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Facsimile Broadcasting [Singing and Dramatic Artists Starred on N Held Nearer Realization Television Tr.ailind Far Behind Rival Radio Development———New Service on Short Waves Announced. By the Radio Editor. HE twins of visual broadcast- ing—facsimile and televislon— which are engaged in a quiet race to be first to offer them- selves for public acceptance, have come to the fork in the road, with facsimile well in the forefront. At least, that is the view of David Sarnoff, president of the Radio Corp. of America, largest experimenter in radio. Facsimile, Mr. Sarnoff divulges in his annual report to stockholders, has reached the stage where now a broad- casting service to the homes con- sisting of pictures, printed matter and other visual material delivered via the wave lengths, shortly will be available as a supplement to audible broadcasting. Plans already are be- ing made, he disclosed, to begin regu- lar facsimile service between Phila- delphia and New York on the ultra- short waves, for the transmission of communications “by the square inch” | instead of by the traditional Morse code method. Home facsimile as an entertainment medium, he indicates, | still presents a number of complex | financial, commercial and operating problems which are receiving study. | Television D:scouraged. Far less optimistic is Mr. Sarnoff over the prospects of television, in spite of the recent spectacular move of Great Britain to install an ex- perimental television station in Lon- don. He still views television as a laboratory infant, growing stronger almost daily, but facing technical as well as economic problems that make its introduction in this country on a Nation-wide basis virtually im- possible “in the present state of the art.” Referring to the latent possibilities of facsimile. or “still” picture trans- mission as against the “moving pic- ture” transmission which constitutes television, the R. C. A. chieftain points out that this visual means has been used experimentally for many months in the sending and receiving of weather maps, pictures and other information. Confirming the state- ment in these columns several weeks ago. he also declares facsimile may find application in police work for the transmission between cities of photo- graphs, fingerprints and other records. A page of business letter size can be | transmitted via radio within a few minutes. Mr. Sarnoff makes clear that his company is still engaged in an in- tensive scientific study of television. ‘The laboratory efforts, however, he indicates, are guided by the prin- ciple that the commercial application of such a service can be achieved only through a system of ‘“high- definition television,” which would make the images of objects trans- mitted clearly recognizable to the ob- servers. In that regard he implies that this stage of development has not yet been achieved, although much of the mist that has blurred em- bryonic television has now been lifted by the eager scientific researchers. “Viewed, however, from the stand- point of public service,” states Mr., Sarnoff, “our own studies agree with the conclusions reached abroad by competent engineer and public au- thority. These conclusions are that sound broadcasting and sound-receiv- ing equipment comprise the funda- mental broadcasting and receiving fa- cilities of the Nation, with television facilitles as a supplementary service; that there are no short cuts to the inauguration of television, that it must proceed step by step through the processes of research, laboratory de- velopment, field demonstration and thence to regular service, and that the | technical program and financial prob- lems involved are so great as to make it impractical to erect and maintain a system of television on a Nation- wide basis, particularly in the United States, in the present state of the art.” Referring to the recent report of the British Television Committee, which recommended the establishment of experimental stations in England, Mr. Sarnoff emphasized that the prob- lem in geographically small England (about the size of New York State) is not comparable with that in this country. First, he explains that the British understand the limitations of their project, and that the cost of this experiment at a single location in London is estimated at $900,000. And for a service limited to half the population of England, he brings out, only 10 stations at this cost would have to be erected. As for the lis- tener, the R. C. A. president points to the British report which reads: “Some time is likely to elapse before the price of an efficient receiver will be comparative with that of the aver- age type of sound receiver.” The present wire systems, according interconnecting television stations into chains as they are for broadcasting stations. For that purpose, either a new wire system must be created or | radio relays must be further devel-l oped and established. He sums up the situation thus: of the art in the United States must | | begin with the establishment of tele- | vision on the basis of field demonstra- tion in order that subsequent plans may be founded on the practical expe- rience thus obtained. In view of the continued laboratory progress of R. C. A. and the wide public interest in this new fleld, your management is dili- | gently exploring the possibilities of such a demonstration.” ’I"HE fiery tongue of Rev. Charles E. Coughlin, crusading radio priest whose influence and popularity has | | exceeded that of perhaps any other | regular radlo speaker, will be heard | over the air throughout the coming | Summer over a larger independent net- work than he has ever used before. Breaking the precedent he estab- lished several years ago of appearing only six months for his Sunday radio sermons, the Detroit clergyman has decided to extend his talks through the Summer. Unique is his decision to speak at midnight, rather than during midday. His new Sunday schedule will run from 12 to 12:30, Eastern standard time, starting after Easter Sunday. He will repeat this same broadcast at a later hour for Far West- ern and Central listeners. Father Coughlin, whose influence has been felt in Congressional votes and. rulings of national and in- ternational import, has come to the | conclusion that since his recent organ- ization of the League for Social | Justice, @ radio-listener voluntary | membership, it is necessary for his | weekly broadcasts to go unbroken | through the Summer, After six months | of half-hour broadcasts, he will resume his Sunday afternoon 1-hour broad- | casts next October for the regular 1 1935-1936 season. The present list of stations on his independent network, totalling 27, covers the country from Omaha to Portland, Me. Other stations are expected to be added. The programs, as in the past, will be keyed from the Shrine of the Little Flower in Detroit, through Station WJR of that city. Since inauguration of the League for Social Justice a few months ago by Father Coughlin, more than 8,000,000 members have joined that organization, according.to word from Coughlin headquarters. More than 200 clerks and secretaries are employed at present to answer the tremendous volume of mail, which runs into an average of 40,000 pieces dally. One of Father Coughlin's greatest legislative triumphs was the part he played in the defeat of American entry into the World Court. In rej as well as special broadcasts he urgd the public to telegraph thelr Senators op- posing the proposal sponsored by the administration. Wires to the Capitol were flooded with a deluge of mes- sages. No count was ever made public of the volume of mail his plea provoked, but unofficially it was re- ported that upwards of 200,000 tele- grams and letters were received within & week by members of the Senate and House. The Coughlin broadcasts and the Detroit shrine are maintained by voluntary contributions. Last year, using an independent hook-up of 26 stations—one less than he is using now—his disbursements for purchase of time over the stations and for tel- ephone line charges to connect them, | | aggregated more than $225,000. Thel aggregate time charge for this net- | work for a single broadcast of one | hour amounted to about $6,500. Father Coughlin first began his | broadcasts over the Columbia Broad- | casting System a half dozen years ago, then a young Roman Catholic | priest, practically unknown outside of | his own little parish on the out- | skirts of Detroit. When that net- work decided to designate a repre- sentative clerical group to arrange all religious programs, whether Protest- ant, Catholic or Jewish, Father Coughlin decided to set up his own special network of independent sta- tions. Since 1931 he has broadcast over such a hookup for six months each year. FOREIGN SHORT-WAVE STATIONS cITy Barranquilla ....HJ1ABB Bérlin ... ...DJA Berlin Berlin Berlin ... Berlin Brussels ..... Buenos Aires. Guayaquii ', Havana Huizen . Jeloy Lisbon London London London London London London ..RNE ..RV59 . (Pointoise) Riobamba . Rio de Janeiro. Rome .. Rome .....ee000..,.12RO 8ydney ..........VK2ME STATION. MEGACYCLES. HOURS. 6.45 2.57 15.20 6.02 11.76 9.54 10.33 1035 6.11 8 to 10:10 a.m. Mon,, Thurs., Fri.; 8 to 10:30 a.m. Saturday and Sunday. Noon to 6 pm. 4:30 to 7 p.m. Tues., Thurs. and Sat. 4:‘3: to 5:45 pm, 6 pm. am.; 9:18 10:45 am. _h e UG & o e S N poowa 3 THE SUNDAY STAR, i to Mr. Sarnoff, are not suitable for| i “In view of these facts it is apparent | , that the next step in the development ; Kathleen Wells Ceft), sparkling-eyed Irish girl, who contributes to the Show Boat program on N. B. C. In the center is Jeanette Nolan, dramatic actress, who is heard during the “Hollywood Hotel” programs on adult accents. Sunday, March 3. (Copyrisht, 1935) Eastern Standard Time. AM.| WRC 950k | 8:00 [Melody Hour g o ‘The Balladeers | Harp Solos Peerless Trio. This and That WMAL 630k Tone_Pictures Moments of Melody. | The Funnies On a Bus WISV 1,460k WOL 1310k |AM. Elder Michaux = 8:00 | /Kay Reed At Aunt Susan’s |The Punnies Old Church Songs |Radio Pulpit Afr Sweethearts 5 _|Rhythm Makers Southernaires {American Youth Church of the Atlr Labor News Review |Between Bookends Pete and Louise Morton Bellin, tenor Lauretta Clonen June Reddington News-Vagaries Jack and Loretta. W.“ Bowes' Family Short Wave Time “What Home Means” |Chicago Round Table |The Listening Post |String Quartet. Musical Interlude |“Your English” |Jewish Program \Lonesome Pine Singer AT Jane Reddington. |Tabernacle Choir Family Almanac. S i Musical Feature AFTERNOON PROGRAMS. Opportunity Matinee Music Hall of the Air | Tabernacle Choir |Garden of Tomorrow Midday Serenade Charlotte Blume etworks Columbia. Ruth Yorke (right), is one of Rudy Vallee's latest finds. Her versatile voice can change instantly from the tones of childhood to normal BENNY AND CREW ARE HAPPY LOT Spontaneous Cheer Held Real Reason for Success. By Martin Codel. INDING the formula for Jack Benny's enormous success on the radio during the last few | years—a success reflected in the | recent poll of the Nation's radio editors, who voted him their favorite | comedian and his show the most popu- lar of the last year—is not difficult after a visit to one of his broadcast " | performances. Attend one of his broadcast shows, as the writer did the other night, and, even if you are not already a Benny fan, you will readily WASHINGTON, D. €, MARCH 3, 1935—PART FOUR. : F—9 Studio Audiences Proving Valuable for the Programs Theaters Do Not Like the Idea, but 'pcrfon'ners Are Able to Obtain Needed Reaction. By Peter Dixon. HAVE never been an advocate of studio audiences though I realize that there are times when an audience at & broadcast helps the show as & whole. Recently, how- ever, I've been convinced that studio audiences are justifying their ex- istence. It is both thrilling and significant to hear the thunder of applause dur- ing the broadcasts of classical music. There’s nothing faked about that expression of approval. And when one realizes that these symphonic concerts are presented before audi- ences of from 500 to 2,000 people and that they represent every social level, it's a pretty good straw in the wind of public taste. Again, the studio audiences are beginning to function as indicators of comedy values. There wus a time when the most inane gag would bring a roar of laughter from the folks in | the free seats. Today a comedian has to be funny. Recently, on a broadcast featuring a famous comedian, a stale joke was greeted with chilling silence. The same joke had always brought laughter before—and the comedian has been doing some thinking since. ‘The grimaces and asides, used by radio comedians to get laughs from the visible audience, don't mean as much now. The audience to radio programs are becoming sophisticated. In fact, I've seen individuals listening with their eyes closed; apparently wanting to know if the program scripts for her new fashion broad- casts, 'OR arnouncing & new series of broadcasts from the Hotel Al- gonquin dining room, with Thomas L. Stix presiding at the microphone, Stix will introduce famous personali- ties on a program to be known as “Having Luncheon Today With——" ... The time is Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, from 12:45 to 1 p.m., beginning March 5 . . . Jimmy Melton returning from his theatrical tour to appear as guest star on next Wednes- day’'s pent house party ...N. B. C’s going collegiate -next Monday. The Hasty Pudding Club of Harvard, Tri- angle Club of Princeton, Mask and Wig of Pennsylvania University and Columbia’s Varsity Show wili all be represented on the hour's program scheduled for 2 p.m. Replaces Lederer. | CHARLE:S BOYER has replaced Fran- cis Lederer in “Break of Hearts,” the new Katharine Hepburn starring picture, soon to go into production at R-K-O Radio. Boyer, popular young leading man, has just finished “Private Worlds,” the new Walter Wanger production, in which he appears opposite Claudette Colbert. John Beal, the Gavin Dishart of “The Little Minister,” | has also been added to the cast of “Break of Hearts” in a featured lead- ing role. New Partnership. UNDm a speclal arrangement com- pleted recently, Samuel Goldwyn and Rachel Crothers become partners in the production of a forthcoming motion picture which will star Miriam Hopkins. Miss Crothers, who is the author of numerous Broadway stage hits, including last season's highly suc- sounded as funny as it looked. Perhaps studio audiences will really | help in the development of the pre- | cocious child radio. | | FUNNIEST thing I've heard in weeks was the singer who wouldn't | stop singing when Maj. Bowes rang the gong during WHN's amateur | hour. The song ended with the major | beating the gong in time with the singer . . . And delightful it was to hear Willard Robinson singing “Pray for the Lights to Go Out!"—one of those deep South blues ballads . . . Johnny Green, the composer-conduc- tor, is a charming master of ceremo- nies, too. Nice informality and not |Lucille Pierce Ferguson ‘American Ensemble Dale Carnegle [Surprise Party Music Hall of the Air Spires of Melody |Dr. Dantel A. Poling Church of the Alr “Little” Jack Little " |Terrence O'Shea Console Moments Musical Sparklets 1 1 5 | discern why the radio editors of Main street joined Broadway's in heaping their encomiums upon Jack Benny. :sof You find him and his troupe in one :45 | of the medium-sized, and thus more ) ' Tmmortal Dramas [Mario Chamlee | |Anthony Frome |Bob Becker |Radio Theater ;uzy Dan |Ereena Music Hll;l. Church of the Alr Joe Brown's Kiddies 2:30 | than 250 spectators in the studio, all | 2 ~00 | Intimate studios, amid the magnificence -15 | that is Radio City. There are not more .45 seated. It is 10 minutes before the Pent House Serenade. Sally of the Talkies IR:dlo Theater I ISundl! Vespers N. ¥. Philharmonie Joe Brown's Kiddies Radio Voices Melody Moments ™ ann | Show goes on. Jack Benny is clutch- |ing a script, a partially burned but | unlighted cigar clenched between his |teeth. He is nervously pacing the :;(l;g {RBythm Symphony : Harry Reser's Crew Dream Drama 4:48 | 5:00 (Sentinels’ Serenade 8:15 | 5:30 "rony Wons 5:45 = - ': A 'National 8:30 |Simons Concert Bana b Catholic Hour | The Triolians Morton Downey Roses and Drums crt Travelogue Dog Drama slightly elevated rostrum on which “ . Y. Philharmonic Open House - Crumit and Sanderson EVENING PROGRAMS. Evening Album |Sports Parade |“Grand Hotel” | Amateur Show Arch McDonald Father Coughlin “- o« - Catholic Radio Hour “ . - | - 'The Watch Tower The Waltzers “Smilin’ Ed” McConnell|“Old Tolerable” |Julie Wintz's Orch. o cooosese wwws 5858 = most of the cast and orchestra are sitting or standing, the principals all | ikewise with scripts in hand. I Jack raises his right arm, with the other yanking the cigar from his ‘mm!h. He grins broadly, an infectious 58585858 grin, and the audience chuckles. We are still not on the air, and we wonder at the need for the hush that follows. “I want you to meet the members of our cast,” Jack says, and with appro- | priate joshing he introduces Mary | Livingstone, Prank Parker, Don Wil- "son, Don Bestor and Sam Hearn, who e ie S |Music—Sports Review |Three Maids |Fireside Recitals Wendall Hall Jack Benny ;Jm Penner |Alexander Woollcott | |The Headliners |Lawrence Troth ‘The Jesters. |Ray O'Hara's Orch. Sports Oddities Opera Guild Symphony Concert Eddie Cantor Club Romance |Ferry Boat Duo |John Paine. |Alma Stanley. 9:00 9:15 9:30 9:45 Merry-Go-Round Silken Strings | Walter Winchen Sunday Evening Hour American Opry House ° 4is the “Mr. Shlepperman” of many | other dialects besides his better known :15 | Yiddish. 20| Actors Loosen Up, Too. -0 All of the actors have been intently {15 | studying their scripts, but they take i30 | their bows—all grinning. Then they return to a serious perusal of their scripts, for 7 o'clock is fast approach- ing. You wonder next why Jack Benny has to deliver himself of his ensuing smartalecky . . . Those round table discussions from Dempsey's eating place, broadcast by WMCA, Friday | nights at 11:45, are both colorful and interesting . . . Wish some of the clever | | songs from the Casino de Paree show | ! were on the air . . . Glen Gray and the | | Casa Loma Orchestra start & national | tour April 27, . . Comfort and Reilly, |2 pet singing team of this listener, jnow at the Club New Yorker—and |theyouzhtwbeonmenr...Don Richards, who leads an orchestra at the Biltmore, is the son of Cesaro | Sodero, who pioneered radio presenta- tions of operas on the networks . . . Wayne King's pleasing waltz pro- grams have been renewed . . . Dave Apollon, working on a radio idea built around musical hobbles . , . Those Sunday night American versions of operas are getting better right along recommended program if you like action and excitement . . . Al Sinton, the sound effects expert, has written a rhyme about the trials and tribula- | tions of a sound man, and I only wish I had space to run it. Maybe it’ll be done on the air . .. Inciden- ,tally, the burlesque melodrama in ' rhyme on Tony Wons' “House by the Sime of the Road” show was very amusing last Sunday. embattled Gen. Johnson prom- | ises “the speech of my career” |when he talks over an N. B. C. network tomorrow, March 4 . . . | Familiar Music | “ Sherlock Holmes 10:00 |Musical Revue 10:15 S 10:30 |“One Man’s Family” 10:45 5 . Sherlock Holmes Shirley Howard American Fireside - . 13:00 | Henty King's Orch. 11:30 |Temple of Songs 11:46 2 = 12:02 Abe Lyman’s Orch. 12:11 = 1230 |Dan_Pedro's Orchestra 5 Ao 5 :00 |Sign Off News Builetins Jesse Crawford Emil Coleman’s Orch. Sign Off EARLY PROGRA MS TOMORROW. 7:00 Up and at Em “|The Grenadiers |Pollock and Lawnhurst |Barnyard Philosopher ‘The Getter Upper | Alr-O-Nuts | Elder Mlc‘!'nux Sun Dial o .« - Phil Cook's Note Book Don Hall Trio 0 |Cheerio 1 130 :45 00 5 |Morning Devotions |Willlam Meeder Landt Trio and White Sun Dial “ - News Bulletins BXuElllt Club Sun Dial Jean Abbey. Blues Cure. «- - Josephine Gibson 'Ward and Muzzy Today’s Children Viennese Sextet News—Serenade Bill and Ginger Larry Walker Radlo Interview The Honeymooners ‘Tony W Melody Mixers Land o' Dreams Connle Gates. Radio Oracle. Merry-Go-Round Merry Madcaps |Story of Mary Marlin | Listéning Post Honeyboy and Sassafras Bennett Sisters iF‘u'n: md_ Home Hour Voice of Experience ‘The Gumps Afternoon Rhythms Typrwriter Program PROGRAMS. AFTERNOON Two Hearts in Song M. and M. et od El 858|58E Vic and Sade Ma Perkins Dreams Come True John Martin's Hour. |Farm and Home Hour Program. . M_Blttlfi'l Ensemble Julu;' l"ld“' Ensemble. Revolving Stage + IMusic Guild g - . P Woman'’s Radio Review Alice Butchins Drake Songfellows 58|8858) Dick Messner's Orch. Slaughter’s Ensemble. Allan Leafer’s Orch. Mitchell Schuster’s Orch. Sundown Revue Tom Mix Aunt Sue and Polly sEges cooleesnlewnals MAJOR Jane Cowl, Broadway star, will play in & radio version of com- | on WISV at 8, FEATURES AND PROGRAM NOTES. memoration of the 250th anniversary| Tito Schipa, Metropolitan Opera o(mbmhnxlmnns'lch.w tenor, will be the soloist with the Composition for the piano by Listt, | sumphony orchestrs on WMAL at 8. Chopin and Brahms will be played by Jose Iturbi, Spanish pisnist, ss & Bizet's opers, “Carmen,” will be feature of the Sundsy Evening Hour 4 45 | like.” roration. “I want you all to enjoy | Jack Benny's contract renewed, carry- 'y:urselves." he tells the studio audi- [ing his current Sunday night broad- ence, “and you don’t need to be afraid | casts over into early Summer . . . to laugh and applaud as loudly as you | Lanny Ross to make personal appear- An invitation for “background | 8nces at the Michigan Exposition in noise” to stimulate the artists, it not | Detroit for four days beginning March impress the unseen audience? It |9 ... Glenn Gray's Casa Loma Or- seems so, and you are a bit disap- | Chestra, Walter O'Keefe and Annette 0 | form often shakes with laughter. 11 Sabatanibetel pointed at such artificial tactics, At precisely 7 o'clock the orchestra signs on, Announcer Wilson delivers himself of his blurb over the musical background, he finishes and the or- chestra breaks into crescendo. The usual wisecracking introduction by Wilson and discordant blare of the band, and Jack himself addresses the microphone. He engages in repartee | with the chubby Wilson, whose moon ! face is all smiles and whose rotund Benny has the microphone at the left, Wilson being at another about 12 feet to the right. The rest of the cast | breaks in at one or the other mikes in the well-known manner of that partic- ular show, according to their parts in the script. Everyone laughs, of course, | but why do the performers themselves laugh so heartily, and especially why is the orchastra literally convulsed? There you have the secret of Jack Hanshaw signed for another 13 weeks on their WABC commercial . . . Abe Lyman leaving March 5 on a Southern cruise. When he returns he’ll broad- cast from California, where he's | going for film work . . . Vim B: radley | being held over indefinitely at the | Stork Club . ., . Robert Simmons to | fly to St. Louis next Tuesday to sing at the annual festival of music . . .| Bernice Claire, who has a lovely voice, signed for “Lavender and Old Lace” | programs . . . Revelers preparing to celebrate their twelfth anniversary asa | radio quartette . . . Shirley Howard starts her first metropolitan tour of vaudeville houses March 8, when she opens at the Metropolitan Theater. VING KAUFMAN “Lazy Dan” and “Mr. Jim,” on his Sunday C. B. 8. series, struck on the shoulder by misplaced piece of scenery while he was singing “Stars Fell in Alabama” Benny’s show, quite aside from the excellence of the script. Cast and orchestra are enjoying the perfor- mance even more than the seen and unseen audience, and there is no question about the spontaneity of their enjoyment. You learn why after the show when you can talk above whispers to your host, a studio attache, and then talk to Jack Benny himself. ! The performers, with the exception of Benny of course, saw the script — | for the first time that morning. They rekearsed it for only three or. four hours, studied their lines through the afternoon, perhaps puzzled to them- selves how some of those lines could “pull a laugh”"—and returned to the show. All of them are troupers or radio artists, yet all are as nervous and eager as for any first night performance. The orchestra members, you also learn, had been barred entirely from the rehearsals! Thus the written) lines are utterly new to all of them but their leader, Don Bestor, who has some script parts. The result is that every laugh from the orchestra is wholly unaffected. Small Paper to Erect Station. The Ardmore (Okla.) Ardmoreite is the second small town newspaper within the last few weeks to secure authority’ from the Federal Com- munications Commission to erect a| new local radio station. The news- | paper was granted 100 watts on 1210 kilocycles, daytime only. A few weeks ago the commission authorized the Anderson (8. C) Independent-Tri- bune to erect a local 100-watter. studio at 6:30 relatively fresh for the|. . experienced | York today with a complete serles of $nRi'fall on ¥ 2 N — /A o during a recent personal appearance | in Providence, R. I . . . The mother of the Pickens sisters never goes to rehearsals or broadcasts with her famous daughters. She won't be known as a stage mother . . . Jolly Coburn and his orchestra renewed at the Rainbow room until September 1 . Evelyne Vernon arrives in New WRC “Key” Station in National Radio Forum Broadcast WRC will become the “key” station for the N. B. C. network cessful “When Ladies Meet,” is to develop an original play of her own, adapt it Into scenario form and co- operate with Goldwyn on production, | casting and direction. The arrange- ment with Goldwyn on film produc- tions is similar to the one Miss Crothers has had with John Golden on the presentation of stage plays. RENOVIZE . .. your home This Has Been Our Business for 86 Years A. EBERLY’S SONS 7 oL Phons “Bherly'er Get 50 Cents Each on Old Pots and Pans See page 109, Woman’s Home Com- STATION WISV 10:05 A.M. Monday TONIGHT GENERAL MOTORS SYMPHONY CONCERT 0 EUGENE MANDY ScHira 8to9p.m. WMAL630K.C. - FREE INSPECTIONS ON ANY MAKE RADIO BY OUR RADIO EXPERTS SPECIAL_PRICES ON ALL-WAVE AERIALS Listen In 938 F ST. NW. P. J. Dunn Earns $55 to $65 Weekly Servicing Radio Sets Learned Radio at Home in His Spare Time N. R. 1. training” writes Mr. Dunn to J. E. Smith, Presi- dent of the National Radio Institute. “I have been muking an average of $55 to $65 P. J. Dunn q week.” 64-Page Book Shows You How to Become a Radio Expert At Home in Your Spare Time. Mail the make $40, commercial police and aviation Radio ions; and for other good jobs in con- nection with the manufacture, sale servicing of Radio. Television and Loud Speaker apparat are doing_and made $5. $10. $15 sets in spare time wi le_learning. Back agreement given. ney Mail coupon now. Smith, Presi Nat | Radio Ii | Dept. 5-CE-7. Washington. D. C. Send me your free book. I under- | stand this does not obligate me.