Evening Star Newspaper, September 18, 1936, Page 12

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGT CarrtaL’s Rapio PROGRAMS Friday, September 18. [__WRC 950k WMAL 630k | AFTERNOON PROGRAMS (Copyright, 1936) 12:00 12:15 Merry-Go-Round Dan Harding's Wife Red River Valley Days l'\m:l Curbstone Queries Listening Post Salon Music News—Music Dance Music and Home Kour B = Church of the’ Air WOL 1310k | Eastern Standard Time. WISV 1,460k | PM. 12:00 12:15 12:30 12:45 ews Bulletins Fred Feibel Jimmy Farrell Afternoon Rhythms Farm Magic of Speech Mary Mason Harvard Tercentenary and Home Hour | Graham Lee Melody Matinee )| Pepper Young's Family Ma Perkins Vic and Sade < The O'Neill's o Harvard Tercentenary | Sports Page Woman's Radio Review Republican Program Grandpa Burton Strolling Songsters Dr. Aurelia Reinhardt Opera from Vienna This Rhythmic Age 1:00 1:15 Judy and Jesters Just for Ladies Dorsey and Day 1:30 Harvard Tercentenary | 1:45 Harvard Tercentenary | 2:00 S = 2:15 2:30 'Billy Mills & Co. U. 8. Army Band 58685 " |Bughouse Rhythm Joseph Littau’s Orch, Alexander Brothers Gelf Tournament Little Rod and Stream Alrbreaks The Singing Lady Today’s Winners « . Orphan Annie . = Margaret McCrae Week End Special smne 5858 ‘Wilderness Road Bulletin Board Jack Armstrong Chasin’ the Blues _{Water Gate Sinfonietta Evening Star Flashed Midgie Willlams 'The Skipper i News—Rhythms = e Renfrew of the Mounted Tea Time Folio of Lowell Thomas EVENING PROGRAMS Buddy Clark e ren aswsl |Amos 'n’ Andy Uncle Ezra Dance Hour Heads Up Carol |0. H. Digest Poll Bill Coyle Caldwell Tony Wakeman Music—News Editorial—Music Deis, soprano |Dinner Concert Arch McDonald Popeye the Sailor Goose Creek Parson Boake Carter |Jessica Dragonette Irene Singin’ Sam Death Valley Days |Five-Star Pinal |News spotiight |Dance Music Rich Detective Mysteries Red Horse Tavern Broadway Varieties Waltz Time s e 8:30 |Human Relations Court 8:45 % % Waring's Pennsylvanians |Clara, Lu and Em Dance Themes ‘WOL Concert Sidewalk Interviews Hollywood Hotel 0 |First Nighter “Red” Grange Man in the Street Senator Norris Boston Symphony Mattie Lazine Isle of Golden Dreams ‘Washington Amateurs Kostelanetz's Orchestra March of Time Rubinoft |News—Music \Hendersun‘s Orch. | Jesse Crawford News Leon Air Breaks Paul Martel's Orch, Midnite Frolics George R. Holmes V. F. W, Convention . 5 Shandor Slumber Hour Bulletins Navarro's Orch Del Regis Orch. & INews Bulletins—Music = VArt Brown's Varieties Band Music = (Oliver Naylor's Orch. |Harold Knight's Orch. William Hard Foot Ball Interview Dick Stabile’s Orch. Frank Dailey's Orch, News Nye Mahew's Orch. |Sign Off Gordon Hittenmark |Night Watchman (2 hrs.) EARLY PROGRAMS TOMORROW Dance Parade (1 hour) Sleepy Time (1 hour) | Sssh! | Gordon Hittenmark Morning Devotions Dick Leibert % - Cheerio Musical Clock Sun Dial Gordon Hittenmark Wake Up Club Breakfast ‘Musical Clock Club i 0~ Gordon Hittenmark News 9:15 | s % 9:30 Harold Nagel's Orch. DS T The Vass Family Josh Higgins |Originalities | Musical Clock Howe Trio ‘Bulletins News—Music Police Flashes—Music Sun Dial “ u |Sun Dial |Dr. Abram Simon |Let’s Pretend (P tibeddo 10:00 Children’s Frolic fonsi - “ 10:30 | Mystery Chet 10:45 |Home Tpwn Herman and Banta Cadets Quartet {Bill Krens Balladeers Prevue Amateur Reporters Hollywood Brevities |Ozark Melodies |Concert Hall 11:00 Chasins’ Music Series 11215 | 2 11:30 Merry Madcaps 11:45 | R PM. 12:00 ' Merry Go Round 12:15 |Rex Battle's Ensemble 12:30 Red River Valley Days 1248 ° TS Genia Fonariova ‘Words and Music “ |Old Skipper Farm and Home Hour Pianologues Dance Music Morning _Concert AFTERNOON PROGRAMS “Bobby Worth's Songs News—Music Johnny Gee In the Music Room Larry Vincent |Orientale George Hall's Orch. |News Bulletins |Poetic Strings Buffalo Presents 1:00 Charles Stenross’ Orch. | 1:15 |Golf Tournament 1:30 |Lee Gordon's Orch. F o [ Charles Sears ‘Whitney Ensemble "2:00 |Varieties 2:15 9o 2:30 |Week End Revue 35k e B The Highhatters Gale Page Hessberger's Orch. “3:00 ,Week End Revue 3:15 | by = 4:30 [Raltenmeyer's Kinderg'tn £ e 00 | Chasin’ the Blues 8:15 | Bavarian Orchestra 8:30 ;Sonia Essin Middleman’s Orch. ports Page |Joan and the Escorts Evening Star Flashes Sunday School Lesson Noble Cain Folio of Fa Farm and Home Hour _ In the Music Room |Afternoon Rhythms Holy Name Convention Al Roth’s Syncopators Labor News Review Clyde Barrie Frederic William Wile | Melodies News—Rhythms MAJOR FEATURES AND PROGRAM NOTES A chorus of students from Harvard University and Radcliffe College will assist the Boston Symphony Orches- tra during the presentation of a spe- cial Harvard tercentenary program on | ‘WMAL at 9:30. The first part of the concert will consist of three portions of Bach's “B Minor Mass” and the “Et Incarnatus Crucifixus” and “Cum Bancto Spiritu.” Gladys George, Arline Judge, Isabel | feld” | scenes from their new picture, “Val- |iant Is the Word for Carrie,” as a | feature of. Dick Powell's “Hollywood Hotel” program on WJSV at 8. Jessica Dragonette, soprano, | sing Friml's “Indian Love Call” as a | feature of her recital on WRC at 7. | | She also will sing Duphre’s “Chanson | | Triste” and Tosell's “Serenade.” | Musical hits from “The Great Zieg- and “Flying Colors” will be Jewel and John Howard will present | high lights of the program of Andre will | Kostelanetz and his orchestra on WISV at 9. | “The Sensational Miss Smith” will | be Irene Rich's starring vehicle on ‘WMAL at 7. The play uncovers a | racket which fleeces thousands of hard-earned dollars weekly from stage-struck men and women. romantic comedy, “Peggy Takes the Count.” during the “Pirst Nighter” broadcast on WRC at 9. Pilots Scout Arctic Skies To Warn U. S. to Wear Coats | By the Associated Press. FAIRBANKS, Alaska, September 18—Two Fairbanks airmen scouted the northern skies yesterday in a hunt for high-flying polar cold waves—so Americans will know when to don overcoats. A six-month series of daily flights into the atmosphere 3 miles above the earth have been contracted by Pilot Harold Gillam, Fairbanks aviator. He will be aided by Pilot Bert Lien. Gillam's specially equipped plane will soar into the Arctic skies, its weather-observing instruments read and the results wirelessed to the Weather Bureau in Washington, D. C., this Winter. Out of the air scouts’ data meteorologists hope to have fore- knowledge of polar air masses much earlier than by the present system of observations, which must wait for the cold waves to dip down to earth. Weather observers and airmen said the flights may have a concrete value to “the man in the streets.” Householders in Detroit, Chicago or New York City may know, from the North Pole long before it reaches the United States. ‘The flights will be supervised for the Aerclogical Division of the Federal Weather Bureau by William Draw- baught, here from Washington, D. C., and will continue until March. Irish Free State has established in the last year 67 schools in which in- ! struction is given solely in Irish. “Plymouth Farms Buy Any CH ICKEN At Real Savings Buy the perts of chicken you like best—and save money. ROBBERS GET $4,000 Bound in Field. CECIL, Pa, September 18 (#).— Two gunmen robbed the First Na- tional Bank of Cecil of approximately $4,000 today and fled in an automo- bile stolen earlier from a motorist whom they left bound and gagged in & fleld. ‘The robbers forced two employes into a vauit, scooped up all the money they could find, then sped away. Cecil, a community of about 8,000, is about 25 miles from Pittsburgh. Brand” Poultry! Part of Plymouth 2885858 Don Ameche will be featured in a | Escape in Auto, Leaving Owner | Ferms brend poultry are guaranteed the finest quelity milk-fed Plymouth Rural Areas, Spread Over Networks l in the world of entertainment it's sophisticated New York that sets the rural districts for its latest diver- sion—community singing, according nity sings.” “For generations the farmers and Hall. “And now the larger cities are taking it up. Community sings are the the country and at least a million persons taking part.” all. More than 1200 men, women and children go to the old Avon The- SET BY FARMERS N POLITICS they say “As Maine the trend for the country at large. to Wendell Hall, song leader of the small-town residents have enjoyed current craze, with more than 1,000 The Columbia broadcasts are by ater in New York, forming the weekly Community Sings, Old in goes, s0 goes the Nation.” But Yet New York had to fall back on new Columbia Sunday night “commu- getting together and singing,” said of them being conducted throughout far more widespread—102 stations in studio audiences which participate in 0 the programs. 'OICES or the views of the coun- try's presidential candidates for 1936 all are to be heard in a single day's broadcast Wednesday. It will originate from the sixth annual forum on ctrrent problems conducted by the | New York Herald-Tribune, President Roosevelt and five other 9:00 | presidential candidates will take part :15 | —Norman Thomas, John W. Aiken, Earl Browder, D. Leigh Colvin and William Lemke. | “JBEHIND THE HEADLINES,” a new | type of news dramatization, fea- | turing Edwin C. Hill, will make its debut on N. B. C. October 4. Hill will open the broadcast with & graphic summary of the week’s spot || news. A dramatic cast will then assist him in presenting some unknown hero who, although no page one news, has made an important contribution to American life. MAMAR'I' SPEAKS, N. B. C. 0, will stand on a concert stage in Basle, Switzerland, Monday night and fill her regular place as soloist on the Voice program origi- nating in the Radio City studios in New York. Her voice, rebroadcast by short waves, will be heard—exactly as before her European tour—sharing the pro- gram with William Daly’s Orchestra. 'HE incessant demand for “some- thing new in radio” will be an- swered October 4 when M. H. H. Joachim, a native Hindu and famous psychélogist, begins a series of broad- casts on Columbia to be known as “Your Unseen Friend.” CHURCH TO CELEBRATE Chinese to Observe First Anni- versary of Organization. Celebration of the first anniversary of the Chinese Community Church will be held at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the Mount Vernon Place M. E. South. There will be speeches and Chinese music, ‘The Chinese Community Church will hold a banquet at 6:30 p.m. Mon- day at the Calvary Baptist Church. | Chinese motion pictures will be shown | at the church the evening of Oc- tober 9. RENOVIZE . . . your home Satisfed Thousands 87 Years. Competent Arf EB 1108 K N.W, Dignify_your home. . DELCO | Auto Radio | CREEL BROTHERS | 1811 Mn STNW.cosDEcarue 4220 | | D. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1936. DRIVE LAUNCHE ON TOY FIREARM Parent-Teacher Board Acts to Curb Sales to Children. By the 2ssociated Press. CHICAGO, September 18.—A na- tional campaign to abolish the use of toy firearms among children was initiated yesterday by the Board of Managers of the National Congress ot Parents and Teachers, Chairmen of four departments of the congress were appointed a com- mittee to prepare an educational pro- gram to achieve that purpose. The board voted to launch the pro- gram after a report on the subject by Mrs. Jennie R. Nichols, who said the sale of toys fasnioned like destructive weapons increased 400 per cent in the country last year. Mrs. Nichols reported an educational campaign against such RADIO TROUBLE? COLUMBIA FREE 4000 Service Calls CONSULT US FIRST KENNEDY Radie Specialis 3319 14th St. NW., Body Dent! ¢ ear deserves o ne- body. fende: tor repairin, d triendly prices, tuPmemt AU CENTRAL vorc OFFICIAL KEYSTONE STATION 443 EYE ST. N.W. Di. 6161 toys in Minnesota sppreciably had decreased their use. Instructions were issued by the board to carry campaign through the 25,000 local Parent- Teacher Associations throughout the Nation. ‘The board met here yesterday under the chairmanship of Mrs. B. F. Lang- worthy of Chicago, national president. Mrs. Langworthy praised the pere in yout FREE sonality of teachers and better sure roundings in school for giving what she termed “zest” to the children now going to school. “Not only do children go willingly to school, but their parents go willingiy to talk over problems with the teachers,” she said. ‘“Parent-teachers have urged parents to develop fine co- operative relationships.” “INSTALLED ° HOME /ot TRIA 'NO COST » NO OBLIGATION fé@g(umfl' 7 h«eoq;v' Electric Institute members are so confident that once youtry Electric Cookery you will never go back to old fashioned methods. Here is an opportunity to convince yourself in your own home. For Complete Details, Phone THE ELECTRIC INSTITUTE Waahin PEPCO BLOG. I0TH & £ STS.NW. METROPOLITAN 2230 rock fryers—killed, dressed end cut up right here in Washington. You can’t buy better quality et eny price. Compare the low prices—they're reel Cuts From IIIR-FN";‘M Rock Fryers aerological data, that they’ll have to stoke the furnace extra hard. Califor- nia orange growers and Georgia peach orchardists may have advance warn- ing to get out their smudge pots and prepare for nippy weather from the ————— SUCCESS DEMANDS ENERGY GIZZARDS____».35¢ LIVERS _____n 68c do LaSEELELE ¥ PLYMOUTH FARMS STANDS 1113 Water St. S.W. N In Wholesale Center Stands 7-8 Eastern Market Poultry In the Park and Shop 7th and C Sts. S.E. Stands 1-2 O St. Market Atlantic 4511 7th and O Sts. NW. FRUITS AND NUTS ARE CONCENTRATED ENERGY 49: ALSO JR. MEN’'S SHOES AT 1 - W NS JUNIORTO 3212 14th- ath & G A

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