Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
CONCERT ON WRC BY GRACE MOORE Soprano to Sing Selections From Stage Successes in Electric Circle Program. RACE MOORE, young Ameri- can soprano, who made her first professional appearance in Washington in 1921, will present the Electric Circle program today over WRC and other National Broadcasting Co. stations. For her program, Miss Moore has chosen selections from the important successes of her career on the musical comedy and concert stage. It includes “Connaitu le Pays” from ‘“Mignon”; “Remember,” the song Berlin wrote for her; “Lover Come Back to Me” and “Lovely Hour,” from “A Lady’s Morals.” Other outstanding attractions on WRC's afternoon schedule will be the Tree Hour program of old melodies, and & rebroadcast from Berlin featurirg a recital by Marcel Wittrisch, tenor, and s talk on “An American Woman in Russia,” by Mrs. Harriet Goodwin Deuss. KTBS to Be Welcomed. As & special feature tonight WRC will carry a program celebrating the sddition of Station KTBS in Shreve- port, La., as a member of the N. B. C. network. Radio stars of the N. B. C. New York and Chicago studios will take part in this broadcast. Among them are Odette Myrtil, soprano; the Cava- liers Male Quartet, Hugo Mariana's Orchestra, Ralph Kirbery, baritone; Amy Goldsmith, soprano, and the comedy team known as “Sisters of the Skillet.” George Jessel will continue as master of ceremonies in the program with Rubinoff and his orchesira. Rubinoff will contribute the immortal “Tram- merel” as a violin solo. His orchestra will feature a special arrangement of “Home” and “China Boy.” “The Public School and Its Individ- ual Problems” is the topic for disc sion during the National Education As- sociation program. The speakers will be Annie Carlton Woodward, State di- rector of Massachusetts high schools, and Dr. Willlam G. Carr. Sons of Eli Return. ‘The Eight Sons of Eli will return to the air today for a broadcast over WMAL and associated Columbia net- work stations. Co-featured with this double quartet will be the Howard Twins, youthful piano team. Bruno Walter will conduct the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orches- tra in its concert from 3 to 4 o'clock. ‘The soloist will be Yelll d’Aranyi, vio- linist. The orchestra will open the program with the overture from Men- delssohn’s music to “A Midsummer Night's Dream.” The regular Sunday international re- broadcast from Geneva will bring talks by two women delegates to the World Disarmament Conference—Dr. Mary Emma Wooley, the only woman who represented the United States, and Mrs Corbett Ashby, a member of the British delegation In the program arranged by the National Advisory Council on Radio in Education, Dr. Paul Douglas and Cyrus F. Ching will be the speakers. Dr. Douglas is professor of industrial rela- tions at the University of Chicago, and Dr. Ching is head of the industrial and public relations department of the United States Rubber Co. Request Program Arranged. A request program has been arranged by Ernest Hutcheson for his weekly radio recital at 10:30. The featured selection will be the entire “Sonata Pathetique” of Beethoven. “The Church and the World” is the subject of the sermon to be delivered by Dr. John Keating Cartwright during the Washington Catholic Radio Hour on WOL. The program will originate In the Chyrch of the Immaculate Con- ception. OL’s musical features in- clude a concert by the National Ha- wailans and a program by the Stevens Bisters, a popular harmony team. Major Radio Features INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTS. Addresses from Geneva by Dr. Mary Emmsa Woolley and Mrs. Corbett Ashby, WMAL, 12:30; “An Ameri- can Woman in Russla” by Mre. Goodwin Deuss, WRC, 4:00; “Back of the News in the World,” by Wil- lam Hard, from Geneva, WRC, 9:00. SPEECHES. *The World's Busine: Klein, WMAL, 8:30. CLASSICAL. New York Philharmonic Symphony Or- chestra, WMAL, 3:00; Grace Moore, soprano, WRC, 5:30; Ernest Hutche- son, pianist, WMAL, 10:30. VARIETY. The Stevens Sisters, WOL, 1:30; Rubinoff’s Orchestra, with George Jessel, WRC, 8:00; Musical Comedy Program, WRC, 9:45. DRAMA. Moonshine and _Honeysuckle, 2:30; - Real Folks, WMAL, 5:00; Club of the Air, WRC, 7:30; Ad- venturing with Count von Luckner, ‘WMAL, 9:30. by Dr. Julius ‘WRC, HIGH LIGHTS ELSEWHERE. 1:00—Damrosch Symphony Orchestra —WJZ, WBAL, WBZ, WWNC and WIOD. 2:30—The Fopmers; Herbie Kay's Or- chestral and Chauncey Parsons, tenor—WJZ, WBAL, WHAM and WBZ. 8:30—Garden Party; Men About Town Trio—WJZ, WMAL, WLW, WMAQ and WJR. 4:00—Travelogues: Malcolm La Prade, narrator—WJZ, WBAL, WBZ, KDKA and WLW. 4:00—Sermon by Rev. Charles Coughlin of the Church of the Little Flower—WOR, WGR, WCAO, WFBL, KMOX, WORC and WCAV. 5:00—National Vespers; Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick—WJZ, WBAL, WLW and WSM. | 6:00—Raising Junior, sketch of domes- tic life—WJZ, WBAL, WHAM and WJR. 9:00—Harold Stokes' Orchestra—WJZ, WBAL, WSM and WJR. 7:30—The Three Bakers and Billy Artz's Orchestra—WJZ, WBAL and WJR. 8:00—Melodies; Betsy Ayres, Mary Hopple and Ensemble—WJZ, WBZ, WBZA, WHAM, WJR, KDKA and KYW. 8:15—Magazine hour E rado's Orchestra— Wiz, W WBAL, WHAM, KDKA, WJR and WMC. 9:15—The Stag Party; male quartet and Brustlofl’s_Orchestra — WBAL, | WJZ, WBZ, WB: WHAM, KDKA, WJR and WLW. 9:45—Slumber Music; Laurier's String Ensemble—WJZ, WBAL, WHAM, WJR and KDKA. 10:15—O0ld Singing Master; program of old songs—WJZ, WBAL, WBZ, WHAM and KDKA. ', drama of the Secret WBAL, WBZ, WHAM and KDKA. 11:16—Sylvia Froos, crooner — WJZ, WBAL, WJR and WREN. Static Arrester Patented. “The Colormeterdyne,” an atmos- g':eleeflc indicator and static arrester, has n patented at the Patent Office by H. L. Mayson, engineer, of Sarnia, On- tario, Canada. The device is said to radio as a static t is supposed to contain a beaul be applicable to eliminator. It r. gold, silver, platinum | e - desmnia, | America, where he was an occasional | E.| Dramatizations, | o THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FEBRUARY 28, 1932—PART FOUR. Three Popular Singers Featured on Radio Programs I Co. stations. BROADCASTS COMING INTO WASHINGTON OVER REGULAR SRATION NETWORKS. ILDRED HUNT (left), contralto, who will contribute to the Broadcast Rehearsals program tomorrow night over WMAL and other Columbia stations. In the center is Nino Martini, tenor, who will present the Columbia Concerts program tonight over the same network. Grace Moore (right), American star of the Metropolitan Opera Co., will be the sololst in the Electric Circle program this afternoon over WRC and a network of other National Broadcasting WORLD AIR PARLEY WILL MISS FERRIE French Scientist Was One of Foremost Radio Experts in Europe. BY MARTIN CODEL. HEN the radio-using nations of the world convene in Madrid next September to bring up to date the inter- national radio treaty drawn up in Washington in 1927 one of the world’s most distinguished radio scien- tists and administrators, present at practically every radio conference since the beginnings of wireless, will be among the missing. Death from appendicitis in Paris February 16 took from world | radio the services of Gen. Gustave Ferrie, inspector general of the French army’s communications services and one of Europe’s foremost radio experts. Gen. Ferrie was well known in visitor and where he had many friends | in radio circles. His own contributions | to radio included many inventions and | adaptations of new developments in | nearly every branch of radio. When death overtook him, at the age of 64, he was working on & new broadcasting plan for France, involving the erection of a dozen high-power stations to serve the nation regionally and as a network. Many nations honored Gen. Ferrie in life, including the American Govern- ment, which awarded him the Distin- guished Service Cross. He was active in radio up to the time of his death, being especially well known on the Continent and internationally for his | work as director of France's Eiffel | Tower broadcasting and short-wave | station. Made Friends Via Waves. Venerated in radio circles throughout the world, Gen. Ferrie developed many of his friendships with professional and amateur radiomen via the radio waves | themselves. Jock W. Scanlin, | Navy's first wireless operator, who en- | listed as a signal boy in 1891 and is still in active service in the office of | naval communications in Washington, tells an anecdote about Gen. Ferrie | that not only indicates how the| Frenchman made some of his friend- | ships, but also recounts an important | phase of early wireless development. | The incident happened in 1912, while | Scanlin was in charge of the erection | of what is now NAA, Arlington, Va, the Navy's central radio station. “While building NAA,” says Scanlin, “I experimented {o See what receiving | we could expect. Each night about | 6:40 o'clock I would pick up a weak | signal sending a series of dashes spell- | ing the letter ‘D' and the numeral ‘6.’ I reported these to the superintendent of radio, at that time Capt. D. W.| Todd. He informed me the signals Te- sembled the time signals used by France. | “Upon_ his orders I managed to re-| ceive a fairly good copy the night of December 29, 1912, which the superin- tendent turned over to the State De- partment with a request that they for- ward it to the French authorities for verification. The copy read: ‘Atten- | tion signal Paris Observatoire — . . . | — signauz horaires’ Then followed 8 | series of dashes, series of D's and series | of 6's, between each series being a dot. This would be followed by a number of figures which showed the exact fraction of the minute each dot was sent. The| entire signal was followed by the call| {PL; |~ “On this particular night, the signals { were followed by ‘RAL Bailloud Sahara | tout bien sauhait bon voyage FL. Gift Presented to Station. | “The French authorities were very much elated to think that the Eiffel Tower signals were heard in America, | | and negotiations were begun which re- | sulted in sending a committee of French |army and navy officers here, with a professor from the Sorbonne. They carried on experiments between Arling- ton and Eiffel Tower for about a_year, | determining by radio the exact longi- | | tudes of Washington and Paris. | “During these experiments, which| { were entirely successful, I became quite | y with Gen. (then Major) Ferrie | and he told me how we came very near | getting him into trouble by our copy- Iing the signals. France, it seems, was| very strict on radio secrecy and no un- | official work_was allowed at all. But | the general had a brother officer who | was with an expedition in Africa, and he had arranged to send him a little | word of greeting to see if they could hear Eiffel in Africa. “Unfortunately or not, he chase the night of December 29 to send the greet- ing, which was the foregoing message. As he put it to me, ‘Of all the nights throughout the year you had to pick the same night to report that I had picked to break the French regu- lations. If it were not for the excite- ment and elation we felt when we found our signals had been heard in America, I would have been disciplined | for_that message.” The French commission was 80 Behind the BY THE RAD NY lingering doubts about the economic stability of American broadcasting, at least when done on a na- tional scale, are dispelled by facts and figures recited in the annual report of Merlin H. Aylesworth, president of the National Broad- casting Co., which shows the net- work made material progress last year in the face of the depression. The report shows the network had a gross revenue of $29,500,000 in 1931, which compares with $22,- 000,000 in 1930. Unofficial tabu- lations reveal that its income from time sold alone during the year was $25,607,041, an increase of | 275 per cent over its 1930 total of | $20,088,887. Income other than | that of time sold to 231 sponsors | last year came largely from the N. B. C. Artists’ Service, which had gross bookings in excess of $10,500,000. In informed radio circles, it is| believed, much the same story of | economic progress—on a smaller | scale, of course—can be told by | perhaps one-third of the 600 or more independently owned broad- casting stations. Apace with this growth there has been a tremen- dous expansion of physical facili- ties, which in N. B. C. alone necessitated the addition of 261 employes last year to bring its total payroll to 1,488. The annual report of the Co- lumbia Broadecasting System has not been made public, but its time sales figures for last year are a| matter of record. During 1931 the | C. B. S. grossed $10,184,958 from the sale of time alone, a 51.4 per cent increase over the 1930 total of $6726859. Its revenues from other sources have not been made public, but its artists’ bureau is also among the largest booking agencies in the country. * kX X ANT to be a radio announcer? | Then you'll have to be able| to pronounce not only tongue-| twisters, but words that are easy | to read yet not so simple to pro- | nounce. Jack Reid, veteran an- | nouncer of KDKA, Pittsburgh, and | now on the staff of WINS, New | York, furnishes us this list of 50 words that must slip off the would-be announcers’ tongues glibly and correctly before they can even be considered partially qualified: Atta che, abdomen, acu- men, adamant, Aloha Oe, trans- lucent, perspicuity, transmissi- bility, pedagological, illustratively, idyl, pituitary, xylophone, guber- natorial, physiognomist, facade, column, columnar, ‘cemetery, ap- paratus, aviator, ignoramus, en- semble, dentifrice, congratula- tions, going, sug&esflons‘ adver- tisements, discipline, interesting, derivation, salon, musicale, rec- onciliatory, program, com) arable, personable, Gounod, Tschaikow- sky, presentation, debutante, vase, serenade, Gretchaninoff, Boston, Houston, adversary, wrestler, Don Quixote, necessary. * ok * % “glings and arrows” of an oft- outraged public, frequently sharp- ened by the exacting demands of politics, which for a while played a happy foot ball game with radio, have not served to deter the growth of the Federal Radio Commission. That body last week observed its fifth anniversary with a hard-working staff of more than 100 and a budget of nearly $500,000 per year—a far cry from the handful of clerks loaned to the original commission by the Department of Commerce and the $15,000 budget originally allotted for the task of bringing order out of chaos in the ether. It was February 23, 1927, that the radio act of 1927 went into effect, first bringing broadcasting and other branches of radio under commission control. About that time President Coolidge named the five commissioners, who fixed March 15 as the date of their first formal meeting. Of the original commissioners, only one still holds office—Judge Eugene O. Sykes of Mississippl, representing the third zone of Southern States. Today the commission is a four- man affair, the Senate not yet having acted upon the nomination of Col. Thad H. Brown of Ohio, | now general counsel, as second | zone commissioner, succeeding | Judge Ira E. Robinson, who re- pleased with the co-operation of NAA that at the end of the experimenting France presented the Navy station with ul figure of a mariner done in still graces the signed January 15. Although the Brown appointment has been held \3 by Senator Couzens, chairman e committee in charge of Din ulgmae Microphone 10 EDITOR. by the Senate is regarded here as a foregone certainty. Observers here recall that the Senate likewise failed in 1928 to confirm Commissioner O. H. Caldwell of New York, due to op- | position from various sources, for nearly a whole year. Serving a recess appointment, Mr. Caldwell finally was confirmed by the scant margin of one vote. He had the satisfaction of receiving from Uncle Sam a check for almost an entire year's salary all in one lump—a total of nearly $10,000. Col. Brown is the eleventh ap- pointee to the Radio Commission, unless one also includes the “mid- night appointments” by President Coolidge just before he left office in 1929 of Arthur Batcheller of New York and Prof. C. M. Jansky, jr, of Minneapolis, whom the Senate failed to confirm and whom President Hoover, upoa coming into office, cast aside in favor of Maj. Gen. Charles McK. Saltzman of Towa and W. D. L. Starbuck of New York. President Coolidge’s original commission consisted of the late Admiral W. H. G. Bullard of Pennsylvania as chairman, Judge Sykes as vice chairman, Mr. Cald- well, Henry A. Bellows of Minne- sota and the late Col. John F. Dillon of California. Upon Col. Dillon’s death in the Fall of 1927, H. A. Lafount was appointed by Mr. Coolidge, he is still serving. | Then Judge Robinson of West Virginia, succeeded Admiral Bul- lard, who died shortly after Col. Dillon. When Mr. Bellows resigned, later to become a vice president of the Columbia Broadcasting System, he was succeeded by Sam Pickard of Kansas, first commis- sion secretary, who served for several years and then also be- came a C. B. S. vice president. He was succeeded by Gen. Saltz- man. O. H. Caldwell’s resignation brought Mr. Hoover’s selection of Mr. Starbuck. ok ok % MANY an accident happens in | the studio and it's only the quick wit of the artist that saves the day. Ruth Lyon, Chicago N. B. C. soprano, calls on experience her most embarrassing moment. She was singing into the microphone, with her music spread before her. All of a sudden it disap})eared. A production man ha uncon- sciously grabbed it up with some other papers and walked off. But Ruth went right ahead, im- provising the words of the re- maining verse and chorus. * X kX ROADCASTERS admit they have a feeling that the popu- larity of the romantic baritone already is beginning to wane. It was only late last Summer when this kind of singing sprang into prominence. Now, the broadcasters say, nlthough there has been no marked lessening in the amount of fan mail received there is a gradual lessening of enthusiasm apparent among listeners. * x ok % AYMOND KNIGHT, chief of the Cuckoos, has found an- other outlet for his humor. It is & new sketch which he calls “making the movies” and which is to deal with activities in the movie studio, with the bur- lesque idea predominating. Be- sides writing the script, Knight is to be chief actor and director of the program. The starting date fi !l;{arch 20 at 9:45 pm. over 5 C. Linked by Radio Telephone. Because the rugged British Columbia coast line precludes long-distance wire telephony, & Tadio telephone service between Vancouver and Prince Rupert, including a 400-mile radio circult be- tween Prince Rupert and Campbell River, on Vancouver Island, Was re- cently established to sonnect with the e telephone systems of the cities of Vancouver and Victoria. This opens "lr to telephony an area that pre- ously enjoyed contact with the out- side world only via radiotelegraphy. et i e e Authorized Service A. C. & Northeast Speedometer Repairs MILLER-DUDLEY CO. 1716 14th St. NW. North 1583-4 CANADA MAY RENEW PLEA FOR AIR WAVES Formal Demand Seems Likely as Result of Reaction to Recent Decision. A newly aroused “radio consclous- ness” seems to have been stimulated in Canada by the recent decision of the British Privy Council upholding the Dominion as against provincial juris- diction over broadcasting. To broad- casters in the United States this means that Canada, as soon as its leaders determine upon a radio policy, will probably renew in a formal way its demands, hitherto heard only from un- official sources, for more broadcasting wave lengths. Of the 96 broadcast channels, 6 have been alloted exclusively to Canada, under a “gentlemen’s agreement” with the United States, and 12 others are shared with American stations. While the disparity may appear large, the division was accomplished a half dozen years or 50 ago by mutual agreement and, as far as avoiding interference is concerned, has proved quite practicable. Canada has some 60 stations, in the United States there are 610. It was a division that grew nat- urally out of the tremendous impetus radio development had in the United States, while in Canada it was being retarded both by palitical and econom- ic factors. Some of the political obstacles have been removed by the court decision upholding federal au- tonomy over radio—the economic fac- tor still exists due to the fact that Canada’s 10,000,000 population is wide- ly scattered in all but a fe® major centers. The fact that much of Canada's broadcast reception comes from high- power stations in this country, with programs advertising American goods, some not manufactured in Canada, has led to resentment in some Ca- nadian circles. A demand for gov- ernment ownership and operation of the broadcasting system has been heard frequently there and was rec- ognized to some extent in the Aird Commission's report of 1929, recom- mending the nationalization of Cana- dian radio. The report of the radio investigating committee proposed, among other things, that a 50,000-watt station be erected in each province, or seven in all, supplemented by strategically placed local stations of lesser power; that a license fee of $3 per annum be imposed on the 600,000 receiving sets in use, upon which a tax of $l is now paid; that a modicum of indirect | advertising be accepted, and that the rest of the cost be borne by a fed- eral subsidy. —e TELEVISION SPREADS British Baird Interests to Make South American Debut. ‘Television is making its South Ameri- can debut through the agency of the British Baird interests, which shortly expect also to have a visual broadcast- ing station in operation in this coun- try in conjunction with WMCA, New York. According to a report from Mil- ton T. Houghton, assistant trade com- missioner at Buenos Aires, a company has been formed in Argentina to be known as Baird Television, Ltd, for the purpose of exploiting in Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Uruguay the patents of Baird Television, Ltd., of London. This company, Mr. Houghton reports to the Department of Commerce, will handle all the apparatus lected by John Logle Baird, and plans are to combine television with sound broad- casting as in England and the United States. In Buenos Aires it is planned to establish a station in_conjunction with LR4, better known as Radio Splen- did. Experiments have been conducted for the last year by the group incor- the new company, who are named as Antonio C. Devoto, Benjamin Gache, ml A. Perrone, Antonio F. Masettl, Arico and Ignacio Gomez. RCA or Ceco Tubes = 1c SALE Buy One Tube and Extra Tube Same Size ' ore. BRING THISAD" WitH YOU RADIO TELEVISION CO. V.W. NEW POLICY We Will Your RADIO SET and CHARGE IT Work Guaranteed /OKAY RADIO CO. 417 11th St. NW Tel. DI 3106 IETHER OWNERSHIP 1556E UNSOLVED iSupreme Court Erases From Docket Last Case Linked to Question. : ; —today Temains in doubt after four years of effort to have it passed upon by the Supreme Court of the United States. By dismissing the petition for review of the American Bond and Mortgage Co. of Chicago, which suffered the loss of a broadcasting station in 1928 at the hands of the Federal Radio Commis- sion, the Supreme Court has erased from its docket the last remaining case raising this and collateral issues having o do with the constitutionality of the operations of the Radio Commission. In all, half a dozen attempts have been made to have the Supreme Court test the legality of the radio law and, while that tribunal listened patiently to argu- ments last year, it refused to pass judg- ment. BY ROBERT MACK. OLUTION of broadcasting’s most Yerplexmg and most fundamental egal issue—who owns the ether Chicago Station Involved. A;r‘l_)lldly. geduuution raised in the erican’ Bond and Mo e which involved the deleuoxrxul:lg SL::!‘(':!; WMBB-WOK, Chicago, was that of whether a station had a property right in the wave length and facility it oc- cupied. While the lower courts have held to the contrary, the company con- tended that by wiping out its station it suffered a loss of property without due compensation as required by the fifth amendment of the Constitution. The theory underlying the radio act, according to Government lawyers, is that radio as interstate commerce is subject to regulation by Congress through delegation of authority, which it vested in the Radio Commission in 1927. It is held also that the public owns the ether. In trust for the pub- lic, therefore, Congress issues fran- chises for use of the ether, in which, Government counsel holds, there can be no vested property right. Fails to Give Reasons. This is the second time the Supreme Court has refused to review the WMBB- WOK case. ‘The Supreme Court, by refusing to grant & writ of certiorari from the = cago decision, permits that court's deci- sion to au.ndlu nm}s‘:nm some other case comes along raising the property rights question in more mnm?c' fashion. The highest tribunal did no give its reasons for refusing to review the case, since it is not impelled to do so_under its procedure. Property rights is the paramount is- sue raised in two cases now pending in the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia growing from deletion orders of the Radio Commission. If the com- mission is sustained, counsel for the stations a y have served notice that they will appeal to the Supreme Court in another attempt for final settlement of the question, (Copyright, 1932.) CUBA HAS 32 AMATEURS Highest Power BStation Is 300- Watter at Guantanamo. ‘There are 32 amateurs in Cuba, ac- cording to a new log of Cuban amateur stations compiled by the Radio Di- vision, Department of Commerce. The; are scattered throughout the island. Thelr calls all begin with CM. ‘The highest-power Cuban amateur station_is a 300-watter, ted by Earle D. Bayer at the United States Naval Station at Guantanamo, working in the 21-meter band. Trumpet Calls Broadcast. Here's real economy made possible by the acoustical arts. At the Marine Arsenal in Toulon, France, trumpet calls are recorded on disks and trans- mitted through a powerful loud speaker to all ships in the roadsteads, thereby reducing the need for ship buglers. ‘Wherefore Wireless World of London suggests that the economy scheme might be carried still further by keeg; ing records of ceremonial gunfire to transmitted through super loud speak- ers when occasion ds. 30 Different Home Improvements at One Cost— saving you something on each sepa- rate job. If you have three, four, or five jobs to be done—EBERLY will group them as one job. The work is billed to you as one job—minus the extra costs you'd have to pay sepa- rately to individual firms. Enmy will budget your payments according to your income. You pay no more than you can easily af- ford. BERLY can do 30 different home improvement jobs in your home— Today on (All programs scheduled for 475.9 Meters, WMAL 630 Kilocycles. 9:00a—Land o' Make Believe. 10:00a—Columbia Church of the Air. 10:30a—Community Center Recital. 11:00a—Julia Mahoney and Charles Carlisle. 11:15a—Watch Tower Service, 11:30a—Voice of St. Louis. 12:30—Rebroadcast from Geneva; | dress by Dr. Mary Emma Wool- | ley and Mrs. Corbett Ashby. | 12:45—The Street singer. 1:00—Cathedral Hour. 1:30—The Garden Club. 1:45—Wee Willie Robyn. 2:00—Eight Sons of Ell 2:30—Columbia Church of the Air. | 3:00—New York Philharmonic Sym- | phony Orchestra. | 4:00—Evensong service from Wash- ington Cathedrai, | 5:00—Real Folks | 5:30—Wardman Park Orchestra. | 6:00—Mayflower Orchestra. | 6:30—Special program. 6:45—Melody Speedway. 7:00—Program by National Advisory | Council of Radio in Education; | addresses by Dr. Paul Douglas | and Cyrus F. Ching. 7:30—Rybb's Novelty Orchestra, 7:45—A Night in Paris. 8:00—Harry Sosnik and his band. 8:30—"“The World's Business,” by Dr. Julius Klein. 8:45—“Your Child,” by Angelo Patri. | 9:00—Pisk University chorus. | 9:30—Adventuring with Count | Luckner. | 10:00—Edna Hopper's Variety Show. | 10:30—Ernest Hutcheson, pianist. 11:00—The Gauchos. 11:30—Evening Melodies. 12:00—Weather forecast. 12:01a—Eddie Duchin’s Orchestra. 12:30 to 1:00a—California Melodies. Early Program Tomorrow. 8:00a—Salon Musicale. 8:30a—Morning Devotions, 8:45a—The Dutch Girl. 9:00a—Opening the Morning Mall, 9:30a—Tony’s Scrap Bodk, 9:45a—Special feature. 9:50a—Frank Young, pianist. 10:00a—Chatting with Ida Bailey Allen. 10:15a—Sweet and Hot. 10:45a—Madison Singers. 11:00a—Musical Alphabet, 11:30a—Melody Parade. 11:45a—Ben _Alley, tenor. 12:00m—Radio Guide. 12:05—Charles Boulanger’s Orchestra. 12:45—Columbia Revue. 1:00—Taft Orchestra. 1:30—Ritz Orchestra. 2:00—Ann Leaf at the organ. 2:30—American School the Afr, 3:00—Four Eaton Boys. 3:15—Columbia Salon Orchestra. 3:30—Sam Prager, pianist. 3:45—Mount Holyoke Glee Club. 4:00—Rhythm Kings. 205.4 Meters. | WISV 135 Kitoeyeies. | 6:00 to 7:00a—Radio revival. | 10:30a—Salon music. 10:45a—Watch Tower Service. 11:00a—Services of the Fourth Presby- terian Church. 12:15— le and Gold,” by Robert Brooks. 1:00—Dreamland Melodies. 1:30—Gaffer Grey. 1:45—Musical program. 2:00—Church of the Ailr. 2:30—Metropolitan Dance Orchestrs. 3:00—Studio feature. 3:30—Mayfair Dance Orchestra. 4:00—Studio feature. 4:30—Mormon Church Service, 5:00—Modern Living. 5:30—Gospel Twilight Hour. 6:00—Gospel Spreading Association. 7:00—Shoreham _Concert Orchestra. 9:15—Percy Zilch and Smolzeir, 9:30—Baptist Chapel Echoes. 10:00—Slaughter’s Orchestra. 10:30—Evangelical Church of the Air. 11:00 to 11:30—Gospel Service. Early Program Tomorrow. 6:00a—Radio Revival. T7:00a—Joe and Harry. 7:30a—King_Tut. 8:00a—The Breakfast Club. | 9:00a—Woman’s Radio Club. :45a—Problems of the Home. | 10:00a—Peggy Clarke's Chat. | 10:45a—Program by Federation of ‘Women's Clubs. 2 von |1 11:10a—Gospel Choir. the Radio Eastern Standard Time.) WRC 315.6 Meters. 950 Kilocycles. 8:00a—Melody Hour. 9:00a—Chiidren's Hour. 10:00a—Mexican Typica Orchestrs. 10.30-—816‘ de Doerr and his Saxophone tet 11:00a—-Neapolitan Days. 11:30a—Library of Congress Musicale. 13:15—Morning Musicale, 12:30—Tales of the Emerald Isles. 12:45—'Control of Crime by Law,” by Guy A. Thompson, mt_of the American Bar iation, 1:00—Organ recital. 1:30—The Silver Flute. : American Singers, with Willlam Wirges' Orchestra. 5—Sunday Bright Spots. Moonshine and Honeysuckle. 0—Wayne King's Orchestra. 0—Dr. S. Parkes Cadman. 0—Rebroadcast from Germany— “An American Woman in Rus- sia” by Mrs. Goodwin Deuss, and recital by Marcel Wittrisch, tenor. 4:30—Tree Hour. 5:30—Circle Program, featuring Grace Moore, soprano, 6:00—National Catholic Hour. 6:30—National Education Association program; music and speeches. 7:00—National Jubilee Singers. 7:15—Radio Party. 7:30—Club of the Alr. 8:00—Rubinof’s Orchestra, with George Jessel. 9:00-—Rebroadcast from Geneva— “Back of the News in the World,” by Willlam Hard. 5—Album of Familiar Music. Musical Comedy program. Last Minute News. 10:17—Alexander Bargansky, cellist, and Leo Ornstein, pianist. 10:45—Sunday at Seth Parkers. 11:15—Special dedicatory program for Station KTBS. 12:00—Weather forecast. 12:01 to 1:00a—Palais d'Or Orchestra. Early Program Tomorrow. 6:45a—Tower Health Services. 8:00a—Gene and Glenn. 8:15a—Morning Devotions, 8:30a—Cheerio. 9:00—Three Mustachios. 9:15a—Flying Fingers. 9:30a—Top o' the Morning. 9:45a—Food I?rocmm. 10:00a—Mrs, Blake's Radio Column. 10:15a—Dr. Copeland's Health Clinic. 10:30a—Breen and de Rose. 10:45a—Kay Reid, contralto. 11:002—Sonata Recital, 11:30a—Hugo Mariani’s Marionettes. 1215% The Feal George Washington 15— George Was! " by Charles Colfax Long. 12:30—National Farm and Home Hour. 1:30—Emory Daugherty’s Orchestra. 2:00—"Prevention and Treatment of Rickets,” by Dr. Edward 8. Rimer, WOL 228.9 Meters. 1,310 Kilocycles. 9:55a—Police Bulletins. 10:00a—Organ Reverie. 10:30a—Sea Isle Moaners, 11:00a—8ervices of the 2:1 3 3:0f 3:3 4:0 9:1 9:4 0:1 1:00—Maui Islanders. 1:15—Jacob Sokol, tenor. 1:30—Stevens Sisters. 1:45—Jimmy Harbison, 2:00 to 2:15—“Stamp Albert F. Kunze. 4:30—National Hawailans, 4:45—The Entertainers. 5:00 to 6:00—Catholic Radio Hour. Early Program Tomorrow. 7:00a—Musical Clock. 8:00a—Birthdays. 8:05a—Musical Clock. 9:55a—Police Bulletins. 10:00a—Modern Melodies. 10:30a—Festival of Music. WIDER SERVICE PLANNED Radiotelephony Will Extend Into Farther Reaches of Alaska. Radiotelephony will be extended into the farther reaches of Alaska this Spring, according to War Department plans. Col. Dawson Olmstead, United States signal officer at Seattle, is now in Alaska arranging for a radiotelephone service at Ketch! , from which com- munication by voice will be maintained with surrounding communities, can- neries and cannery tenders. The Army radio net at Alaska now is almost en- tirely radiotelegraph. ances,” Wy MODERNIZE Cour Home Is Your Burden House a on You? RE you crushed each month meetifig household expenses? Make your home share this burden that it causes. Apartmentize a the EBERLY Plan. apartment in your home will add $40 or $30 art of it by An EBER! Y-lrnng%do L3 your monthly income. EBERLY can take the unused sPace in_your home—add a bath room, a sink, a clothes closet—make a few necessary improvements, and right away you have rentable property. EBERLY improvements not only add extra cash to your income—they add new valuation to your prop- erty. After you have paid for your home improve- ments through the aid of an EBERLY-made apart- ment, you can use this modernized, improved space as you wish, Start today—Increase your income this month— eall. . .and talk with an EBERLY representative about apartmentizing your home. “THERE 1S NO FINANCE FEE” “All Ways” the Lowest Price—We Can Always Prove It! A. EBERLY’S SONS, Inc. 1108 K Street N.W. Telephone Dlstrict 6557