual set—Siegfried, Bt "4 High individual strikes—J. McCarty, Bt Prancis Xavier, 9. High individual spares—T. Fahey. Bt Btephen, 42 TENNIS BOOMS IN BERLIN. BERLIN, January 7 () —Winter ac- eommodations for the capital’s tennis enthusiasts will be ample as never be- fore. Four huge tennis halls will be available when the work of remodeling two on the municipal exhibition grounds & finighed, Earner Kramer Dooley Quade Latona cKain 105 weeney || Collins Nee Newman Callahan inn agner weeney ent: eough Btorer uenther ane Cumberiand hornton tadtier —8t Holy individual Stelski, An- Peter, | Jeague-leading Central Armature Works { Deery .. | Scanlan { Kutseh THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. THURSDAY., 0 MORAN G OVERWRCTONE} Star of St~ ~e and T >reen Will Be Guest Artist With Rudy Vallee. owling Standing NATION-WIDE LEAGUE. Binders Respers Dominos .. Bearcats Harvesters . Plodders kame—Beyer (Bearci set—Baxter (Harvester: average—Baxter (Harvesters), 100-28 pares—Shaw (Binders), 51 8. W. Barnshaw (Bearcats) flat game—Vallario (Plodders) High striki 11 | Hizn 'BRILL HIGH ROLLER IN ELECTRICAL LOOP Creel Ace Sports Average of 108. 92, Lois Moran, scintillating star of the E nd screen, will sing for the first time on the radio tcnight when she { appears as guest artist with Rudy Val- Jee and his Connecticut Yankees on the | Sunshine hour program over WRC and a network of other National Broadcast- ing Co. stations, Details of Miss Moran's program have | not been announced, but she is expected starring vehicle, “Of Thee I Sing. The Dramatic Mus will honor Josef Haydn, celebrated Aus- | trian composer. Four of his composi- tions are included in the program, the featured nuwbers being “With Verdure | Clad” ang the sezond and third move- { ments frcm “Surprise Symphony.” Other WRC Features. | The dance hour, with Coon-Sanders | Orchestra, and another Sherlock Holmes Central Armature No. 1 Leading Team. Brill of the Creel Brothers No. 1 team is leading the Electrical Duckpin League in average with 108-27. Moyer of the No. 1 outfit is second with 107-22 Third place now is held by H. Eskite with 106-5. TEAM STANDING. W. L TP. HG. Cent. Arm. Wks. No. 137 8 23.511 582 Pot. Elec. Pow. Co..... 31 559 O. R. Evans & Bro.... 30 565 Nat. Elec. Supply Co. 563 Pepco Sta. F No. 1..% 559 Creel Bros. No. 1 schedule. In addition the station will | broadcast from its own studios a popu- I lar program by Leon Brusilof’s Or- chestra and & concert by Rudolph Schramm's Orchestra. Selecticns from outstanding musical %3 | comesies will be featured in the pro- aram of the Trumpeters tonight over WMAL and assiciated Columbia sta- tions. Among them are “Gotta Go to Tow from “Iie Laugh Parade”; “Of Thee I Sing.” and “Manhattan,” 521 | from “Garrick Gayeties of 1925 #34)In the Bath Club program at 8 o'clock Margaret Santry will interview Eve Garette Grady. The musical por- Pepco Sta Arm CENTRAL ARMATURE WORKS st 17 7 18 21 G ] S L5 ve-48 HG, 143 17 141 148 HS 368 285 352 370 Sp. 85 12 92 Barbagallo E. Camp ... Habermehi . Mover .. Pillsbury ", 36 13 134 347 Robinette 45 20 138 363 POTOMAC ELECTRIC POWER CO. 45 T 138 344 it 7 31 321 340 41 by Barbara Maurel, contralto; a male quartet and Frank Ventree's Orchestra. Alex Gray, baritone, will sing two Belk Hays Knapp Trewolla Weldman oday on 336 315 350 335 137 334 102-30 BUPPLY CO. 342 101-24 334 103-42 304 305 321 341 & 315.6 Meters. | w R(‘ 950 Kilocycles. 3:00—Woxan's Radio Review. 00—Salon Singers :15—United States Navy Band. 00—The Jungle Man. 5—Prances Bowden. 30—Correct time. 31—Studio feature. 45—Russ Columbo and Orchestra. 00—Leon Brusiloff’s Orchestra. 15—Rudolph Schramm'’s Orchestra 45—The Stebbins Boys. 00—Amos ‘0’ Andy 15—Lanin’s Orchestra :30—Alice Joy and Paul Van Loan’s Orchestra. :45—"Famcus Pallacies in Business by Merle Thorpe. 00—Rudy Vallee and his Connecti- cut Yankees and Lois Moran. :00—Dramatic Musicale. 30—Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. :00—Coon-Sanders Orchestra. 00—Last-Minute News. :02—Slumber Music. 30—Weather forecast. ‘31—Jesse Crawford, organist. 45—Cotton Club Orchestra 00—Ralph Kirbery, baritone. 30—Larry Funk's Orchestra. J. Loveiess R. Loveless 45 69 45 7 NATIONAL ELECTRICAL | Beit M. Brown | Fenton PEPCO STATION FEskite 4 Eskite 11 Evans 35 Merredith a3 D40 34 17 CREEL 4 a5 i 45 42 47 14 123 WARREN & CO. 41 19 b 11 33 137 133 F No BROS. No | Ginson Roller Sencindiver Totten E B Bryant Jennings Kearney Noone Vincent { Warren DOUBLEDAY-HILL Barnstead L4l T | Bartels 1 48 Hill 459 MacNeiil 19 13 Rases oo 120 38 om%5 West 4“4 80 127 341 104-1 WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. Dreitzler ... 51 15 123 326 Gordon 48 6 125 1307 Kammerer 2 11 130 3 Lease 56 10 122 327 Ressler 416 133 A0 Schafhirt 50 14 128 228 Yancey 30 9 114 309 JE CONTRACTORS, 7123 344 9919 18 31 8411 127 398 130 312 kd 15 312 85 23 139 359 ELECTRIC STORAGE BATTERY Eckstine 116 308 Feighenne 31 367 Pavne n Torrev 307 I Wrighi | 105 286 W. Wright ... 129 MILLER-DUDLEY CO. 42 5 124 L4 s w9 £ ) T 325 34 127 323 115 282 ECTRIC CO. 120 341 102-28 | 10 302 2223 | 156 361 1m0 | 15 271 AA | son-Lenz bridge game. Early Program Tomorrow. 45a—Tower Health Exercises. 00a—Gene and Glenn :15a—Morning Devotions. 30a—Cheerio. 00a—Melodic Gems. 15a—Waring's Troubadors. :458—Food program. 00a—Mrs. Blake’s Radio Column. 15a—Dr. Copeland’s Health Clinic. 30a—To Market with Wilma Rice. :45a—Betty Crocker. 0a—Music Appreciation Hour. :00m—The Home Circle. :15—"“The Real George Washington, by Charles Colfax Long. :30—National Farm and Home Hour. :30—Palais d'Or Orchestra. 00—United States Army Band. 30—Echces of Erin. 00—Woman's Radio Review. 00—Decorating Notes, by Moore. 15—"Pere Gynt,”by the Radio Guild 475.9 Meters. i W]\IA 630 Kilocycles. 00—La Forge-Berumen Musicale. 30—Miriam Ray. 00—United States Army Band 30—With Uncle Sam's Naturalists. 40—Taft Orchestra. 45—Dance Marathon. 00—Biltmore Orchestra. :30—Talk by Robert J. Cottrell. ex- ecutive secretary ington Board of Trade. 5:45—Flashes from The Evening Star, by Doug Warrenfels. 5:00—Time and prcgram resume. 6:01—Bossert Orchestra. 30—Musical program. 45—Frank Stretz’s Orchestra. 00—Myrt ana Marge. 15—Bing Crosby, baritone. 30—Land o' Flowers. 45—Morton Downey, tenor. 00—The Bath Club. 15—Abe Lyman's Band. 30—Kate Smith, crooner. 45—"Your Child,” by Angelo Patri 00—The Mills Brothers. 15—Tito Guizar, tenor. 30—Dramatized Love Story. | 10:00—The Trumpeters, with Edwin C. Hill J‘ 30—Nat Shilkret’s Orchestra, 51 28 “* 3 15 a7 12 5 334 Black Bush 324 27 288 218 260 240 100 Hayden Hyiand y Kronenbitter Wabh 39 54 30 Williamson 30 30 309 GRAYBAR FLECTRIC CO. L4 122 334 6 106 300 " 107 212 27 210 T30 4 3% Youngquist 42 68 309 PEPCO STATION F NO 57 13 120 313 56 11 122 320 48 5 125 335 62 16 131 316 28 9 132 9 27 6 1R 0 Mandley 18 4 105 285 CENTRAL ARMATURE WORKS NO. Bailey 26 8 107 793 W. Chanes 72 7.125 3 Flowers 4 1 117 313 Hormen 45 18 120 323 Kuech 63 18 124 27 Marsh 19 10 111 301 Shaw 29 4 109 286 BROTHERS NO. 40 . " Hornig T. Lewis Kostulski ... Reed D2 Arneson E. Chaney Connick C. Evans Gray . CREEL Holland McGraw BATTALINO IS PEVISH |, AS HE SHEDS WEIGHT BY WILBUR WOOD. EW YORK, January 7.—Weight has beaten many great horses | and many great fighters. The horses have been beaten by putting it on and the fighters by taking it off. Shylock was no more insistent on having his pound of flesh than some boxing managers. In Hartford today Christopher (Ba | tiing) Battalino is in a savage mood 5 | For more than a week the feather-| “”:fl welght champlon has been undergoing | 1) sa that most dreaded ordeal of the fighter | 11:30a the making of weight. Battalino is very free with his cuffs and his kicks. Even his manager is eligible for a buffet on the head if he happens to get in Bat's way. The weight-making grind will turn the most sweet-tempered of glove throwers into a snarling_ wolf The featherweight king was well over the 140-pound mark when he received word that he was matched to defend his title against Lew Feldman of Brooklyn in Madison Square Garden Friday night. He had not paid much attention to staying close to the featherweight limit, as he had counted on an overweight match. The boxing commission could not see it that way, so_the bout was set at 126 pounds. It is unlikely that any one really expects Feldman to walk off with the championship. If he does win the chances are that it will be due to the havoc wrought with Battalino by mak- ing the weight. The fighter who can take off gobs of weight in & few days and not suffer a heavy loss in vitality is an exception. Johnny Dundee and Harry Greb were two who could get away with it. Dundee was the best weight-maker in modern Queensberry history. Shedding 12 or 15 pounds was no trick for John. He has been known to work himself down from 156 to 126 in two weeks and show no ill effects 45—Jack Miller's Orchestra. 00—R 30 11 uby Potter, soprano. 1 George Olsen’s Orchestra. 2:00—Weather report 01—Guy Lombardo’s Orchestra. 30 to 1:00a—Panico’s Orchestra. Early Program Tomorrow. Morning Devotions. —Salon musicale, The Dutch Girl. 00a—Opening the Morning Mail. 30a—Tony’s Scrap Book. 4 Rhythm Kings. 00a—Warren Sweeney, pianist derson. osephine Noel, pianist. School of Cookery. The Captivaters, Kansas, 452—Ben Alley, tenor 00m-—Don Bigelow's Orchestra. 2:30—Lotus Orchestra. :00— Varieties. 15—The Dance Marathon 30—Ritz Carlton Orchestra. 2:00—The Funnyboners. 15—Ann Leaf at the organ. 30—American School of the Air. :00—United States Marine Band. 30—Arthur Jarrett, tenor. 3:45—Educational program. 4:00—Light Opera Gems. “’OL 228.9 Meters. 1,310 Kilocycles. 3:00—Variety Hour. 4:00—Ellen H. Wheatley, pianist, and Erma Counselman, soprano. 4:30—Tea Time Tunes 4:45—Catherine Deale, planist. 5:00—One-Time Opportunities. 5:15—Emory Brennan, pianist. 5:30—Accordion Kapers. 6:00—Jimmy and Bert. 6:15—The Troubadours. 6:30—Musical Sketches. 7:00—Dinner_music. 7:20—News flashes. 7:30—Elmer Calloway's Orchestra. 8:00—Moanno Melody Boys. 8:15—Ardis Atkinson, soprano, Rovilla Atkinson, contralto. —Rernard Milofsky, violinist, 9:00--Continental Trio. to sing several selections from her latest | A concert by fcale at 9 o'clock | prano, and Revilla Atkincon, contralto, { dramatic episode are among other out- | standing N. B. C. attractions on WRC's | “Love Is Sweepng the Country,” from 8ram will be present tion of this attractions will be presented | trict Red Cross yesterday moved from e e e 1 the Radio (All Programs Scheduled for Eastern Standard Time.) 55 to 1:00a—Resume of the Culbert- | of the Wash- | 15a—Frank Crumit and Julia San- Address by Senator Capper of and | 1932 C-3 T numbers during his program at 10:30 | with Nat Shilkret's Orchestra. The | orchestra will feature a medley of pop- ular selections. On Personalities Program. Ruby Potter, soprano, and Louis Pot- ter, pianist, will provide the Washing- ton Musicial Personalities program at 11_o'clock. i Manager Walter Johnson of the Washington base ball club will go before the microphone of WJSV at 6 o'clock tonight to discuss the 1932 base ball season, and particularly the chance of his club to win_the American League pennant. John B. Keller, sports writer for The Star, will interview the popular diamond idol | WJSV's musical attractions include a concert by Walter Holt's Fretted Sym- phony and a joint recital by Donald | Seigrist, tenor, and Doris White, so- prano. This station also has scheduled | | a talk at 8:30 by Senator Nye of North | Dakota on *“The 1932 Hopes of the | Progressives in Congress.” Bernard Milofsky, violinist, will make his radio debut tonight over WOL. Ac- companied by Henrietta Halam, he will | be heard in'a recital from 8:30 to 9. the Continental Trio and Ardis Atkinson, so- a joint recital by are among this station’s otizer musical features. TRAVE'. SERIES ON AIR District to Offer Programs Over WRC. Music Clubs 20| A special series of radio travel pro- grams will be presented over WRC by the District Federation of Music Clubs, beginning Sunday night at 7 o'clock. The programs will be directed by! Mrs. Charles Brooke Smith. There will | be 20 in the series. The brcadcast will} come on Sunday nights. Prominent | Washing' on artists will take | | ington Composers’ Club. Red Cross Unit Moves. ! The roll call department of the Dis- ‘1'5 cdowntown headquarters, at 1342 G street, to the chapter house, 1730 E street. 9:15—Osborne Miller, tenor. r g matches. Early Program Tomorrow. | | | 7:00a—Musical Clock. 8:00a—Birthdays. 8:05a—Musical Clock 10:00a—Novelettes | 10:15a—Boswell Sisters. 10:30a—Dance Tuncs. 2054 Meters. “ V 1,460 Kilocycles. 3:00—Ballad Hour 3:30—Thompson and Ziegler. 00—Studio feature 30—Dance Tunes 00—Margaret_Latham. soprano. 30—Mount_Alto Hospital program. 00—John B. Keller, sports writer of | The Star, interviews Walter Johnson, manager of the Wash- | ington base ball club 30—Songs by Ray Gibbons. :45—"Flights Into the New Year,” by Marjorie Webster 00—John Preston, baritone. 15—Market report 30—Kaltenborn Edits the News. 45—Estelle Hunt Dean, Soprano. 00—Shoreham Concert Orchestra. 15—Studio feature. :30—"The 1932 Hopes of Progressives | in Congress,” by Senator Nye of | North Dakota 00—Dance Marathon, 15—Mystery pianist. 30—Donald Seigrist, tenor, and Doris | White, soprano. 00—News flashes. :15—Holt’s Fretted Symphony. 00—Shoreham Orchestra 130 to 12:00—Dance Marathon. Early Program Tomorrow, 00a—Breakfast Club 0%a—Treasure Chest :30a—Musical program. 00a—Peggy Clarke's Daily Chat. 15a—For Your Information. 30a—Rev. H. B. Brenner. 00a—Gospel Chor. 30a—Popular Melodies. :57a—Correct time. 00m—Variety Hour. 00—Schramm’s Trio. 30—Studio feature :00—Luncheon Concert. 30—Celestine Adams, contralto. 00—United States Marine Band TONIGHT. RUDOLF FRIML and Land o' Flowers Station 4 WMAL At 7:30 O’Clock Sponsored by the Floris Telegraph Delivery = Associa- tion of ch we are a member 2 Co. Four Flower Shops MAIN STORE 1212 F St. N.W. Phone Nat. 4276 Members of Florists' Telegraph Detivery As: ¢ MODERNIZE Your Home by the EBERLY PLAN fi?OM CELLAR A Modernized Kitchen OUR kitchen re-design- ed, re-equipped, re-done throughout in the most modern manner for as little as 36c a day. EBERLY handles as one ‘job all the separate home improve- ments you need from cellar to roof. Costs as little as 30, 40, or 50c a day, the same way you pay gas or light bills. A. EBERLY’S ~SONS, Inc. 1108 K Street NNW. Phone DIstrict 6557 83 Years' Reliability musical ¢ 2 nd | 4 Folks Behind The Microphone BY THE RADIO EDITOR HE fact that Julian Altman, 15 vyear-old Washington boy, whe made good in “big-ti radio circles, was once a freckle cham- pion is important—to bhim at least. Yet he can truthfully boast of other accomplishments Altman plays his violin like a_vet-| eran. He also goes before the N. B. C. micrcphone as an actor. Still, that medal award he won for having 2,000 freckles, more or less, is one of his prized possessions, along with a dozen medals givin in swimming, diving, box- ing, etc. He builds radio sets as a hobby. T HIL COOK, popular radio enter- tainer, has written a musical com-} edy in collaboration with Tom Johnstone. It will open on Broadway January 18 under the title “Radio Per. sonalities.” Radio stars will make up a big share of the cast. The show Will be of the variety type with a thread of a plot * CCOMPLISHMENTS of radio engi- neers have put radio in the Metro- | politan Opera House to stay. The | quality of the pick-up and the network | trancmission of the first three operas from the stage during the holidays has brought the conclusion at N. B. C. that modern apparatus does such a good job | with this type of production that there | is little to worry about in future broad- | casts. x £ K ¥tk 'EATS of the Canadian mcunted po- lice are to be dramatized in a series starting Monday night on N. B. C Seth Parker and his cast go on the r Sundav night from Los Angeles Arthur Tracy, Columbia’s “Street nger,” is due back on the air tomor- row after a throat illness, caused by a cold...Lowell Thomas' broadcast pe- rlods on N. B. C. have been cut. The Saturday night talk has been eliminated and the daily repeat transmission t0 a | Midwest chain has been stopped...Ted Husing will describe for Columbia the A. A. U. champlonship bobsled races January 15 and 16 at Lake Placid, N. Y. -..An operetta written to fit a 30-min- ute broadcast will be put on the air Monday night by N. B. C. It is called “El Cabrellero.” WILL SUBMIT ORDINANCE Md., Councilmen Draft Septic Tank Regulations. Special Dispatch to The Star. | CHEVERLY, Md January 7.—A proposed town ordinance setting up re- quirements regarding the design and Walter Johnson, interviewed installation of septic tanks here is sched- B. Keller, WJSV, 8:00; uled to be a\llbrmlfivd to the mayor and‘ Matches, WOL, 9:30. Council at the meeting tomorrow night , - in the school house at 7:30 o'clock. The | ; JATIELYn proposed ordinance, drawn along lines | Schramm'’s Orchestra, WRC, _ corresponding with the regulations of Morton Downey, WMAL, 7:45 the United States Public Health Ser Bath Club, WMAL, 8:00; Rui ice, it is believed, effectively will elim-| lee and his Connecticut Yankees inate unsatisfacfory conditions here| WRC, 8:00; Abe Lyman's Band, growing out of the use of septic tanks.| WMAL, 8:15; Kate Smith, WMAL, The proposed ordinance will be pre-| 8:30- sented by Councilmen R. Major Radio Features ; SPEECHES. “Famous Fallacies in Business,” by Merle Thorpe, WRC, 7:45; “The 1932 Hopes of Progressives in Washing- ton,” by Senator Nye of Nortk. Da- kota, WISV, 8:30. DRAMA. Myrt and Marge, WMAL, 7:00; Adven- tures of Sherlock Holmes, WRC., 9:30; Dramatized Love WMAL, 9:30 CLASSICAL. Dramatic Musicale, WRC, 9:00; Guizar, tenor, WMAL, 9:15. SPORTS, | Cheverly, Tito by Wri John tling 6:15 The Val- Wt DANCE MUSIC and W. A. Link, named some time ago Cocn-Sanders Orchestra, WRC, 10:00 by Mayor Fred W. Gast to study the George Olsen's Orchestra, WMAL situation and draft an ordinance to 11:30; Cotton Club Orchestra. WRC oover it. 11:45; G Lombardo’s Orchestra, . WMAL, 01 THANK FARM BOARD HIGH LIGHTS i 6:00—Raising Junior National Beet Growers Also Ask Philippine Independence. —WJZ, WBAL, WGAR Topics in Brief; Lowell Thomas WJZ, WBZ, WLW, KDKA, GREELEY, Colo., January 7 (#).— AW A audAvAIaD The Federal Farm Board was thanked for its co-operation and the Govern- ment was urged to grant independence to the Philippines by the National Beet Growers’ Association, in convention here Tucsday The convention closed after election of officers. Fred Cummings of Fort Collins, Colo., 1s the new president and the first vice president is Charles M. Kearney of Morrill, Nebr, LSEWHERE. domestic WHAM skit and 6:45— DOES YOUR CAR STEER HARD? “SCIENTIFIC SERVICE” O’CONNELL & PRATT 1617 L St. N.W. DE. 3719 Story, 7:30—Phil Cook, comedian — WJZ, WBAL, WHAM, KDKA and WGAR, 7:45—The Goldberg’s, comedy sketch— WEAF, WTIC, WCAE, WWJ, WSI and WGY. 8:00—Dixle Spiritual Singers—WBZ, WBAL, KDKA, WRVA, WHAM and WGAR. 8:30—The Pickard Family: hill billy songs — WJZ, WBZ,_ WBAL, ‘WHAM. KDKA and WSR. 9:00—Julia y Sanderson _and _Frank Crumit—WJz, WBAL. WBZA, WREN, KDKA and WHAM rd Crooks, tenor; Orchestra WLW, KDKA Don wJz, and 10:00—Harry tra—WJZ, CKGW. 30—Clara, Lu and Em: gossip and incidental music—WJZ, WBAL WHAM. WJR, WLW and KDKA 45—Paris Night Life: orchestra and soloists—WJZ, WBZ, WBAL, WHAM, WGR, WLW and KDKA 30—The Three Doctors—WJZ, WBAL, WSR and WHAM. 00—Mildred Bailey and the King's Ji s, variety program—WJZ WBZ. WBAL, KDKA, WJR and WHAM TONIGHT—10 P.M. Station WMAL Tune in on the Hart Schaffner & Marx Trumpeters Dance Orches- WHAM, WBAL and 10 —a great orchestra! —a great singer and Edwin C. Hill, world's greatest news re- porter. Raleigh Haberdasher 1310 F Street STAR RADIO CO. Shallow Irregular Space Back of Speaker—No Boxy Tones. Improved Speaker Sounding-Board Combining Large Area and Great Weight Brings Out— and Clarifies Low and Medium Frequencies. Pentode Tubes Price Complete $89.50 High Notes, Which Travel in Straight Lines, Go Up to Your Along the Floor. Superheterodyne No Interest ONE YEAR TO PAY Ears—Not NEW!! Long-Short | Wave Combinaticn NEW!! Super- Heterodyne Radio and Clock Faithful adap- tation of famous Eli Terry Colo- nial Clock. Gen- uine mahogany cabinet and bird’s-eye maple panel. Hear Europe, South America, airplane and po- lice calls as well as all U. S. sta- tions. STAR RADIO CO. Washington’s Largest Radio Stores 1350 F St. N.W. 3218 14th St. N.\W. 409 11th St. N.W. Here Is Something Really New!! - PHILCO RADIO - A MUSICAL INSTRUMENT OF QUALITY The First Radio Ever Scientifically Designed as a Musical Instrument Model 112X Complete With Tubes harge Price Complete $60.00