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HOOVER TO PLEAD AGAINST HOARDING Appeal Will Be Carried Over Both WMAL and WRC Tonight. RESIDENT HOOVER will carry his plea against the hoarding of money directly to the people of the Nation tonight in a special program to be broadcast over extensive networks of the National and Columbia broadcasting systems In Washington the program will be carried by both WRC and WMAL. Col. Frank Knox, publisher of the! Chicago Daily News and chairman of the Citizens’ Reconstruction Organiza- tion to combat the hoarding of money, will open the program from Chicago. He also will introduce President Hoover, who will speak from the cabinet room of the White House. After Mr. Hoover speaks, the program will be switched to the Willard Hotel, where Secretary of Treasury Mills will explain the details of the plans for issuing 60-day Treasury certificates. Addresses also will be made by Senator Robinson of Arkansas, Democratic leader of the Senate, and Gen. Charles G. Dawes, president of the Reconstruc- tion Finance Corporation. Mitchell to Talk. Aside from the special anti-hoarding program, WRC will broadcast its reg- ular N. B. C. attractions, and a talk at 12:45 o'clock by Attorney General Wil-+ llam D. Mitchell. His topic is “Fed- eral as Distinguished FProm State Con- trol of Crime.” Glovanni Martinelli, leading tenor of the Metropolitan Opera Co., will be the guest soloist in the Electric Circle program at 5:30. His contributions in- clude * Celeste Aida” from the Verdl opera “Nins,” and four familiar Eng- lish songs, “Because,” “Homing” “Ah, Love But a Bay” and “Song of Songs.” Another afternoon musical feature will be a concert by the Schwarzmeier Children’s Choir to be brought from Berlin via short waves. This German musical _organization consisting of children between 8 and 14 was estab- lished 29 years ago by Karl Schwarz- meler. The children sang twice for Mayor Walker of New York when he was in Berlin. The Rotary Clubs of the United States will be honored in the Tree Hour program. The program features the organization's song “Oh, Rotary.” Twelve old time melodies also are on the program. snP Thomas Beecham, English mil- lonaire conductor and one of the most dynamic figures in European music, will make his American radio debut to- day when he conducts the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra in its concert from 3 to 4. For his first broadcast Beechham has chosen a pro- gram consisting of two symphonies and ohe of Strauss’ major symphonic poems. Hans Barth on Air. Hans Barth, internationally famous pianist, will present the Columbia con- cert program at 6:30. He will use a quarter-tone piano, an instrument employing a 24-tone scale. In his weekly recital at 11:30, Ernest Hutcheson, pianist, will feature “Valse Impromptu,” he also will play the second and third movement from Schumann's “Concerto in A Minor. Very Rev. John Fenlon, superior of the Supliclan Fathers in the United States, will preach the sermon during the Washington Catholic Radio Hour on WOL. This originates in the Church of the Immaculate Con- ception and is under the direction of Rev. Francis J. Hurney. WOL’s musical features will be pro- vided by the National Hawaiians, the Maui Islanders and Jimmy Harbison, pianist. Jubilee singers of the Industrial School of Belleville, Va., will be heard in a 15-minute concert this afternoon over WJSV. This station's program also contains a concert by the Shore- ham _ Orchestra, dance music by Slaughter’s Orchestra and a recital by Roland Wheeler, tenor. Razor Blades for Radio. ‘What to do with old razor blades— one of the world’s most serious prob- Jems—has been solved by H. Steanson, s radio rimenter of Newcastle, Eng- land. He hag built a one-tube radio set which incorporated 63 blades and can tune in five stations. The blades are used as condenser vanes. Major Radio Features SPECIAL EVENTS Anti-hosrding_campaign featuring ad- dress by President Hoover, WR and WMAL, 10:15. INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTS. Address from Geneva by Prederic Wil- | llam Wile, WMAL, 12:30; Concert by Schwarzmeier Children's Choir, WRC, 4:00. SPEECHES. “Pederal as Distinguished from State Control of Crime” by Attorney | General Mitchell, WRC, 12:45; “Our Government,” by David Lawrence, WRC, 9:00. CLASSICAL. New York Philharmonic Symphony Or-, chestra, WMAL, 3:00; Glovanni Martinelll, tenor, WRC, 5:30; Ernest Hutcheson, pianist, WMAL, 11:30. VARIETY. The Stevens Sisters, WOL, 1:30; Rubinofl’s Orchestra, with George | Jessel, WRC, 8:00; Musical Comedy Program, WRC, 9:45. DRAMA. and _ Honeysuckl 2:30; Real Folks, WMA Club of the Air, WRC, 7:30; Ad- venturing with Count von Luckner, WMAL, 9:30. HIGH LIGHTS ELSEWHERE. 1:00—Damrosch Symphony Orchestra | —WJZ, WBAL, WBZ, WWNC and WIOD. | 3:30—The Foamers; Herble Kay's Or- | 18 chestra_and Chauncey Parsons, tenor—WJZ, WBAL, WHAM and ‘WBZ. 8:30—Garden Party; Marion Ander- son, contralto—WJZ, WMAI WLW, WMAQ and WJR. 4:00—Travelogues; Malcolm La Prade, narrator—WJZ, WBAL, WBZ, KDKA and WLW. 4:00—Sermon by Rev. Charles E., 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. 7:00—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; Dramatizations, Emest La Prado’s Orchestra— WJZ, WBZ, WBAL, WHAM, | KDKA, WJR and WMC. 9:15—The Stag Party, James Stanley, bass; male quartet and Ivan Rudisills’ Orchesira— W BAL, WJZ, WBZ, WBZA, WHAM, KDKA, WJR and WLW. 10:15—Old Singing Master; program of old songs—WJZ. WBAL, WBZ, ‘WHAM and KDXA. 11:16—Sylvia Froos, crooner — WJZ, WBAL, WJR and WREN. - _ THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, MARCH 6, 19 32—PART FOUR. Three Recent Additions to Radio Featured in Broadcasts TWO TAKING PART IN NEW COLUMBIA NET WORK SERIES INTRODUCED LAST WEEK. I RENE WICKER (left), who is taking the role of Mme. Louise in the new “Beau Bachelor Charles W. Smith, tenor, soloist with Rudolph Schramm's Orchestra in the WRC concerts. “Today and yesterday,” another new Columbia series on WMAL's schedule. series on WMAL and other Columbia stations. Gladys Brittain (right), soprano, selected as the star for In the center is QUESTION .. &T. RIGHT T0 WAVES Radio Commission Asks Ruling by Court of Appeals. BY MARTIN CODEL. ROUND an apparently insigni- ficant application for a 5-watt experimental radio station, de- signed to operate on wave lengths so short that they are measured in inches and use antennae about the size of a small pin, has de- veloped a complication in radio admin- istration that threatens the entire radio system of the International Telephone & Telegraph Corporation, holding com- pany of Postal Telegraph and counter- part in the international communica- tions fleld of the domestic American ‘Telephone & Telegraph Co. ‘The tiny station, developed in the Paris laboratories of I. T. & T. was intended to experiment with fractional- meter radio channels to determine their practicability for radiotelegraphy, broadcasting, television or other serv- ices. Trials carried out last Surmmer Behind the BY THE RADIO EDITOR. the battle rages or the peace talk flows, radio is there to furnish| almost, instantaneous contacts with the outside world. Not only are the cables from the Shanghai war zone and the Geneva Disarmament Conference being taxed to capacity, but at Shanghai the Chinese govern- ment’s powerful radio station is carrying a large share of the world traffic to America and at Geneva the League of Nations’ newly completed “Radio-Nations” has just been impressed into serv- ice for direct communication with this country. Additionally, from Geneva come periodical reports to the American broadcasting networks by Ameri- ca’s two “speaking reporters,” Wil- liam Hard and Frederic William | Wile. At Shanghai, American cor- respondents have found the radio a ready medium for filing their dispatches up to now without censorship. Due to the time dif- ference between this country and Shanghai, an event occurring | there is actually reported here the | sion’s legal division hel in Europe revealed that with only one- half watt of power it could transmit audible radio signals over 20 miles of the English Channel between Dover and Calais. Brought Apparatus Here. So eager were I T .& T. officials to pursue the experiments further in this country—especially in view of the in- tense rivalry that seems to be develop- ing among research laboratories to plumb the potentialities of the ultra- short waves—that they brought M.| Clavier, French engineer, over to the | United States with the apparatus used in the European tests to conduct the experiments also at their Newark lab- oratories. Expecting to secure the experimental wave lengths as & matter of routine, they ran into a snag at the Radio Com- mission, which not only has refused to grant this application but has asked| the Court of Appeals here to rule on the right of the I. T. & T. and its sub- sidiaries to hold any radio wave licenses at all. The decision of the court is ex- | cted momentarily. peThe whole situation, complex in the | extreme, grows out of the commission's more or less sudden determination to test the validity of section 12 of the radio act, which directs it to "E;ie cense ts “to any company, = gcunong::l association of which any officer or director is an alien, or of which more than one-fifth of the capi- | tal stock may be voted by aliens or | heir representatives,” etc. y {N‘I‘;\flep T. & T. is dominantly | American, four of its 23 directors are | citizens of foreign' countries, namely, | Conde de Guell and Marques de Urqui- | o of Spain, where I T. & T. holds im- portant telephone, telegraph and radio concessions; Henry B. Orde of Canada, where 1. T. & T. has a telegraph af- filiation with the Canadian Pacific, and Frank Gill of Great Britain, vice president in charge of European op- erations. Has 85,000 Stockholders. This information has been filed with | the commission along with other data about the corporate setup of I T. & T.| and its subsidiaries, The I T. & T.| itself, according to a letter filed Iv'lth the commission by Charles Evans Hughes, Jr., its counsel, has more than 5,000 stockholders, of whom more than 76,000, owning more than 6,000,000 of its total of 6,642,508 shares, reside in the United States. The other stock- holders are in various other countries. The 5-watt wave application was first made last September in the name of the International Communications Laboratories of Newark, a 100 per cent cubsidiary. Later, when the commis 2 1d it up “until the commission may have an opportu- | nity to satisfy itself with respect to nfie‘ al eligibility of applicant,” the appll- | cation was renewed in January in the neme of Lewis M. Clement, an 1T & T. engineer at Newark and an Ameri- can citizen. The applicants asked for the frequen- cies 1,000,000 to 3,000,000 kilocycles, or 10 to 33 centimeters, which is only one- tenth to one-third of a meter—a por- tion of the radio spectrum 80 far ;:; moved from present operations 12. A only a handful of experimenters ‘e ever been licensed to use it. The pm?l- bilities of these waves are practically unknown today, but many engineers see in them more avenues of radio| communication in the future, l.ncluding possibly localized broadcasting an television services. These are the ww called “line-of-sight” _waves, which “nust be projected from high points and | Which do not travel beyond the horizon. Delay Short Wave Grants. Even Mr. Clement’s application Was held up, the commission refusing to grant any more short waves to com- panies involved in the litigation grow- ing out of the scramble for the 40 channels recaptured after the Uni- versal Wireles bankruptcy. Asking the court here to clarify its man- date directing that these waves allocated to Radio Col ation of America and Mackay o & Tele- graph Co,, the latter also an I T. & - subsidiary, the commission also Te- quested that the court pass upon the right of I T. & T. or any of its sub- sidiaries to hold radio licenses in view of section 12. This is the decision now anxiously “day before it happens.” Early plans of combined news- paper and radio interests, as a matter of fact, also embraced having a “speaking reporter” at the Far Eastern war zone, who would talk across the Pacific to American listeners from time to| But wpparently the plans| time. went awry. oyd Gibbons, the war corresjjondent and speaker, went first to Manchuria with the dual object of reporting it for the Helrst newspapers and also for the yadio. Only one of his radie talks through—that was when he spoke from HarbXy and introduced a Japanese general to the American radio audience. P Although radiotelegraph con- tacts are readily available, there is no radio-telephone medium at Shanghai, whither Gibbons went from Manchuria as soon as major hostilities changed fronts. If there were a radio-telephone station at Shanghali, it is more than prob- able that first-hand vocal reports would also be coming from there as from Geneva. The Shanghai radio station is at Chen-ju, 7 miles west of the city roper. According to George F. hecklen, American adviser to the tions, it has been spared from bombing attacks by the Japanese despite the fact that hostile planes have frequently flown close to it. Shellfire and some bombs hav come so close, however, as to ren- der exceedingly dangerous the re- pair work that the station’s en- gineers have had to do occasion- ally. The station operates on short waves contacting San Fran- cisco directly. It was built by Americans, who trained and still supervise the Chinese personnel. So much verbiage has been flowing from Geneva that it be- came necessary to establish a temporary radio circuit between New York and “Radio-Nations,” a short-wave beam station situated a few minutes’ walk from the vil- lage of Pangins, near Nyon, pic- turesque resort on Lake Geneva. The receiving station is at Colorex, another nearby village. Messages are filed at a central office in by remote control. Radio-Nations” was built for the secretariat of the League of Nations last year to make avail- able a means of quick communica- tlon with nations of the world either directly or by relays from other powerful European statio Two short-wave transmitters are used, one built by the French and the other rushed through for com- pletion by the British recently in time for the Disarmament Con- ference. Each transmitter has 20,000 watts power, the first oper- ating on 15,19, 35 and 60 meters, and the second on 15, 18 and 35 meters. The station, which began operating on February 3, has opened direct circuits with Shang- hai, Nagoya, Japan, Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro, ok % DRASTIC price reductions and & gain in the sale of tubes were factors which marked the progress of the radio industry in 1931, ac- cording to current Radio Retail- ing. The industry’s income for the year was $309,270,000 and 1t radio | actually came | Chinese minister of communica- | Geneva, which is connected with | the sending and receiving stations' Microphone sold 3,420,000 sets, these includ- ] ing phonograph combinations and | automobile receivers. | _ Favorable factors facing the in- dustry as 1932 gets under way in- clude, according to the radio pub- lication, the national average of one million new homes a year and the prospect of notable advances | in television. Further gains are expected from the growing popu- larity of automobile radio sets and of short-wave receivers. The income from tubes last year was $65,550,000. The total is smaller than the 1930 income of $119,600,000, but is ascribed to re- ductions in tube prices. The total of tubes sold in 1931 was 53,500,000 which compares with 52,000,000 for 1930. The complete radio units sold | last year closely approached the 1930 total of 3,827,000 sets. Last year's dollar volume was consid- erably behind the 1930 income of $500,951,500, not because of any real market loss to the industry, but because of reduced prices on sets. This drop also includes the essentially rock-bottom prices made necessary in sales of mid- get sets. * ¥ X % SIXTH national radio audi- tion with first-place prizes of | $5,000 each for the young man and | young woman singers rating high- est in their respective groups was announced last week by the At- water Kent Foundation. As in| | previous years, the door isopened | |In the 1932 audition to any non- | professional singer between 18 and 25. | Forty-four Washington singers | competed in the 1931 audition. | The winners were Ina Marie Holt- zscheiter and Edwin C. Steffe, | who represented the District on the semi-finals in New York last | November. * * X % WHEN the Republicans and | dential nominating conventions in Chicago, television pick-ups may be established alongside the radio microphones on or near the rostrum of the convention hall so that pictures as well as words of | the participating notables can be | broadcast. This is announced on authority of the Radio Manu- facturers’ Association, represent- ing the majority of the producers | of radio equipment in this country. If the conventions are televised, it is almost a certainty that tele- vision will be employed by the campaigning candidates later and that it will also be used during the presidential inauguration in March, 1933. The exact nature of the polit- ico-vision plans are not known, nor have the publicity head- quarters of the two major parties | here entered into any arrange- ments as yet. Such arrangements as are made will probably be with | convention headquarters in Chi- cago, and the televising will un- doubtedly be done over local Chi- cago stations. It will not be done on a national scale as there are no television networks in exis- tence as yet, and all television is being done on a localized scale. Chicago has three visual broad- casting stations now and soon will have a few more. The National | Broadcasting Co. now operates | W9XAP, the 2,500-watt television | station established by the Chicago | Daily News and connected with WMAQ; the Chicago Federation of Labor is rebuilding its W9XAA, operating with 500 watts and con- nected with WCFL, and Western Television Co. has W9XAO with 500 watts and connected with WIBO. In addition, the Chicago Tribune’s WGN proposes shortly to add a television adjunct, and in Milwaukee there is an ultra- high frequency visual station operated with 500 watts by the Milwaukee Journal. | The images that will be broad- cast from the convention hall, except for unusual conditions such as sometimes prevail for DX listening, will be confined to reception by those having tele- visors in and near Chicago. For | the most part, the images are still |in a crude state, though the fea- | tures of those televised can readily be recognized. Television, so the | experts say, is now at about the | |same stage of development as | |sound broadcasting of 10 years | ago. | Democrats hold their presi- \WJR, Detroit, and WGAR, Cleve- | Hopewell, N. J., with receivers connect- Authorized Service Carter Carburetors— Eclipse—Bendix Lockheed Brakes R. C. A and a large user of interna- | tional and domestic radio waves, stands to lose all those channels unless its| parent I. T. & T. drops its foreign di- Tectors. This the I, T. & T. is hesitant | to do, at least in fhe case of the two | awaited by I. T. & T. If it isadverse, the Mackay company, only American | zival in the international radio fleld of MILLER-DUDLEY CO. 1716 14th St. NW. North 1583-4 Spaniards, because of “embarrassment” | it may cause with the new Spanish R&-I puklic, \MEXICO GETS MORE RADIO REGULATIONS Greater and Greater Control Makes Broadcasters’ Path Far From Rosy. Far from rosy is the path of the radio broadcaster in Mexico, whose | activities are being hedged about by more and more government regulations. Particularly careful is the Mexican government ot to permit the radio to be used for propaganda that might foment revolutionary spirit. Only a few months ago a party of alleged Communists raided a leading broadcasting station in Mexico City, held the staff at bay at gun points and went on the air for about 15 minutes of anti-government speech- making. They were stopped only after the police heard of the broadcasts and rushed to the scene. Perhaps it was this experience which led President Ortiz Rubio to promulgate a regulation recently which forbids any- one “to send news or messages whose text is opposed to the safety of the state, international good will, public peace or order, morality,” etc. The same set of regulations, specifically excluding radio from the category of public utilities, divides stations into two classes, “commercial” and ‘“cultural” and requires the posting of bonds with the minister of communications for the protection of authors and composers. Another regulation prohibits Mexi- can broadcasters “from establishing studios on foreign soil connected by telephone lines.” This law, which apparently has not been enforced, is evidently aimed at Dr. John R. Brink- ley's powerful XER, at Villa Acuna, just across the Rlo Grande from Del Rio, Tex., which is really an American station in that it is backed by Ameri- can capital and its 75000 watts are really designed to serve the United States audience. Most of XER'S programs come from its studios in Del Rio. This station, the most powerful in North America and widely heard in the states, is devoted largely to promoting the sales of the Kansas doctor’s patent medicines. TWO NEW TELEVISION STATIONS LICENSED land, Get Authority to Build Visual Adjuncts. ‘Two new television stations, both em- ploying the ultra-short waves, will soon be on the air, bringing the total num- ber of visual broadcasters authorized by the Federal Radio Commission to 32. The commission has just granted WJR, Detroit, and WGAR, Cleveland, both under the same ownership, au- thority to build television adjuncts to operate in synchronism with one an- other on a group of ultra-high fre- | quencies between 43,000 and 80,000 | kilocycles (about 7 to 3.5 meters) with 200 watts. In addition, the Detroit station will also utilize a medium band of waves between 2,000 and 2,100 kilocycles (150 to 1428 meters) with 500 watts. A hearing has been ordered March 8 on the application of First National Tele- vision Corporation of Kansas City, pro- posing to build a visual station there to operate in conjunction with KMBC. TELEVISION HUNTS BABY Television—radio in its newest form —and the short waves have had a part in the broadcasts made by the two networks in connection with the Lind- bergh baby kidnaping. Television gave an indication of its future possibilities when W-2XAB of the C. B. 8. chain sent out on 107 meters electrical reproductions of photographs of Charles Lindbergh, jr. Portable short wave transmitters were set up by both N. B. C. and C. B. 8. at | ing to the network located at Princeton. At Princeton and Trenton microphones with direct lines also were available. Short wave equipment was used at Hopewell because of the lack of wire facilities. Japanese Resent “Jap” Name. Apparently unfounded were the re- that Japan has ordered her ama- urs to cease communicating with American and Canadian amateurs dur- ing the Chinese hostilities. Members of the Japanese Amateur Radio League are still very much “alive,” although the long span across the Pacific makes two-way contact with American “hams” rather infrequent. Proof that the Jap- anese amateurs are still active is evi- dent from the umbrage several of its members took when radio circles re- cently referred to them as “Japs.” To call them that seems to be an insult. “BETTER USED CARS” We Never Offer Any Used Cars But “Better Used Cars” RADIDSET SERVE 10 FIAT FRAUDS i Standard Price Aim of Cen- tral Organization, Already Functioning. BY ROBERT MACK. O wipe out fraudulent practices I nd to standardize prices for repair and servicing of radio | receiving sets, the radio service men of the ccuntry have or- ganized a central organization. Called the Insiitute of Radio Service Men, the | organization already is functioning in | key cities, and has as its objective “the 'nth degree of mechanical perfec- tion in radio reception.” Many frauds, according to Kenneth Hathaway of Chicago, executive secre- tary of the institute, have been per- petrated on an unsuspecting listening public by some service men. By charg- ing exorbitant prices for inconsequential repairs, he said, such individuals have wrecked public confidence in their sets, | and are hurting the entire industry. | Standards Are Sought. “Our purpose,” said Mr. Hathaway, | “4s to standardize radio service methods | and charges, and to prevent rackets and frauds through exposing them. | Technical information is being given to members and a code of ethics for the | service men is being drafted. The im- | portance of the service branch of radio has been overlooked, and as a result, | the number of listeners and the quality | |of receptian are not what they | should be. | Radio servicing, Mr. Hathawa: clared, is a “vast new industry an industry.” It was created largely with the advent of the *plug-in" set in 1927, and now has grown to such proportions that it has a turnover of about $100,000,000 annually. This is based on the estimate of approximately 16,000,000 sets in this country, with an average of $6 per year expended per set for maintenance. He sald there are about 25,000 radio service men in the country and that there are 50,000 “potential radiotricians.” Patterned After Institute. ‘The organization, in a fashion, is pat- terned after the Institute of Radio Engineers, Mr. Hathaway explained. In larger centers where there are| sufficiently large groups of radiotricians, | regular forums are arranged for ex- | changes of ideas and discussions of the | problems of the industry. Such groups already have been organized in Chicago and New York and work is going for-| ward along_simildr lines in Buffalo, Rochester, Boston, Wilmington, Del.; | Philadelphia, Albany, Orlando, Fla.;| New Orleans, Oakland, Calif.; San Francisco, Portland, Oreg.; Minneapolis, | St. Louis and Vancouver, British Columbia. (Copyright, 1932.) |ELECTRICAL ECORD London Company Is Formed to Distribute | Programs. Canada and the rest of Great Brit- “Canned” IDEA HITS BRITAIN Today on (ARl programs scheduled for 475.9 Meters. WMAL 5§35 kitoeycles. 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; ad- | dress by Prederic William Wile. | 12:45—The Street Singer. 00—Cathedral Hour. 30—The Garden Club. :45—Wee Willie Robyn. 00—Eight Sons of Eli. 30—Columbia Church of the Air. 00—New York Philharmonic Sym- phony Orchestra, 00—Evensong _service ington Cathedral, 00—Real Folks. 5:30—Wardman Park Orchestra. :00—Mayflower Orchestra, 30—Columbia Concert, Hans Barth, pianist, 45—Melody Speedway. 00—Program by National Advisory | Council of Radio in Education; | address by Clarence Yoakum, | vice president of the University | of Michigan. | 30—Rybb’s Novelty Orchestra, | 45—A’ Night in Paris. 00—Harry Sosnik and his band. 30—The Metropolitan. :45—"Your Child,” by Angelo Patri. :00—Fisk University chorus. :30—Adventuring Wwith Count Luckner. 00—The Gauchos. :15—Anti-hoarding campaign pro- | gram, featuring address by President Hoover. 11:00—Hamilton College Choir. | 30—Ernest Hutcheson, pianist. | :00—Weather forecast. :0la—Eddie Duchin’s Orchestra, 30 to 1:00a—California Melodies. Early Program Tomorrow. :00a—Salon Musicale. 30a—Morning Devotions, :45a—The Dutch Girl, :00a—Opening the Morning Mall. :30a—Tony's Scrap Book. 45a—Frank Young, pianist. 0a—Chatting with Ida Bailey Allen. :15a—Sweet and Hot. 10:45a—Madison Singers. :00a—Musical Alphabet. :30a—Melody Parade. :45a—Ben Alley, tenor. :00m—Radio Guide. :05—Charles Boulanger's Orchestra. :45—Columbia Revue. :00—Taft Orchestra. 0—Ritz Orchestra. 0—Ann Leaf at the organ. 30—American School of the Air. :00—Four Eaton Boys. 3:15—Columbia Salon Orchestra. 3:30—Sam Prager, pianist. 3:45—Bryn Mawr Glee Club. 4:00—Rhythm Kings. 205.4 Meters. WJSV 1,460 Kilocycles. 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. 15—"Purple and Gold,” by Robert Brooks. 1:00—Dreamland Melodies. 2:00—Church of the Air. 2:30—Metropolitan Dance Orchestra. 0—Studio feature. 0—Dance Orchestra. 4:00—Jubilee Singers of the Industrial School of Belleville, 4:15—"Memories of France,” by Ger- main Johnson. from Wash- featuring von Bt | WOL ain’s dominions and colonies will not | :30—Mormon_Church Service. have to wait until the completion of the | :00—Modern Living. the Radio Eastern Standard Time.) 315.6 Meters. WRC 55 Kilocycles. 8:00a—Melody Hour 9:00a—Children's Hour. 10:00a—Mexican Typica Orchestrs. | 10:30a—Clyde Doerr and his Saxophone Octet :00a—Neapolitan Days. :30a—Library of Congress Musicale 15—Morning_Musicale. 30—Troika Bells. 45—"Federal as Distinguished from State Control of Crime,"” by At- torney General Mitchell. 00—Harding Siste 15—Artcraft and Cinderella. 30—The Silver Flute 45—American Singers, with William Wirges' Orchestra 15—Sunday Bright Spots 2:30—Moonshine and Honeysuckle. 3:00—Wayne King's Orchestra. 3:30—Dr. S. Parkes Cadman. 00—Rebroadcast from Germany— Schwarzmeier Children's Chotr. 30—Tree Hour. 30—Circle Program, featuring Gio- vanni Martinelli, tenor. 00—National Catholic Hour. 30—National Education Association program; music and speeches. 00—National Jubilee Singers. 15—Radio Party. 30—Club of the Alr. 00—Rubinoff’s _Orchestra, George Jessel 00—“Our Government,” by David Lawrence. 15—Album of Familiar Music. :45—Musical Comedy program. 15—Anti-hoarding campaign pro- gram, featuring address by President Hoover. 00—Sunday at Seth Parker’s, 11:30—Last Minute News. 11:32—Jesse Crawford, organist. 12:00—Weather forecast 12:01 to 1:00a—Palais d'Or Orchestra. Early Program Tomorrow. with 7 7 7 8 9 9 9 0 11 6:45a—Tower Health Services 8:00a—Gene and Glenn. 8:15a—Morning Devotions. 8:30a—Cheerio. 9:00a—Three Mustachios. 9:15a—Flying Fingers. 9:30a—Top o' the Morning. 9:45a—Food program. 10:00a—Mrs. Blake's Radio Column. 10:15a—Dr. Copeland’s Health Clinic. 10:30a—Breen and de Rose. 10:45a—Kay Reld, cox‘:tnlto. 12:00m—Circle Program. 12:15—"The Real George Washington,” by Charles Colfax Long. 12:30—National Farm and Home Hour. 1:30—Emory Daugherty’s Orchestra 2:00—"“The Care of Children,” by Dr. Charles M. Smith. 228.9 Meters. 1,310 Kilocycles. 9:55a—Police Bulletins. 10:00a—Organ Reverie. 10:30a—Sea Isle Moaners. 11:00a—Services of the New York Ave- nue Presbyterian Church, 12:25—Birthdays. 12:30—In Funnyland. 1:00—Maui Islanders. 1:15—Musical program. 1:30—Stevens Sisters. 1:45—Jimmy Harbison, pianist. 2:00—"Stamp Romances,” by Albert F. Kunze, 2:15 to 2:45—Program by Jewish Edu- cation Association. 4:30—National Hawaiians. 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. corded for broadcast reproduction only. strengthen the bond existing between new empire short-wave station at Da- ventry, scheduled before the end of this year, to hear all-British programs. | Taking their cue from American | practice, already well known on Cana- dian broadcasting stations, a group of men have formed a company in Lon- don to record and distribute “elec- trical transcriptions,” or programs re- g 30—Gospel Twilight Hour. | 10: According to advices received here, | some of these programs will be fur- nished for sponsorship by local adver- | tisers in the dominions and colonfes. | Essentially a_commercial enterprise, | the object of the company is also “to 7 9 9: 9 the people of Great Britain and their brethren overseas.” It is pointed out that similar recordings are already be- sible for the untrained ear to distin- |1 guish them from actual studio presen- l 1 tations. 30 Different Home Modernizing Jobs —Done by EBERLY EBERLY offers a complete department store of home modernizing services. Every remodeling job in your home— and there are 30—can be done by EBERLY. No matter how many jobs you have done, you are serviced by one firm, you deal with one firm, the differ- ent jobs are done as one—and the cost is billed on the low EBERLY one-job basis. You may pay in small monthly in- stallments based on your in- come. “All Ways” the L 100 to 11:30—Gospel Service. 6:00a—Radio Revival. 7:00a—Joe and Harry. 8 10: ing circulated in British territory by | 10: American companies and have been re- ceived very favorably, especially in view | 11: of the fact that it is practically impos- |1 9:55a—Police Bulletins. 10:00a—Modern Melodies. 10:30a—Festival of Music. The Dial Lo Stations Heard in Washington Regularly. Keys. Kcys. WMAQ .. Vi Pirst Church of ¢ Christ_Scientist. 5—Percy Zilch and Smolzeir. 0—Baptist Chapel Echoes. 0—Slaughter’s Orchestra. 30—Evangelical Church of the Air. Early Program Tomorrow. :30a—King_Tut. :00a—The Breakfast Club. 00a—Studio feature, 15a—Vilma Whaley, contralto. 30a—Whispering Strings. 00a—Peggy Clarke’s Chat. 45a—Program by Federation Women’s Clubs. of | MODERNIZE QYour Home l{y the N EBERLY PLAN Is Your House Vil a Drag on You? A lot of people hate to see pay day roll around. So much of their roll rolls away in the form of monthly home payments. It's such a drag to keep up these payments. Make your house put back into your pocket half of what it takes out each month. Apartmentize a part of it through the EBERLY plan. EBERLY will take the unused part of your home and put it into a paying apart- ment. You can earn $40 or $50 extra each month by the simple addition of a bath room, a lavatory, a kitchenette—by modernizing the space in your house that’s now lying idle! Put it to work for you—start now—let EBERLY apartmentize your home to bring you extra income each month— call District 6557 and talk with an EBERLY representative about the possibilities of an apart- mentizing job in your home! “ There is no finance fee! owest Price . . . We Can Always Prove It MOTT MOTORS, Inc. 1520 14th St. N.W. Dec. 4341 A. EBERLY’S SONS, Inc. 1108 K Street N.W. Telephone, DIstrict 6557 . 82 Years’ Reliability