Evening Star Newspaper, November 29, 1934, Page 38

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B—24 A New Selection of Movie Films For Kiddies’ Projectors We have a new selection of movie films for kiddies’ projectors. From 25-foot lengths and up. M. A. LEESE Optical Co. 614 9th St. N. "= “TANG O' THE SEA” FOOD . O’Donrell’s Crab Imperial Is the Talk of the Town ODonnells SEA GRILL Friday, 11:30 A.M. till Midnight ten of Famous Crisfleld Sivie: “with 5 glass of beer all t<5> Wine, Beer and <& Drinks of all Kinds = 1207 E St N.W. = scallops. Sara- toga potatoes, 2,240 Pounds to the Ton Blue Ridge Va. Hard Stove Coal, $12.00 Special Furnace Size, $10.50 Nut, $11.35 ~ Pea, $9.00 ' Exs. $11.35 Buckwheat, $7.25 Rice, $6.25 Smokeless Egg, $9.75 Bituminous Coal Without Smoke eor Soot, 80% Lump. $8.35 Blue Egg, $8.50 Hard-Structure Pa._Bitumi Makes Only Thin White Smo 759% Lump Coal, $7.50 50% Lump Coal, $6.90 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, CapITAL'Ss RADIO PROGRAMS Thursday, November 29. WRC 950k M. WMAL 630k (Copyrisht, 1934) WISV 1,460k AFTERNOON PROGRAMS. Eastern Standard Time. WOL 1310k | 78100 Ma Perkins 8:15 |Dreams Come True [Alabama vs. Vanderbilt |Penn vs. Cornell G. W. U. vs. Oklahoma - i e | ‘Thanksgiving Symphony |“Pirst Thanksgiving” Penn vs. Cornell Dick Messner's Orchestra | G. W. U. va. Oklahoma 'Parents and Teachers B st b | 5:30 Sundown Revue 5:45_Uncle Charlie PM. |Alabama vs, Vanderbilt The Aristocrats |Little Orphan Annie |Evening Rhythms |Skippy Jack Armstrong Larry Walker EVENING PROGRAMS. Dramatic Sketch Bob Fallon's Orch. Christian Science 6:00 | Betty Lane 6:15 |Jimmy Allen 6:30 |“Little Women” 6:45 |Billy Batchelor |Navy Foot Ball Rally “Better Housing” Gridiron Reporter Lowell Thomas Buck Rogers Arch McDonald Foot Ball Reporter | Wurtzebach’s Orchestra Dick Mansfield's Orch, Today in’ Sports Manhatter's Orchestra Northern Dramatic Co. ~7:00 Music—Sports Review 7:15 |Gene and Glenn 7:30 | Merry Minstrel Show 7:45 | = % | Amos ‘n’ Andy Gems of Melody |G. W. U Forum_ I Gingham Club Orchestra Melodies Romantique Myrt and Marge Just Plain Bill Godfrey’'s Gazette Liberty Forum “‘Whispering” Jack Smith True Crime Stories |Boake Carter |Northern Dramatic Co. News Spotlight Soiree Musicale | George Reid Joe Holman | Thanksgiving Cavalcade |Death {Moments of Melody | Hurdy Gulfly Man Valley Days The Caravan 'Waring’s Pennsylvanians | Thanksgiving Cavalcade “Faust” Whiteman's Music Hall |News Bulletins % o |Caravan of Song :"A Changing SoctalOrder” :Mlmmoth Minstrels Story of Lithography | Serenade Lotus | Axthur Reilly 11:15 |Jesse Crawford, organist | 11:30 |Heigh-Ho Orchestra 'Eddie 11:45 BT [ Orchestra Duchin’s Orch, |Clyde Lucas’ Orchestra “« {Leon Belasco's Orch. 12:00 Dell Campo’s Orch. 12:15 o ' 12:30 Hal Kemp's Orchestra 12:45 (o - | George Olsen’s Orchestra/ Dancing in Twin Citles Leon Navarra's Orch. :00_ Sign oft AL | Sign off EARLY |Sign off PROGRAMS TOMORROW. Jack Little’s Orch. Paul Sabin’s Orch, Tony Cabooch Hockey game. e | — 6:30 | 6:45 | | | "7:00 Sons of Pioneers Barnyard Philosopher Lump delivered in ment from the fine—, bin Guarantee m truc we do not dump it on curb. If you are not plea with our coal after burning it ] hours, we will take it back and refund your money on portion not used Over 20.000 New Customers in 3 Yrs. in’ Baltimore and Washington. There Is a Reason Why World's Larest Retailers of Va. Anthracite separate compart- . K to vour coal sed 4 BLUE RIDGE COAL CO. Miners of Vireinia Anthracite Hard Coal Alexandria Me. 4401 So. Washington, Opposite Texaco Oil Distributing Plant 8 Va. ‘Wal. 475 SEE the New TOASTMASTER SETS J. C. Harding Co. Inc. 10th Street, Just Below F | RENOVIZE . .. your home This has been our business 85 years EBERLY’S Dignify_vour phone_ " Eberly's” RADI NAT. TROUBLE 7171 DI 6557 Official Service Delco—Remy—Klaxon DUDLEY( IM6 M4 ST.NW. NORTH 158313 From Washington Police Records The Singing Cor toer Shield Charus COMPLETE QUAKER STATE LUBRICATION SERVICE MINUTE Service Station No. 1 17th & L Sts. N.W. fiXPiR‘l‘ AUTO REPAIR SERVICE Your auto radio ex- pertly repaired, s stalled. A New Parts Extra COMPLETE . i2'%Scvice SERVICE CO.INC. 1630 14th St. N.W. No. 0030 408 HSt. N.E. 1905 M St. N.W. RADIO checked and re-in- NATIONAL AT.0030. ME.0035 TODAY 63° WR.C. < ling the wherewithal to purchase cof- 7:30 | The Grenadiers 7:45 | Moments of Melody 7:15 |Romance of Melody ‘ifing‘éMen v e Getter Upper | Musical Clock i | T e e cooe mam Ferreey| T8:00 | Bradley Kincaid 8:15 'Don Hall Trio 8:30 Cheerio 5 2 Landt Morning Devotions Lew White, organist | Trio and White | Musical Clock 0 Mail Bag | ©:30 Mystery Chef 9:45 Caroline Baker |News Bulletins 9:15 Betty Lane lcmcago Breakfast Club Sun Dial Broadway Hits “Your Handwriting” i Woman's Hour 10:00 |Breen and De Rose 10:15 Clara, Lu and Em Joe White Betty Crocker Flying Troubadour W. R. Beattie | Hazel | Today | Josephine Gibson 's Children ! News—Radio Kitchen String Symphony Red Cross Program Bill and Ginger Dr. E. D. Starbuck |Radio Interview Arth |Serenade U. S. Army Band AF NOON PROGRAMS. | Cooking Close-ups Top o' the Morning |vaughn de Leath |Rhythm Melodies Police Flashes | Variety and Value Washboard Blue Along Theater Row Along Theater Row 'Morning Parade THURSDAY, TECHNICAL GAINS CLAIMED FOR KYW Pioneer Station Begins Broadcasts From Phila- delphia Monday. ECHNICAL perfection is claimed I for Station KYW, which begins operations Monday from its new location in Philadelphia after more than a decade of | broadcasting at Chicago. ‘The second station to begin operat- ing in this country, KYW was licensed as a Chicago station in 1921, just a few months after its sister station, KDKA (Pittsburgh), took to the air | to begin regular operation as world’s pioneer broadcasting unit. According to engineers of Westing- | house, which owns and operates KYW, | the station embodies the most ad- the | vanced practices in radio engineering, | dustry at the recently organized Na- | with a unique antenna system that ac- | tually steers the course of the sta- tion’s signals to prevent dissipation over the ocean and interference with | other stations. From its new location NOVEMBER 29, 1934. the station will serve as the Philadel- phia key of the N. B. C. network. Instead of & single antenna, as used by most stations, KYW has four verti- cal masts, eich 245 feet high, made of telescopic steel tubing; 55,000 feet of wire, representing nearly a ton of copper, are employed in the ground system. Operating on the 1,020-kilo- cycle clear channel, with 10,000 watts power, station engineers anticipate that its signals will be picked up over a wide portion of the country. * ok x % world isn't to want for an op- portunity to listen in to the Army-Navy foot ball broadcast Saturday afternoon. There will be at | least seven short-wave stations hooked onto the N. B. C. part of the de- scription. L Such stations as W3XAL, W3XL, W2XAD, W2XAF, WSXK, WIXAB and a Pacific Coast transmitter all will be pumping the signals into the short-wave air, principally for follow- ers of the gridiron destinies of the | Army and Navy in odd spots on the | globe, * x % % V. KALTENBORN, veteran news ~ analyst of Columbia, has been invited by Attorney General Cummings to represent the radio in- tional Conference on the Cause and | Cure of Crime, to be held in Washing- ton the second week in December. Prior to attending the conference, Kaltenborn is making a survey of what Genuine Walnut radio stations in every part of the country are doing in relation to crime —in reporting crime news, in co- operating with agencies charged with crime prevention, detection or punish- ment, and in combating anti-social tendencies. * ok % ETTY LANE, personal shopper for the Hecht Co., will begin a series of daily morning broadcasts over WRC tomorrow at 9:15 am. Each broadcast will sketch based on Miss Lane's experi- ences. L | ARL J. BERGMANN, president of | the District Building and Loan League, has been added to the list of speakers taking part in the “Better Housing” radio series. He will be heard over WMAL tomorrow | at 5:10 pm. Four-Ounce Coin Sold. Weighing nearly four ounces, the | largest coin in England was sold re- | cently in London for $110. NOV. M¥th P.M. Captain Henry pilots his other melodious voyage— Rom, 9:00 (MAXWELL HOUSE| wr( Four their parts. feature a dramatic | Molases 'n’ January, the Show Boat |INSULL PROCEEDINGS WILL START MONDAY By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, November 29.—State's | Attorney Thomas J. Courtney yester- | day said the trial of Martin Insull on charges of embezzlement definitely will | be started Monday. “We think that we have the evi- | dence and we are going to go ahead | and present it,” he said. | Insull is charged with using $344.000 | worth of Middlewest Utilities Co. stock to support his personal brokerage ac- counts. His brother, Samuel Insull, and 16 other defendants were acquit- ted Saturday in Federal Court of mail fraud charges. Courtney also sald a State trial of Samuel Insull would begin January 7, as scheduled, as far as the State was concerned. | Both cases will be tried before Judge Cornelius J. Harrington. ADVERTISEMENT. NETWORK HEADLINERS".:- MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE General Foods Carp. Thuriday ew in a0- e Lanny Muriel Wilson, Conrad Thibault, and Gus Haenschea's Band do Convenient Smoker $7.50 Burl walnut veneers. A strictly distinctive design in this useful article for the home; copper lined humidor interior: beauti- fully finished; dull rubbed. Terms Here is a gathering of smart gifts for Christmas that will appeal to you. Priced very moderately, with quality that endures. BUY NOW—PAY NEXT YEAR Governor |IRigo Santiago Ben Arley, tenor 12:00 Muriel Kerr 12:30 Merry-Go-Round 12:45 Merry Madcaps T1:00 |Nathan Stewart 1:15 |Women's Clubs 1:30 Horatio Zito's Orchestra 5 e Words 0 Magic of Speech Fari Morin 2:15 2:30 | The Sizzlers 2:45 Vic and Sade 3:15 | Yago and Dmitietrieff 3:30 Woman's Radio Review 3:45 - - |Listening Post 12:15 Honeyboy and Sassafras Charles Sears and Home Hour Farm and Home Hour La Paree Orchestra Words and Music Smackout English Teachers 73:00 |Ma Perkins — |N.B7C. Program Roadways of Romance Library Dedieation = |Voice of Experience Afternoon Rhythms Reflections |Jack Little's Orch. |Pat_Kennedy French Princess Helen Trent School of the Air |“This 'n That" and Music Sisters Allan Leafer's Orch. |Eddie Pryor's Orchestra |Here's How Church oi the Air Mirror Reflections Bergere's Orchestra Ragamuffins Ebony Keys Jerry Baker |Junior Stamp Club |String Quartet i |“The Numbers Racket” Lorine Letcher Sports Review 4:00 Music Guild | Betty 4:15 | ) i 4:30 | 4:45 | & "5:00 |Sundown Revue - i :15 | Tom Mix 5:30 'Aunt Sue and Polly | Betty Ryder |Rod and Stream Women's Clubs Tea Time Evening Star Flashes Rice Brothers and Bob Rhythm Bandbox |Henry Seibert Sports Review e | Evening Rhythms | Skippy Jack Armstrong |Tea Timers 'Bob Fallon's Orch. MAJOR FEATUR A gala Thanksgiving day program, | composed of four all-star acts, will be presented during Rudy Vallee's Va- riety Hour over WRC from 8 to 9. Taking part will be the Don Cossack | Male Chorus, Peter and Aline Dixon, Bert Lahr and Oliver Wakefield. WOL will broadcast from 9:15 to' AND PROGRAM 10 a tabloid version of Gounod's| “Faust.” | Yvonne Gall, soprano star of the | Paris Opera. will again be featured on the Paul Whiteman Music Hall pro- | gram on WRC at 10. She will sing | | four numbers, including “L'Heure Ex- | quise” and Engel's “Sea Shell.” ESTATE EVENTUALLY GOES FOR EDUCATION Taylor Grandy Bequeaths Bulk to Sister During Her Life- time. Directing that the bulk of his es- | tate eventually be devoted to educa-| tional work in North Carolina, the‘ will of the late Taylor Grandy, who| died last April 23, has been filed Xor:‘ probate in District Supreme Court. Mr. Grandy left real estate worth $53,750 and personal property valued | at $2,455. | He directed that the bulk of his es- | tate be given to Miss Lillie Grandy a sister, of Elizabeth City, N. C., for | life. Upon her death, one-third is to go to the University of North Carolina to establish the “Taylor Grandy chair on the philosophy of living.” The county of Camden, N. C. was given one-third to improve its school system. The remaining third will be paid into a fund created by the sister for the “shut-ins” of Eliz- abeth City. The will and petition were filed through Attorney John H. Small. DRINKS HIS WHEAT CADILLAC. Saskatchewan, No- vember 29 (#).—Let's have a drink of wheat, says W. E. Doyle, who farms 10 miles south of here. Lack- fee, he set about to manufacture a substitute. He uses wheat in the process and claims it tastes better than the real Java. The process is a secre Week-End Special! Friday & Saturday Only Have Your SHOES 5 1, Soled Men’s, Women’s, Children’s 59c Genuine Oak Leather. Workmanship and Material Guaranteed. GRAND CENTRAL VALET SERVICE 1342 N. Y. AVE, N-W. 10-Min. Service. | Dr. John Swan, the surgeon, explained | Girl's Heart Restarted. While 14-year-old Constance Bem- | rose was being operated on at the General Hospital at Nottingham, Eng- | 1and, her heart stopped, was massaged | and resumed beating for 10 minutes. | | that a heart which had beaten again | for that length of time should be ex- 1 pected to continue beating, but too | much damage had probably been done | otherwise before the girl's heart could | be restarted. | Our Regular 8c THRIFTY LAUNDRY SERYICE NOTES. With an augmented chorus. Capt Henry's Show Boat. on WRC at 9, will feature Rubinstein's “Romance” ;nd Ketelby's “In a Monastery Gar- len.” Alexander Edward Duncan, chair- man of the board of the Commercial Credit Co., will speak on “The Forum of Liberty” program on WJSV at 8:30. “We Live Again” will be the presen- tation of the Northern Dramatic Co. on WOL at 6:45. Ronald Dawson, Charles C. Gillman and Meredith will have the principal roles. 1935 DIARIES and calendars. A complete stock at popular prices. E. Morrison Paper Co. 1009 Pa. Ave. Phone NA. 2945 5 EXTRA Features at No Extra Cost HANDKERCHIEFS com- pletely finished. Special attention to monograms and initials. 1. EACH PIECE SHAKEN AND FOLDED, no knots or tangles to straighten out. WRAPPED IN WAX PAPER, airtight to pre- vent mildew. * Shirts, Uniforms, House Dresses, etc. Hand Finished for 10c Each Extra 4. NECESSARY PIECES STARCHED, no dampen- ing necessary, ready for ironing. SOFT COLLARS COM- PLETELY FINISHED. Returned in glassine en- velopes. —and in addition Home Laundry finishes all flat work at NO EXTRA CHARGE. Minimum Bundle, 77c. * LL ATLaNTIC 2400 Occasio Seat Bou drawer; veneer in bed finish; Phyfe bas talon claw feet. Winthrop Secretary thint the Just s for the radio: convenient _for zine and ample top space, walnut veneere: top. Buy on Budget Terms front book 53.95 Here is a value that should bring you early: a full size Occasional chair upholstered i pattern of tap. €Stry; scoop seat. Neat stretcher bottom. Buy on Budget Terms neat (;on\'enient mahogany dull rub- Duncan ltn Buy on Budget Ter™® Genuine Walnut or Mahogany Drop Leaf Table Veneers in maho, an or ralnut; drawers fol €; fAuted legs, claw fecr, o Brass Buy on Budger Terms Rayon Damask Spring doir Chair $5.95 Choice of color- ful damask, in rose, orchid, gold, green OF brown. Spring geat, full size. Buy on Budget Terms Here is a twenty-four-hour useful addition to your home; a neat divan in the daytime and easily converted into double bed or twin beds for sleeping; inner-spring mattress and three pillows included. Julius Lansburgh walnut veneer. drawers with desk and 523.50 Full size, serpentine in mahogany or Three section. Large Size Lounge Chair 51495 Tee cushion de- sign: loose spring- filled reversible cushion seat and soft spring back; rust or green uphol- stery in Colonial tap- Twin Studio Couch 523.50 Jusniture (50. 909 F St. N.W. -~ Y

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