Evening Star Newspaper, November 18, 1935, Page 12

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CONTROL ROOM PRICED FROM $ 50 199° PALAIS ROYAL Iith & G Sis. | 1.00 |Sign off Monday, November 18. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1935. (Copyright, 1935) “Caprrtal’s Rapio PRoGRAMS Eastern Standard Time. P.M. [ WRC 950k WMAL 630k WOL 1,310k WISV 1460k | AFTERNOON PROGRAMS P.M. Edna O'Dell 3:156 |Ma Perkins 3:30 |Vic and Sade 3:45 |The O'Neils 73:00 Campbell’s Royalists 'The Wise Man Terri La Fraconi 'The King’s Jesters | Symphonic Moments Don Redman’s Orch, Will Osborne’s Orch. 3:00 3:15 3:30 3:45 The Dictators Hoosier Hop Music—News Betly ) 3 Woman's Radio Review Sundown Revue Songs and Stories Dr. William McClellan Mixing Bowl Winners and Bob Today'’s PR 4:00 4:15 4:30 4:45 Chansonette Latvian Program Chicago Varieties Clyde Barrie | Al Pearce’s Gang Tom Mix Clara, Lu and Em Little Evening Star Flashes Aunt Sue and Polly Singing Lady Vocal Interlude Orphan_Annie One Time Opportunities William A. Roberts 5:00 5:15 5:30 5:45 Evening Rhythms ‘Terry and Ted lJack Armstrong News—Music | laoaoenss I - EVENI PROGRAMS P.M. 0 [Tarzan 5 Sports—Music 5 |Word Man—Music U. §. Army Band Bill Coyle Lowell Thomas Today in Sports News Bulletins RIEXY X :0 :15 | :30 |Little Jack Little 4 :0 0 |Amos ‘n’ Andy 7:15 {Uncle Ezra 7:30 |“Question Mark” 7:45 Master Singers 8:15 | 8:30 |Richard Crooks g5 e Rudolph Schramm Stamp Club Education in the News Dangerous Paradise | “8:00" Hammerstein's Music Hall Fibber McGee and Molly | |Evening in Paris Don Bestor's Orch. News Spotlight Varieties Hindu Religion Five Star Final Radio Bookman Detective Mysteries Safeguarding InvestmentsArch McDonald Government Family San Francisco Symphony 6:00 6:15 6:30 6:45 7:00 7:15 7:30 7:45 8:00 8:15 8:30 8:45 Buck Rogers Vanished Voices Myrt_and Marge Martha and Hal |Singin’ Sam |Boake Carter Lombardo Road One-Night Stands 9:00 JHurllck‘s 9:15 | 9:30 |Grace Moore GO R Gypsies Greater Princess Pat Players Food Show Two Boys—A Girl Fox Amateurs Minstrels "9:00 9:15 9:30 9:45 'Radio Theater 10:00 Contented Program 10:15 | G 10:30 |National Radio Forum: 10:45 | A. R. Clas | |News Dixie Harmonies The Iron Master Bulletins Fox Amateurs News Bulleting Beautiful Music 10:00 10:15 10:30 10:45 Wayne King's Orchestra, {March of Time Manhattan Choir 11:00 | Night Owl 11:15 |Arthur Reilly 11:30 |Madriguera’s Orchestra 11:45 |Jjesse Crawford 12:00 Midnight Rhythms i 12:30 |Joe Candullo’s Orch. g5yl e | AM. 76:00 | 6:15 | 6:30 |Gordon Hittenmark 6:45 e = "7:00 Gordon Hittenmark Sons ~ \Gordon Hittenmark e w 79:00 | Gordon Hittenmark News Bulletins 9:15 Richard Leibert, organist |Breaklast Club 9:30 Grace and Scotty | 9:45 The Wife Saver {Slumber Hour Shandor 12:15 |Luigi Romanelli's Orch. |Sign Off Grab- | Yodeling Philosopher News—Morning Glorles {Morning Devotions The Sizzlers |Cheerio Russian Troika ! Dance Music 11:00 | | 11:15 iEmnry Dougherty's Orch. 30 |Moon Dial Sign Off |News Bulletins 00 |Dick Gardner's Orch, 15 {Hawali Calls 130 EARLY PROGRAMS TOMORROW Bag Musical Clock of Pioneers o iy | Police Flashes Varieties | News Bulletins 10:00 'News—Fashions 10:15 Home, Sweet Home 10:30 |Gypsy Trail 10:45 'Three Shades of Blue 11:00 Ida Bailey Allen 11:15 Keyboard Sketches 11:30 |“Your Child” 11:45 Piano Moods | |*“The |Community Chest |Edward MacHugh | Today’s Children |U.S. Marine Band This and That Variety and Value Musicale | Margie Nicholson Doctor Says” | Rowan Tudor | sage’s Album Views of the News | Jack Ward. organist _ |Sun Dial | Morning Concert _'sign oft |Elder Michaux e 6:15 6:30 | 6:45 | News—Sun Dial “7:00 Sun Dial = % 7:30 7:45 | 8:00 8:15 8:30 |Sun Dial | 9:00 9:15 9:30 9:45 |10:00 10:15 10:30 10:45 [ 11:00 11:15 11:30 1 11:45 {Jean Abbey {Bugle Call Revue Gothamaires { Romany Trail Betty Hudson U.S. Navy Band Milky Way Three Keys |Hester Walker Beall Just Plain Bill P EVENING PROGRAMS P.M. 12:00 Three Scamps 12:15 Honeyboy and Sassafras 12:30 Merry Go Round 12:45 s | “1:00 Dick Fiddler's Orch, Farm and Home Hour 1:15 3 1:30 'Boulanger’s Orchestra 1:45 |Music Guild The Simpson Boys Curbstone Queries Farm and Home Hour | (Castles of Romance Children's Concert Lost and Found | News Flashes Dance Music Church of the Air | Balladeers | Dance Music Cheese Club Vonce of Experience 12:00 Bunny's Blue Boys Mary Marlin |Afternoon’ Rhythms ‘Chpsv Luncheon |Luncheon Music |News—Music “2:00 'Music Guild | 2:15 g 2:30 Marine Exhibit | Children's Concert, Words and Music Golden Melodies Rhythm Revue Happy Lewis Revu | News Bulletins | Between Book Ends | |{Happy Hollow School of the Alr e | 73:00 |Clark Dennis 3:15 |Ma Perkins 3:30 |Vicand Sade 3:45 |The O'Neils | 4:00 Woman's 4:15 = | 4:30 |Sundown Revue 4:45 Women's Clubs |Nellie Revell The Silver Flute King's Jesters Betty and Bob |Gale Page | Tea Time |Evening Star Flashes Accordion Aces Jan Garber's Orch. Today's Winners "5:00 |Chasin’ the Blues 5:15 | = - 5:30 |James Wilkinson {Your Health 'The Singing Lady Famous Voices Symphonic Moments One-Time Opportunities Town Topics |Nbv\ s—Music Cleveland String Quartet Science Service Three Little Words Evening Rhythms | Terry and Ted |Jack Armstrong MAJOR FEATURES AND PROGRAM NOTES. Grace Moore, famous screen, oper- atic and radio soprano, will return to the Open House program on WRC at 9:30 after an absence of three weeks. Richard Bonelli, Metropoli- tan opera star, also will contribute to | the program. Miss Moore's chief se- lections will be Cadman's “Land of the Sky Blue Water” and the “Hero- diade” arfa of Massenet. Bonelli will sing “La Paloma” and the pro- logue from Leoncavallo’s “Pagliacci.” | “The Girl from Havana” and “I'd Wwilliam Gillette, celebrated char- acter star of the American theater, will emerge from several years of re- tirement to re-create his famous role | of “Sherlock Holmes™ for the Radio | Theater version of the play on WISV at 9. | Levy, a star of the old Hammerstein Victoria days, and Donald Brian of Merry Widow” fame on his Music | Hall of the Air program, a WRC at- | traction, at 8. Miss Levy will sing Rather Two-step Than Waltz.” Ted Hammerstein will present Ethel | . Richard Crooks, Metropolitan opera tenor, and Margaret Speaks, soprano, | will be heard on WRC at 8:30. Crooks’ | contribution will be Friml's “L'Amour | Toujours L'Amour” and Metcalf's “Absent.” The Romany Singers. a chorus of | 18 voices, will appear for a second | time with Harry Horlick's Gypsies ;on WRC at 9. They will sing Friml's “Song of the Vagabonds” “The Rosary” and Padilla’s “Valencia.” 80 ANCIENT AUTOS IN BRITISH RACE| Rattle From London to Brighton | in Annual “0ld Crock” Event. By the Associated Press. | LONDON, November 18—Eighty ancient automobiles—the oldest made in 1896, the youngest in 1904—coughed | into action today. despite damp No- vember weather, and rattled their way from London to Brighton through a pouring rain for the annual “old | crocks” race. ! They commemorated thus the ! emancipation day of 1896, when a 12- mile-an-hour speed limit was abol- ished and cars were allowed to take the road for the first time without being preceded by a man waving & red flag to warn horses and pedes- trians out of the way. Almost ditched by the sleek limou- sines which swept by in showers of mud, the “old crocks”—once the pride of their owners—made & Sorry spec- tacle as they ploughed past speed- limit signs they simply could not exceed. Traffic caused the old cars many bad moments and some had to give up, being towed ignominiously from the course. Sixty-eight veterans of the road finally panted triumphantly into | Brighton to earn gold medals for their muddied drivers. The winner was George Eyres, driv- | ing a 33-year-old Napier, which com- pleted the 60-mile trip in 1 hour 50 | minutes. | New Textures for Hosiery. | CHICAGO, November 18 (P).— Manufacturers of women’s hosiery, having virtually exhausted the availa- ble supply of “popular” shades, today displayed new textures and brightly colored toes for evening wear. ‘Winter hosiery is dark in color, but as extravagantly sheer as anything | worn last Summer. The new after- noon things were described as “filmy ‘as mist” yet with strength to take wear without a trace of strain. Want New Industry. ‘The Netherland Indies are trying to establish a cotton textile industry. Portraits in Books. by hand, and if the illuminator hap- pened also to be a natural portrait painter, we may have the likeness of some famous personage of the past. The portrait of Chaucer, England’s celebrated writer of the fourteenth century, is thus believed to have come down to us as authentic, a fellow- scribe of his generation who knew him, happening also to be a good hand at portrait painting. Rah Rah Carpets. Rag carpets in college colors con- stitute a new London fad. WHEN YOUR AUTO RADIO Needs Dependable SERVICE Come to GEORGE’S Exclusive Auto Radio Station 2015 14th St. N.W. A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy cheeks—sparkling eyes— most women can have. Dr. F. M. Ed- wards for 20 years treated scores of women who suffered from constipa- tion. During these years he gave his patients a substitute for calomel made Before printing, books were written | COMPLETE QUAKER STATE LUBRICATION SERYICE Minute Service Stations of a few well-known vegetable ingre- dients, naming them Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets, Know them by their olive color. ‘These tablets are wonder-workers on the bowels, causing & normal ac- tion, carrying off the waste and poi- sonous matter in cae's system. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coatest tongue, headaches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, take one or two of Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets at night for a week and note the pleasing results, Thousands of women and men take Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets—now and then—to keep fit. 15c, 30c and 60c. 6:00| 7:15 | | _8:45 No. 1 ot 17th ond L Sts. N.W. | No. 7 ot 3939 Canal Road N.W. An Open Letter to ‘MY CLEANER 10:30 Tonight. R. CLAS, director of the A' tion, will discuss the Gov- ernment's slum clearance program network of other National Broadcast- ing Co. stations. | | 10:30 to 11 o'clock. Clas has under his direction many involving millions of dollars. * & % % | ities Commission, will celebrate his | twenty-fifth consecutive weekly broad- | i Clas to Discuss Federal Program in Address at Housing Division of the Public Works Administra- during the National Radio Forum to- night over WRC and a coast-to-coast The forum, arranged by The Wash- | ington Star, will be broadcast from slum clearance projects in various | cities of the country, some of lhcm[ IWILLIAM A. ROBERTS, people’s counsel before the Public Util- | cast over WOL today at 5:45 p.m.| | with a review of his air activities. | staff at an informal party. | These programs are educational in character and are devoted entirely to | questions relating to the District gov- ernment, such as the history of the | | Police and Fire Departments, the budget. and legislation urged by the Commissioners. | Civic teachers in a number of | | Washington schools have found a source of valuable information in the Roberts broadcasts and have assigned Pupils to listen in and make a report for study in the class rooms. ¥ %k % UDWIG BEETHOVEN and Mau- rice Ravel are to be honored by | the New York Philharmonic Sym phony orchestra during its 200th ra- dio concert December 1. These were | the composers selected in a Nation- wide poll of the radio audience as the most popular writers of classical music. Actually, Raval was the third choice in the vote. Jan Sibelius received more votes than Raval, but he will be honored December 8. when the orches- tra will mark his 70th birthday anni- versary. 4 * | COLL'.\!B]A and N. B. C. have com- pleted arrangements to broad- cast President Roosevelt's speeches in Atlanta November 29, and in Chicago December 9. In Atlanta, the Presdent will speak at Grant Field during Georgia Tech's | homecoming day celebration. The Chicago speech will be made before the Annual Convention of the Amer- ican Farm Bureau Federation. | % * | UBE GOLDBERG, humorist and | cartoonist, has been signed by Columbia for a series in which he will | introduce the world's first “mechan- | | ical stooge.” The radio robot will play amazing spare parts in the show ¥ e COLCM_BIA has scheduled another broadcast from Ethiopia Wednes- day at 5 pm. At that time Crown * % * %k k 4-STAR RADIO FEATURE Romance... Comedy... Thrills! Starring Robert Stone, Joan 8laine and Original New York Cast | 'PLAY OF THE WEEK RENOVIZE . .. your home | Particular Renovizine—for Particular Peopl A. EBERLY’S Diomn vour DISTRICT 6557 | Phone_*Ebe Listen Tonight at 6:45 on WRC for Hahn’s Word Man ENTER THE CONTEST Prizes Every Day Prince Asfao Woosen, eldest son of Emperor Haile Selassie, will discuss the war situation. HOSPITAL GETS $39,000 FROM WINE AUCTION Burgundies From Grapes of Vine- yard Provided by Philip the Good Sold Amid Festivities. By the Associated Press. BEAUNE, France, November 18.— ‘Wine from grapes of an orchard pro= | tinuing only during the burning of a ' Afterward he will entertain the WOL} vided by Philip the Good in the fifteenth century was sold at auction yesterday amid splendor and festivities changed little since medieval times. ‘Wine buyers, who mingled with sing- ing and dancing townfolk clad in old Burgundian costumes, spent 600.000 “francs (about $39,000) for the wine sold by the Hospital of Beaune. Philip the Good, Burgundy, endowed the hospital with the vineyard that its earnings might provide care for patients unable to pay. ‘The auction is held in the dimly lit hall of the hospital, the bidding con- then Duke o." | | candle. Many of the finest Burgundies in the world are marketed at the | famous auction, ADVERTISEMENT. Now You Can Wear FALSE TEETH With Real Comfort FASTEETH. & keeps teeth fir new. pleasant powder, set. Deodorizes. No gummy. 80ey, Das'y taste or feciing To eat And Iaugh i comiore® o sprinkle 3l PASTEETR on o Dlates. Get it toduy At Peapler Deu Stores and other rus storen > DT [ I\V\Y THIS CUSTOMER'S CHECK WORTH $1.°° Entitles you to Purchase Beautiful 1 76ty HERE'S ALL YOU DO— When vi Check this check with purchases. When it is completel becomies worth $1.00. Pay only 99¢ A very acceptable Christmas Gift already have a sufficient supply of Partly Cooked, Long-Cut SAUER KRAUT big A No. 2% can 5c Farmdale Select June Peas 4SCO Sweet Peas twa 15¢ ASCO Sifted Peas Tt 17 ¢ Soap Chips 5. 33¢ 2 cakes 9¢ reg. reg. 17¢ reg. 18¢ Palmolive Soap BAB-O 2 cans 23¢ CLEANER POWDER 4SCO Floor Wax Marco Dog Food It contains kelp 4 Please Leave Your Order Early for Thanksgiving Turkeys, Poultry, Etc. ¥ punched FLOATING SOAP TOILET SOAP LAUNDRY OAP 16-o0z. cans 5 PIECE MONAX Lunicireon Set 991 ing your American Store, ask for vour Free Customer's U every time you come to make (a total of $5.00), 1t and get your Monax Lt for a friead or relative, d Calif. Fancy Muir. EVAP, Peaches CRISCO, the Digestible Shortening Kellogg’s Wheat Krispies and doll Big Boy Wheat Cereal Repp’s Natural Cider . ummer TUna Fish Big Value 4asco Fine Quality OMATO JUICE Stock 12Y5-0z. c Up can Now ASCD Vine Ripened Tomatoes 3 cons, 25¢ Red Ripe Tomatoes, 4 cans 25¢ OCTAGON 2 cakes 9¢ 2 cakes 9C 4 vars 19¢ 2 cans 9¢ 2 pkgs. 9c T big Rainbow Cleanser 2 15¢ quart Zsc ttles 25¢ Lowest Prices—Satisfaction Guaranteed Tender Steer CHUCK ROAST b 23 Lean Plate BOILIN BEEF Ib. ]30 5¢ reg. 2 ] cans GET YOUR CUSTOMER'S CHECK 1b. 3 < 3 1b. can 57¢ 2 pkes. 25¢ large pkg. 10¢ !: gal 23¢; gal jug 39¢ 25 Chase & Sanborn “Dated” Coffee w 27€ Quality at a Saving - - = VICTOR = ] 7 c COFFEE 1b. 19¢ 45c0 COFFEE ACME 1b. 27¢ Mother’s Joy 1b. 23¢ BOSCUL COFFEE 31c 1b. can Prepared Pancake Flour or Buckwheat A4S0 GOLDEN TABLE SYRUP No. 1% can 10c BIG STEAK SALE G ROUND 1 3lc SIRLOIN ©.35¢ SPRING LAMB SALE |Porterh’se »n.37c¢ Shoulder Chops Shoulder Roast Lean Stewing ®. ] | ». 25¢ Freshly Made PATTIES each 5 c 9¢ 9¢ Freshly Ground BEEF » 2lc ] Finest, Freshest Fruits and Vegetables Maine White Potatoes 10 » 25¢ Crisp Iceberg Lettuce 2 ==« 19¢ Fresh, New" Cabbage 2. 5°¢ Large Fancy Where Quality Counts and Your Money Goes Furthest! Large, Fresh Cranberries Thin-Skin Orang » 20¢ es Red Sweet Potatoes GRAPEFRUIT Save with Quality—Shop in Your Convenient 450 Stores rices Effective Until Wednesday Closing Wa. P P PP P PP P T s . .

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