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PRIL 19, 1935. ; 'HE EVENING STAR, C, FRIDAY, Washington Wayside G NATIONS T 0 RADID PEACE PLEA N. B. C. Will Link Capitals il Transoteanic Broad- cast May 3, 4. OKTIO. London, Geneva, Paris, Moscow and Washington will be linked by the National Broadcasting Co. in two trans- cceanic broadcasts May 3 and 4. From the far-scattered capitals of the world, leading statesmen will issue appeals for world peace. Mme. Krup- skaya, widow of Lenin, and Mme. Litvinov, wife of the foreign commis- sar, will be heard from Moscow; Vis- count Robort Cecil from London; Prince Tc~7awa from Tokio, and Jane Adde: - irom Washington. From Geneva, on which the eyes of the world are now focused, a plea for in- ternational harmony will be voiced by Arthur Henderson, president of the disarmament conference. The first program will be heard Friday afternoon, May 3, with speeches from Tokio, London, Patis, Geneva and ‘Washington. by Mme. Litvinov. The exact times and specific N. B. C. networks will be announced later. . Arranged by the Women's Inter- | linist, On Saturday morning, | during the broadcast Thursday. Mrs. May 4. Mme. Krupskaya will be heard | Luboschutz and Nancy Wilson, cellist, from Moscow. with English translation | will also play Beethoven's “G Minor national League for Peace and Free- dom, the international programs will honor Dr. Jane Addams and will cele- brate the twentieth anniversary of her salling with 46 distinguished Ameri- can women to The Hague in 1915. Dr. Addams and s majority of these women will gather at the home of Mrs. George Rublee in Washington to hear the Saturday morning program from Moscow. * &k % % ONTEMPORARY composers have an even break with the classicists in the programs scheduled by the N. B. C. Music Guild for next week— Bela Tozsa, Sergel Rachmaninoff and Boris Koutzens representing the living, and Mozart, Haydn and Beethoven, the classic writers. Bela Rozsa, young Hungarian for some time an N. B. C. staff pianist and a student in composition of Ar- nold Schoenberg, heads the program for Monday. His manuscript “Quar- tet” and Haydn's “A Major Quartet, No. 22,” will be played by the String Quartet. Boris Koutzen, composer and vio- linist; Nahoum Benditzky, cellist; Inez Koutzen and Henri Deering, pianists, will be heard Tuesday. Deering will be the pianist in the playing of Rach- maninoff’s “Trio Elegiac, Opus 9,” and Miss Koutzen will assist in Boris Koutzen's “Sonata for Piano and Violin.” Genia and Plerre Luboschutz, hus- band and wife, will play the Mozart “D Major Sonata for Two Pianos” Cello and Piano Sonata, Opus 5." On Saturday, April 27, Josef Honti, pianist, and Remo Bolognini, vio- will play Beethoven's “C| Minor Piano and Violin Sonata, Opus 5, No, 2.” Harrison Knox, tenor, will be heard in a group of Beethoven songs, including ‘“Adelaide,” “Ich Liebe Dich,” “Mignon” and “Peni- tence.” * ok k% AX BAER will play the part of & private detective 30 minutes a week on N. B. C., starting April 29. Part of the series will be a de- scription of his fight with Jimmy Braddock, June 13. * x ko B. C. will will carry a series of five Library of Congress musi- cales beginning Wednesday. ‘These concerts will be under auspices of the Elizabeth Sprague Foundation. The first will feature the String Quar- tet of Vienna, which made its Amer- ican debut at the Library chamber mausic festival April 8. DANCER WILL WED Thelma Mills to Marry Dr. Wun- der in Chicago Sunday. LOS ANGELES, April 19 (A.— Thelma Mills, screen dancer, left last night by train for Chicago, where she said her twice-interrupted marriage to Dr. Clinton Wunder, former exec- utive vice president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science, will take place Sunday. En route to her marriage ceremony the first time, the actress suffered an attack of ptomaine poisoning. Her next attempt was marked by a traffic accident. She was confined to a hos- pital several weeks. Dr. Wunder formerly was a min- ister in Rochester, N. Y. CapritaLs RaDiO PROGRAMS Friday, April 19. I WRC 950k P.M. WMAL 630k (Copyright, 1935) AFTERNOON PROGRAMS WISV 1,460k Eastern Standard Time. WOL 1,310k | 73:00 [Vic and Sade 3:15 |Ma Perkins | 3:30 |Kay Foster | 3:45 Dr. Joseph Jastrow | U. S. " Marine Band Seville Program > Buffalo Philharmoni “ @ |Ladies of the Air |Light Opera Gems Hot Chocolates ic "4:00 Woman's Radio Review et e g 4:30 South Se 445 o Betty Islanders Rod and Stream Tea Time Women's Clubs and Bob |Buffalo Philharmon! Carla Romano ic |Today’'s Winners “ . “5:00 |Sundown Revue 5:15 e = 5:30 |“Skipper Jim" 5:45 Stamp Club Little Evening Star Flashes |Aunt Sue and Polly Singing Lady |Evening Rhythms |The Government Jack Armstrong Orphan Annie Comedy Capers One Time Opportunities Radio Voices Quarter Hour P.M. EVENING PROGRAMS, 6:00 Sports Review—Music 6:15 Jimmy Allen 6:30 ’Arlene Jackson 6:45 |“The Desert Kid" |Gen. Amos A. Fries |Evening_Album |Sports Parade |Lowell Thomas |Carlton and Shaw Arch McDonald Makers of History Milton Charles Homer Rodeheaver Government Family 7:00 | Music—News |Amos 7:15 7:30 Sons of Pioneers Uncle Ezra “The Black Chamber” |Plantation Echoes Red Davis Dangerou: Paradise Myrt and Marge Just Plain Bill “The O'Neills” Boake Carter - ‘n’ Andy 'Wonderland Boys News Spotlight Dinner Music Jessica Dragonette {Irene Morton Downey College Profa Rich Edwin C. Hill True Story Court Mrs. F. D. Roosevelt Dance Music Lonely Jack Dance Music 9:00 Waltz Time 9:15 . 9:30 One-Night Stands 9:45 = - 10:00 First Nighter 10:15 ) % 10:30 'Pause that Refrcshes 10:45 & e |News | Beatrice Lie i Circus Night March of “'nm Las‘t. Wo‘l:ds of Christ” "'Hol.!_ywood Hotel® * Amateur Show Ray Beck Dance Parade |“Hollywood Hotel” Bulletins Stoopnagle and Budd Dance Parade | WOL Haymakers “ 11:00 |George R. Holmes |N. B. C. Revue 11:15 'Jesse Crawford Good 11:30 La Paree Orchestra 11:45 i |Slumber Music Friday Service Rolling Stones |Godfrey’s Moon Dial | |Freddie Berren's Orch. WOL Haymakers Sports Flashes |John Slaughter’s Orch. 12:00 Madriguera’s Orchestra |Tommy Tucker’s Orch. 12:15 |Sign off g EARLY PROGRAMS TOMORROW. |Midnight Revue 12:30 !Jimmy Carrigan's Orch. !Mnnsy ll:pon's Orch. (Chas. Dol;nberxer'; Orch. 5 S0 i - |Sign off [Chapel Hour | |Morning Glorles The Getter Upper S‘H]Dlll Sign off | four black-and-white Random Observations of Interesting Events and Things. YACHTLESS YACHTSMEN. HIL FRIEDLANDER, the bro- ker, laid out his wardrobe of newly-bought yachting clothes. There was a smile like the glimmer of the sun on a Sum: mer sea 1n his eyes as he stared ap- provingly at the shiny new binoculars. “And what,” his wife asked sud- denly, “is all the excitement about? “Year after year Bowie Chipman has asked me to go cruising on his yacht, the Rima. This year I'm going to do it—and do it right,” he added, with a sweep of his hand toward the maritime regalia, It had cost him a round $100. Next morning Mr. Friedlander rushed to the financial district to notify Mr. Chipman he was set and ready to go a-yachting. The latter's face grew grave. “Sorry, Phil,” he said, “but I've sold my yacht.” * % ok % CRITIQUE ON CURIOSITY. WO men stook talking on the I north side of Pennsylvania ave- nue between Eleventh and Twelfth streets. As they talked one raised his arm and pointed across to | the old Post Office Building. “There. Don’t you see?” he said. “In that first-floor window, just to the left of the entrance” “Oh, yes.” ferret out little-known documents on the historically famous or neglected. ‘The group is called “The Atticans” for no classical reasons, Dr. Chase explains, but simply because the work calls for exploration in many old attics. * k¥ . “IN UNION—" | ‘TUDENTS of Washington-Lee High School, in Arlington County, Va., have a “congress,” a president and a vice president. Recently a member of the congress introduced & resolutian to abolish home work. The measure was adopted unanimously and was quickly signed by the president. In deference to the new “law,” school authorities have announced that next term there will be no home ag work at Washington-Lee. * K k *x OBSCURE FLEET. HE United States has a fleet that sees action 365 days a year and yet has no connection with the Navy Departmeni, the War Depart- ment, the Marines or the Coast Guard. It consists of approximately 20 ves- sels, ranging in size from 28 to 115 feet, that were put into service by George A. Anthony, the marine en- gineer who floated more than 100 large ocean-going ships during the Overweight? From the few words discernible it | & developed they were talking about figures in a window in the building now occupied | by the Agricultural Adjustment Ad- | ministration. “Looks like four skulls and cross- bones,” the first man went on. | “Yeh, sure does.” Several passersby paused, gazed at | the peculiar window adornments and | wandered on. Presently the two men started off, still arguing over what the two fig- 5 | ures were. They probably still don’t know they are four N. R. A. blue insignia. To such a state hal human curi- osity fallen. Maybe they were right. | What good did it do to walk across | the street and find out? * * ¥ x WITH THE -ATTICANS. | R. LEWIS CHASE, who is now doing research in Washington | on the life of Thomas Holley | Chivers, the poet, is the leader of a group called “The Atticans.” | The members are pledged to some | form of research work as a pastime. Their aim is to know everything about ' something and each member selects his own subject, delving into any and all available records. All subjects, of course, are historical and Wash- ington is considered an ideal place to Easter fJorYoung "“Eat Sensibly — Drink| Welch’s Grape Juice” Says IRENE RICH Lovely Lady of the Air and Screen . Send your name and address to "'c: Weich ® Grape Juice 65.Westfield, _N- Yoo ?:r free scientific 31 neaith booklets: “Keeping Your Weight Down"” and — “Red Blooded Children and Athletes.” Also a new, simple Diet List of many good things to eat, with weight and height chart, and a letter from Irene Rich, telling vou how she keeps her weight the same as at 16, though over 40. sent prepaid. TONIGHT IRENE RICH W M A L-8 o’clock Welch CRAPE JUICE Styles Chickens! World War and was s en- gineer for the remodeling of the old Leviathan, when it was converted to This Mttle-heard-of fleet operates under the Department of Agriculture, through its Bureau of Biological Sur vey, and the boats are used for en- forcement of the game protection laws. ‘The largest craft are in service around the Aleutian Islands and in Alaskan waters. * x % x UNCORRUPTED. HAT do representatives eat? Once it was “corned beef and cabbage,” but just now the fashionable dish in the House restaurant is “pigs’ knuckles' and sauerkraut,” according to the man- er. That ought to convince the folks back home that city life is not cor- rupting the men they send to Con- gress. Authorized Service Marvel Carburetors CREEL BROTHERS 1811 M4n ST.NW.-+-DEcarva 4220 WHEN YOUR AUTO RADIO Needs Dependable SERVICE Come to GEORGE'S Exclusive Auto Radio Station 2015 14th St. N.W. ARMY FLYER KILLED IN TEXAS CRACK-UP Plane Crashes Few Yards From Taylor, Tex., Rail Station. Three Escape. By the Associated Press. TAYLOR, Tex., April 19.—Lieut. Paul Boyer Wilson, 26, of March Field, Riverside, Calif., was killed here yes- terday when his plane crashed near the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Rail- road Stagion. . ‘Taylor residents said the plane “spun like a top” as Wilson attempted to bring it down in a plowed field. When it was within about 50 feet of the ground the pilot's straps broke .l:’d Wilson was thrown from the p. ‘The young officer’s legs were broken and his skull crushed. ‘Three men standing in the rallroad yards said they barely had time to get out of the way of the falling plane. It missed the station only & few yards. Papers found on Wilson's body did not disclose his destination or the purpose of the flight. The plane was demolished. RENOVIZE... your home Papering that is Papering EBERLY’S v AL 1108 K N.W. Dignily your home. It MT be OXFORDS Yes, if you are goi'ng to wear glasses with your Easter outfit...they must be Oxfords. Here’s an excellent choice at a remarkable saving! 'Vassar' Schwab Guard Folding Type Frame Only $4.85 Glasses May be Charged to Your Account OPTICAL DEPARTMENT—STREET FLOOR. LANSBURGH'S 7-8m & €E-STREETS Blue, gray or black kid. Gray or beige swirl, NA+-9800 {The Grenadiers |Morning Devotions Don Hall Trio Cheerio Here are the smart voung styles that smart young people will be wearing on Easter. . . just a few of the many fashions you can choose from at 8:30 | 8:45 Group Singing ) 9:00 (Your Timekeeper |News Bulletins 9:15 |Organ Recital | Rreakfast Club 9:30 |Junior Radio Journal | o Sun Dial. 'The Ban d Wagon {Caroline @aker Mann and Irwin Words and Music |News—Smackout Edward MacHugh |Marie De Ville |Children’s Frolic 10:00 |Wyoming Jack 10:15 [Morning Parade 10:30 G 10:45 | Red Cross Program lht'snpntgnfl |News—Mellow Moments |Old Favorites Varieties Boys' Band ; B E 1p:45 11:00 (Capital Cadet Band 11:15 ‘vasv Family 11:30 [Down Lovers’ Lane FEasiipEasT e |Children’s Frolic [ “« - “« - PROGRAMS !International Week End P.M. AFTERNOON |Cincinnati Conservatory | “w e Varieties Mrs. J. F. Weinman uorgm; Moods 11:00 11:15 11:30 | 11345 P.M. /Augustana Choir 12:00 Minute Men Fields and Hall |Afternoon Rhythms 5 |Honeyhoy and Sassafras Listening Post :30 {Merry-go-Round Farm and Home Hour 12:45 Merry Madcaps e International Broadcast 12:00 12:15 12:30 12:45 Midday Musicale Luncheon Concert ~1-00 |Rex Battle's Ensemble Farm and Home Hour |Rice Brothers Poetic Strings People's Lobby G e | “World Fellowship” ‘mtsrnnim:ml Broadcast -(John Slaughter’s Orch. 1:00 Radio Romeos 1:15 Music in the Air |People’s Lobby {Saturday Melodies Miniature Theater !A)Illg Pln‘!w'l Orch. Week-End" Revue Week End Revue | College Debate Mu.slf Mlglc Buffalo Presents “ Music Guild Mickey ot“thc Circus Paumonok Handicap 3 Old Favorites Popular Hits Symphony Concert Ladies of the Air Accordion Aces Orchestral Music Piano Duo J. Thomas Schneider Music Guild Carol Deis “Our Barn” Mod:rn Minstrels “« - “- - Tea Time Today’s Winners - - Evening Star Flashes [Evening Rhythms Sunday School Lesson |Dance Rhythms Our American Schools |Romany Trail MAJOR FEATURES AND PROGRAM Sundown Revue Eddie Duchin’s Orch. |Parade of Youth " The famous Paulist Choristers will be featured during a special Good Friday service on WMAL at 11:15 o'clock. The program will be pre- sented under the auspices of the Na- tional Council of Catholic Men. Jessica Dragonette, on WRC at 8 o'clock, has included several Easter selections on her program. These in- clude Berlin’s “Easter Parade” and Faure’s “The Palms.” “‘WMAL will broadcast at 9:30 o’clock Words of Christ.” The Chicago A Capella Choir and a symphony or- chestra will take part. Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt will conclude her present radio series on ‘WJSV at 8 o'clock. Sidney’s Orches- tra, directed by Rudy Schram, will One "'nme" Opportunities Nordica Orchestra NOTES. bl lababals 85815858 play some of Mrs. Roosevelt’s favorite numbers. Ann Harding and Herbert Marshall, motion picture stars, will take part in the “Hollywood Hotel” program, on ‘WJSV at 9:30 o'clock. S8 EEE 3 MORE DAYS T'S TIME s C//fIVGE "10, TO ENTER CONTEST FOR 000 —the first grand prize in the Shelby Arch- Preserver contest for grand prize: Six pairs of contest. MOTOR OIL SUPERFINE LUBRICANTS women! The second of shoes a year as long as you live! Listen tg Mre. Roosevelt in final broadcast tonight, WISV at eight, for details Shoes on sale— ONLY AT %F ST. S SRR Hahn's. . .and all at a smart low price! FOR JUNIOR Dressy straps, san- dals or step-ins in patent. Browns. Whites. Sports Ox- fords. Sizes 3% to 9. $2.95 * 35.00 Lovely patent or white straps and sandals. Also pumps with slightly higher heels. 121 to 3. $2.65 t #4.00 Oxfords or moccasin styles. Also straps in the most desir- able leathers. Sizes 6 to 12. WOMEN FOR LARGE BOYS shoes like Wing tips. or _smooth Black or Brown. In big boys’ sizes 1 to 6. $2.65 © %5.00 Sturdy Juniortown: 1207 F ST. 7th & K STS, 3212 14th ST. Beige-and-brown or blue kid. Also black patent leather sandal. If you want to be smart and gay and economize, too, by all means see these famous shoes! If you have never worn a shoe at this low price in your whole life...we promise you you'll be astounded at what $2.95 can buy. The smart ’ blues! The light beiges and grays! And notice the styles! All light! Open! Gay and summery! And light materials! We repeat, just to see for yourself, come to Hahn's and find out how much shoe style and value this little price will buy. Blue, brown or black gabardine, smart pat- ent leather trim. 1207 F STREET 3212 14th ST. 7th’ & K STREETS