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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1935. CarrtaL’s Rapio PROGRAMS Wednesday, December 4. (Copyright, 1935) Eastern Standard Time. WRC 950k | WMAL 630k WOL 1,310k WISV 1460k | Mary Mason Ma Perkins Vic and Sade o The O'Neils 2 AFTERNOON PROGRAMS Rochester Civic Orch. CIUff Edwards Afternoon Musicale - o = Singing Sam ‘Woman’s Radio Review.—~|Betty “ ow Sundown Revue w , om Al Pearce's Gang Mix Lu ‘n’ Em Tea Time U. 8. N. Symphony Orch, i * Evening Star Flashes Aunt Sue and Polly 'The Singing Lady Little Orphan Annie and Bob Today’s Winness “ “ - -« Famous Voices Dance Tunes EVENING PROGRAMS P.M. Al . 3:00 exd - 3:15 Student Federation 3:30 Music—News 45 Curtis Institute “ w . e Tea at the Ritz One-Time Opportunities Evening Armstrong News—Highlights :00 |Tarzan Animal News Today in Sports Bn;:k Rogers :00 Lowell Symphony Previews Bill Coyle ‘Thomas Government Family Talk—Music Belle Baker* Arch McDonald | Vanished Voices Stamp Velvet Voices [Easy Aces Fannie Hurst Club News Spotlight Our American Schools |Popular Varieties Dangerous Paradise Sam Lacy One Man's Family w a B Wayne King's Orch. House Rendezvous ) Sam Lacy Five Star Pinal of Glass e Detective Storles Mary Penn, Pianist Myrt and Marge Hawalian Band Kate Smith Boake Carter American Cavalcade “ u Burns and Allen 'Town Hall Tonight g »» 7 ‘Warde; John Charles Thomas The Bucklebusters n Lewis E. Lawes » - Lily Porls Ray Noble's Orch. a8 5117 Log Cabin Revue Alfred " IMusie Guild P. Sloane, Jr. Boxing Bouts Jimmy Fiddler ! » Guard Bicycle Races Arthur Godfrey March of Time Martha and Hal Night Owl Arthur Reilly Jesse Crawford Lotus Orchestra Shand Lights Out )_|Sign off Dorothy Lamour News Bulletins Madriguera’s Orchestra |Slumber Hour Sign Off Beautiful Music Dance Time “ - lor Sign Off National Moon Dial “ Claude Hopkins’ Orch. News_Bulletins Georde Olsen’s Orch. (Henry Halstead's Orch. Sign Off EARLY PROGRAMS TOMORROW Gordon Hittenmark Elder Michaux Farm and Home Visit Gordon Hittenmark “ P The Grab Bag Sons of Pioneers Yodeling Philosopher = - Morning Glories Musical Clock Sun Dial “ o« “ u Gordon Hittenmark Morning Devotions Happy Jack = = Cheerio Musical Clock Sun Dial “ . Gordon Hittenmark Richard Leibert Fields and Hall Grace and Scotty 5 News Bulletins Breakfast Club Jack Ward Police Flashes Varieties = News Bulletins Sun Dial As You Like It News Bulletins |News—Pioneers Sallie Home, Sweet Home Sons of Pioneers Today’ |{Home Town Edward MacHugh Herman and Banta Muchmore This 'n’ That Varieties Musicale Morning Concert ’s Children Music in the Alr Retty Hudson Music in the Air |Ida Bailey Allen Fountain of Song |Honeymooners “The Garden Calendar” Listening Post U. S. Navy Band Popular Hits Claire Dillon Sage's Album Views of the News Milky Way Three Keys Christian Science !Just Plain Bill AFTERNOON PROGRAMS Merry-Go-Round Post Office Dedication |Farm |Simpson Boys Honeyboy and Sassafras |Curbstone Queries Luncheon Concert News Bulletins Folio of Facts and Home Hour Voice of Experience Jack Shannon Mary Marlin H. B. Derr | Matinee Today |Farm | Anning . Prall & Charles Boulanger’s Orch. [Piano Folio of Facts Rhythm Revue Piano Moods and Home Hour and Cello Anning 8. Prall Afternoon Rhythms Luncheon Music News—Music Matinee Musicale Words 'Three Scamps Music {Mary Mason " Jules Lande's Ensemble | Dot and Will and Music Juliet Romeo Guild » News Bulletins Happy Lewis Revue S. Wells Utley P School of the Air Mary Mason Music Ma Perkins Vic and Sade The O'Neils o Rochester Philharmonic Guild Afternoon Musicale Hawaiian Sunlight & Ruth Etting The Orleanders Elizabeth McCallum Do You Remember? News Bulletins Pedro Via's Orch. Betty Sundown Revue Alice Hutchins Drake Charles Sears Von Unschuld Piano Club = %, George Hall's Orchestra and Bob “Today's Winners Salvation Army Band Tito Guizar |From Old Kentucky Chasin’ the Blues |Evening Star Flashes 5 Tea Time - - Singing Lady Famous Voices One Time Opportunities |Evening Rhythms Terry and Ted Jack Armstrong MAJOR A salute to the medical fraternity for its part in the development of the country will feature the “Calva- cade of America” program on WJSV at 8. The program will include a skstch depicting the discovery of a medium for the alleviation of pain in surgical operations and the battle egainst a plague that threatened workers on the Panama Canal project. ‘The world’s oldest musical instru- fment—the steer's horn—will be played FEATURES AND PROGRAM by Philip Osta, Los Angeles mechanic. as one of the prominent amateur acts during Fred Allen's “Town Hall To- | night” broadcast on WRC at 9. Ap- propriately, the tune selected is “Ga- briel'’s Horn.” The speech of Alfred P. Sloan, jr., president of General Motors, at the Congress of American Industry in New York will be broadcast by WMAL at 10. Conrad Thibault, baritone, will sing “You Are My Lucky Star” as his chief C.B.S. TOPRESENT STORY BY KIPLING Dramatization Sunday Will Mark Observance of 70th Birthday. RAMATIZATION of a story by Rudyard Kipling, rarely heard by radio, will be broad- cast by the Columbia Dra- matic Guild Sunday, in connection with the world-wide observance of “Kipling Week,” marking the noted English author’s seventieth birthday anniversary. The story, “The Man Who Would Be King,” will be produced as a radio play by special arrangement with Kip- ling through his publishers, Doubleday Doran. It will be presented from 2 to 2:30 p.m. “The Man Who Would Be King” concerns the adventures of two Eng- lishmen among the tribesmen of Kafiristan, in India. They represent themselves as gods and become 50 suc- cessful with this deception that the tribesmen name one of them, Daniel Dravot, their king. He and his com- penion, Peachey Taliaferro-Carnehan, who is accorded a similar honor as Dravot’s henchman, enjoy the luxury of their false offices until Dravot in- sists upon marrying & native woman. Proof of the pair's deceit angers the tribesmen and they slay Dravot. Carnehan escapes, but suffers sun- stroke on the way back to his own colony. He arrives, but dies in an asylum. The tale was written in 1888 under the general title of “From Under the Deodars” and is sub-titled “Brother to a Prince and Fellow to a Beggar if He Be Found Worthy.” The adapta- tion has been prepared for the Colum-~ bia Guild under the supervision of Courtenay Savage and will be directed by Knowles Entrikin. A large cast will perform in the work. * % ¥ X ¢\JOTOR MADNESS,” & program first broadcast November 132, dramatizing vividly the results of careless automobile driving, will be repeated Friday, with J. 8. Furnas, muthor of the sensational magazine v article, “And Sudden Death,” as guest speaker. Prom the N. B. C. Radio City studios after the dramatization Furnas will discuss the automobile driver who always insists on maintaining his rights to the limit. The remainder of the program will originate in Chicago. * x k X EDWIN C. HILL, news commentator, internationally known journalist and author, will be heard in a spe- cial series on “The Human Side of the News” each Monday, Wednesday and Priday at 6:35 p.m., starting De- cember 9, over an N. B. C. network. * Xx X % N B. C. will climax its 1935 * broadcast season at the gridiron with the New Year Rose Bowl game at Pasadena between Stanford and Southern Methodist. Don Thompson, probably accompanied by his old team- mate, Don Wilson, will do the talking. P. W. A. HOUSING BILL WILL BE INTRODUCED NOTES. contribution to the Log Cabin Revue | on WRC at 10. John Charles Thomas, Metropolitan Opera baritone, will present a varied program on WMAL at 9. His selections include “By the End of the River,” “Autumn Dream,” “The Blind Plough- man” and “Home to My Blue Hills.” The “Bell Song” from Delibes’ “Lakme” will be the highlight of Lily Pons’ recital on WISV at 9. She also will sing “I Dream Too Much” and “When Love Comes Your Way.” defray the cost of municipal services for two housing projects in Atlanta. Ickes had suggested payment of 5 per cent of the gross annual rental for each development. CELLOWAX FOR BEAUTIFUL FLOORS NORUBBING NO POLISHING RENOVIZE. .. your home Reliable for Eighty-six Years A. EBERLY’S SONS 1108 K N.W. DISTRICT 6557 Dignify_your_home. _ Phone “Eberly's” WHEN YOUR Measure Would Allow Tax Pay- ments on Slum Clear- ance Jobs. By the Associated Press. Secretary Ickes said yesterday Sen- ator George, Democrat, of Georgia would offer & bill when Congress con- venes to authorize the Public Works Housing Division to make payments to city governments in lieu of taxes against dwellers in slum clearance developments, This step had been advocated by Ickes after Contioller General Mc- Carl held up payments intended to r TONIGHT ! Refreshment' Time” M PRESENTS RAY NOBLE and his orchestra with supporting cast of stars Columbia Network Every Wednesdag' WJSV 9:30 P.M. ‘ SERVICE Come to GEORGE’S Exclusive Auto Radio Station 2015 14th St. N.W. LISTEN [N DU PONT’S “’Cavalcade of America” PROGRAM TONIGHT 8 P.M.—WJSY HucH REeiLLY Co. PAINTS —if you want to compliment the loveliest woman you know, give her satin—a piece of ex- quisite lingerie—or, really grand gesture, a satin hostess gown. SATIN DASCHE GOWNS and SLIPS In This Season’s New Styles Incomparably lovely gowns, fashioned on the sculptured lines of one’s most glamorous evening gowns. Lavishly trimmed with those smart, dark, French laces—and the colors, the most flat- $ tering imaginable—blush, Pompadour rose 5 and sunset blue—sizes 32 to 44 —beautifully fitted costume slips, of this superb, pure-dye satin, offer another smart Christmas sug- gestion. You may choose either the straight or vee top, with appliqued lace—and lace, too: at the hemline. Blush or white, $3.50 sizes 32 to 44___ ln.tunn\_vnlmoon'm-sur ‘TrmD FLOOR. SATIN HOSTESS GOWN with Trapunto Stitching —smart, sophisticated—perfect for informal enter- taining at home. And do note the Ascot tie—the deep cuffs, and the way it is “nipped in" at the waist to give a lovely moulded line. Dubonnet, Ciel blue or a dusty rose. (And there are matching pajamas if you prefer, in Dubonnet, royal blue or black, $I 6.50 also $16.50.) Nzerreezs, Tamp FLOOR. §\\!r/é_,_ Woo i T DWARD & Lot —wThe Christmas SlOre oo«