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B—14 row Wilson Ceremonies to Be Broadcast. RMISTICE day ceremonies A dominate the -broadcasting including ceremonies of re- membrance, patriotic speeches and Among the outstanding broadcasts will be the ceremonies at the Tomb of Cemetery, which WMAL and WOL will broadcast at 11:02 a.m,, following The N. B. C. schedule also includes two other major Armistice day pro- Unknown Soldier and Wood- BY THE RADIO EDITOR. schedules tomorrow, programs martial music. the Unknown Soldier in Arlington & two-minute period of silence. grams—the annual Woodrow Wilson service in Bethlehem Chapel of the | ‘Washington Cathedral and a four-way conversation between world-famous radio leaders in New York and Rome. Messages of peace and international good will will be exchanged during the four-way conversation. David Sarnoff, president of the Radio Corp. of America, in New York; Robert Jar- dillier, French minister of communica~- tions, and Maurice Rambert, president of the International Broadcasting Union, in two airplanes flying over New York, and Senator Guglielmo Marconi, in Rome, will take part in the conversation. Aside from the special broadcasts, many of the regular network programs include music and stories identified with the American Expeditionary Forces, N B. C. has completed arrangements * for its annual broadcast of the Library of Congress chamber mu- sicales, which will start December 2, under auspices of the Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Foundation. The Stradivarius String Quartet, the Gor- don String Quartet, the Musical Art and Roth String Quartets are among the noted ensembles to contribute to the series. :OLUMBIA will handle the annual on Sunday in connection with *Catholic University day” ceremonies. broadcast of Catholic University | its Right Rev. Joseph M. Corrigan, rector of the university, will be the principal speaker. Music will be provided by the uplvemty chotr. “Catholic University day” was pro- posed originally by Pope Pius XI. The first broadcast went out of Washington November 20, 1932. WOL anpounces it will join the Mutual network Saturday for a play-by-play description of the annual Army-Notre Dame foot ball game in the Yankee Stadium in New York. . Another sports event on this station’s schedule is the Walden Han- dicap, one of Pimlico's important stake races, which will go on the air tomor- row at 4. . . . The contract for the “Community Sing” broadcasts on Co- lumbia has been renewed for a long term. Major Features and Notes A condensed version of Maxwell Anderson’s play, “Elizabeth the Queen,” co-starring Joan Crawford and Franchot Tone, will be the dra- matic high light of the Caravan pro- gram on WJSV at 9:30. That discussion of adoption of chil- dren scheduled for the last “Hus- bands and Wives" broadcast, which didn't get on the air because of the election returns, is again on the WMAL program at 9:30. Alan Jones, popular screen tenor, will make his fourtlf guest appearance during Fred Astaire’s program on WRC at 9:30. The dramatic portion | of the broadcast will be a playlet based on “Isnt It a Lovely Day,” from Astaire's picture, “Top Hat.” Ruth Etting will be the guest of Ben Bernie and his orchestra on WMAL at 9. How a wounded signal tower opera- tor frustrated an attempt to rob & train carrying thousands of dollars in currency will be described in the “Thriil of the Week" period during | the program of Leo Reisman’s Or- chestra on WRC at 8. | “When the Floods Came,” a drama based on the plight of a typical Ameri- can famliy in disaster, will be broad- cast by WMAL at 10. | Jimmy Fiddler, Hollywood gossip | broadcaster, will start his fourth con- | secutive season on WRC at 10:30. | Radio Joe and his Budget Boys, who last week permitted their pro- gram to be interrupted for 10 min- utes for a broadcast of the latest elec- tion returns from The Evening Star, will devote their half-hour program THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. Q. NO, MADAM, THE SEANCE IS CALLED I HAD A OUT OF TOWN ??P7? W-WHY, DATE TO CALL ON HIM FOR A SEANCE THIS EVENING 77, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1936. Secret Operative 48. —Bv NORMAN MARSH (ND AS KAY HURRIES DOWN THE STRE! THE TALL FIGURE OF SLIM FOLLOWS HER - SO SHE CAME BACK THIS EVENING! BANKOK'S INSTRUCTIONS ARE TO FOLLOW HER AND FIND OUT FOR SURE IF SHE (S IN WITH THE POLICE+- WHAT NOW --HE HAS LEFT TOWN--AND OAN HASN'T THE INFORMATION HE R WANTED/ BEN WEBSTER’S CAREER. M HOPIN' I/ ONl THE LAST MILE TO THE LODGE, BUT IM WIGHIN' ME AN BEN, AN' OLD BRIAR, WAG A / THOUGAND MILES FROM THE PLACE./, PROCEEDING GLOWLY NOW ON THE TWIGTING, GLIPPERY AND TREACHEROLS ROAD, PERCY GUDDENLY PUT ON THE BRAKEG/ A BRILLIANT RED FLARE, THROWN FROM THE DEEP FOREGT, WAG THE REASON = THE |1DEA 16 TO WARN NOU AND THE WEBGTER AW ¥10 To SCRAM OUTOF GUNGET LODGE WITHIN THE NEXT HOUR ! BE / ON YOUR WAY, NOW. \DEE ? WHO THREW THAT? Tuesday, November 10. WRC 950k PM. (Copyright, 1936.) | WOL 1310k AFTERNOON PROGRAMS WMAL 630k One feature | on WMAL at 7:30 to the Community | Chest campaign. a sketch called “Arrest Those Public Enemies.” will be | Ehringhaus’ Son Admitted. was admitted Eastern Standard WISV 1,460k 12:00 |Merry Go Round 12:15 |Story of Mary Marlin 12:30 |Myriad Voices aAsi|l et e [Honeyboy and Sassafras |Hillbilly Tunes | News—Music Luncheon Concert |Church of the Air | Armchair Quartet |Farm and Home Hour The Gumps Between Bbokends Romance of Helen Trent Rich Man's Darling Charles Stenross’ Orch. Farm and Home Hour The High Hatters | Charles F. Kette ~ |Paul Pendarvis' Orch. |Afternoon Rhythms | Vaughn de Leath | Dot and Will | |Ruth Etting |Newark Orchestra 0 Band Lessons Mary Mason | Auto Show = T 00 |Pepper Young's Family" 3:15 |Ma Perkins 3:30 |Vic and Sade 5 | The O'Neills AR | Have Marine Band You Heard? Wakeman's Sports Page | Mabelle Jennings |Concert Miniatures Auto Show Song Stylists School of the Air | |Happy Hollow Wakeman's Sports Page |Al Pearce’s Gang |Cincinnati Symphony to the Time. 400 | Cheerio's Musical Mosaics| 4:15 |Chasin’ the Blues 4:30 | z 4:45 Consumer’s Program Pan-American Peace |Dog Heroes |Today's Winners “5:00 |Sundown Revue 5:15 5:30 |Tom Mix |Jack Armstrong Little Orphan Annie | Your Health | The Singing Lady Evening Star Flashes EVENING Dance Music | Folio of Facts PROGRAMS Cincinnati Symphony Billy Mills & Co. Crowing Cont | Tito Guizar |Science Service Evening Rhythms Wilderness Road N <0 i1 =3 4 7:00 imnner Dance | “«- - Amos 'n’ Andy :15 | Voice of Experience 7:30 Jackie Cooper 45 |Quest'n Mark Hittenmark/ 8:15| Science in News Dinner Club Lowell Thomas |Easy Aces |John W. Studebaker | Radio Joe |ie0 Reisman’s Orch. 8:30 |Wayne King 8:45 | “ 9:00 | Sidewalk 9:15 | | Dude Ranch Edgar A. Guest Interviews 9:30 Fred Astaire 0:45 | 10:00 10:15 10:30 10:45 Ben Bernie Husbands and Wives | Tony Wakeman |En Dinant Editorial and Music |Bobby Worth [Patti Chapin | Arch McDonald {Suburban Welfare {Renfrew of the Mounted |Jack Little’s Orch. Arthur Reilly Dance Music Mina Horne, soprano |Poetic Melodies |Rubinoff |Doris Kerr {Boake Carter 6:00 6:15 | 6:30 6:45 7:00 7:15 | 7:30 7:45 Five Star Final Christian Witness Bee George, contralto | Detective Mysteries ~ Music Hall Ken Murray Washington Amateurs Rhythm Rhapsody The Caravan Waring's Pennsylvanians || |Fred Astaire |Hollywood Gossip Campbell's Royalists “When Floods Come” Portraits of Harmony |RRythm Rhapsody Alt Wein Gen. Alfred L. Cox News Bulletins ‘The Caravan Red Cross Program News—Night Owl |Arthur Reilly Midnite Frolics News Bulletins SIumbcr’ Hour At Brown Shep Fields’ Orch. Buck O'Neill Hal Kemp's Orch. {News Bulletins |George Olsen’s Orch. Shandor Johnny Hamp's Orch, Jimmy Dorsey’s Orch. Sign Off Night Watchman PR “« u | Claude Hopkins' Orch. 'Veloz and Yolanda |Sleepy Time “nght Watchman (1 hr.) Gordon Hittenmark EARLY PROGRA | Dick Jurgen's Orch. |sign o MS TOMORROW Sign Off i Gordon Hittenmark “ | Today's Prelude - Wake Up Club Art Brown Sssh! |Gordon Hittenmark Fripi A Morning Devotions ‘Wake Up Club Cheerio ‘Gordon Hittenmark The Streamliners News Bulletins Breakfast Club Art Brown Art Brown Morning Concert Police Flashes—Music News—Music Sun Dial Radio Gravure Artello Dixon Betty Hudson Mrs. Wiggs John's Other Wife Just Plain Bill 'Today’s Children Air Sweethearts Viennese Sextet Josh Higgins Dr. John H. Finley Timely Tempos Frances T. Northcross Martial Music Betty and Bob Modern Cinderella John K. Watkins Hymns of All Churches | David Harum Backstage Wife How to Be Charming Voice of Experience Midday Merry Go Round Story of Mary Marlin Armistice Ceremonies Arlington Ceremonies Camille Taylor Edward MacHugh Honeyboy and Sassafras Curbstone Queries Farm and Home Hour Florida Treat Canadian Luncheon “ - Helen Traibel Four-Way Broadcast ‘Mary Mason Parm and Home Hour Vaughn de Leath Dot and Will Arlington Ceremonies - Ed Pitzgerald & Co. AFTERNOON PROGRAMS Salon Music News—Music |Dance Music ek s Music from Texas Concertairs Palmer House Ensemble Studio Orchestra Magazine of the Air ) 'The Big Sister Dr. Allan_Roy Dafoe Negro Achievement " Jean Dickinson, songs Vienna Orchestra HEEET = @ ] snaluuswluen 2585358 8:30 Pepper Young's Family Ma Perkins Vic and Sade The O'Neills Henry Busse’s Orch. Jack Armstrong Vienna Orchestra wlll:n Al;mhtloe Service] Parents and Teachers w . Alice Hutchins Drake Tea Time Arn?fiu_l’tmu 'The Singing Lady Bpa:lPl“u s T ‘Walden Handicap Facts Folio Esther AMERIGAN SYSTEM o i |(IF RADIO PRAISED ber 10 (4).—John Cristoph Blucher | Ehringhaus, jr., son of Gov. J. C. B. Ehringhaus. | practice of law in the courts of North ! Carolina yesterday. Roosevelt Sends Message as | Network Observes Tenth Anniversary. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 10.—Anning S. Prall, chairman of the Federal Radio Commission, said last night that “in this country we would not] seek public ownership of all broad- | casting because we feel that it is not | conducive to our form of government.” Addressing a dinner given in con- | nection with the observance of t! National Broadcasting Co.’s tenth an- niversary, Prall said for some time forces have been working for Govern- ment ownership of broadcasting in America, but lately they “appear .to | have become less articulate.” Others on Program. Prall spoke on a Nation-wide broadcast with M. H. Aylesworth, first president of N. B. C.; Maurice Ram~ bert, president of the Internation: Broadcasting Union; Dr. Karl Compton, president of the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology; Henry Sloane Coffin, president of Union | Theological Seminary, and C. M. Chester, president of the National Association of Manufacturers and chairman of the board of the General Foods Corp. The chairman of the Radio Commis- sion said American radio “is the finest in the world because it has been per- 1open forum for friendly and open de- | bate and discussion that gives the American system of broadcasting | pre-eminence. Radio broadcasting is ! an essential service to the American home in the moulding of public opinion, It must be maintained for the American people, free of bias, or | prejudice, or sinister control. ¢ * *+ | | *“The National Broadcasting Co. has made a contribution to the radio art | during the past 10 years and I am | sure that its officials will accept as a | challenge their responsibilities for the future.” OFFICERS TO MEET Members of Air Corps Benet’ve to Discuss Navigation Aids. The growing importance of radio range beacon service and other civil aids to air navigation to military avia- tion both for training and for emer- gency operation will be considered at a meeting of all local Army Air Corps Reserve officers tonight at 8 o'clock in the Air Corps projection room, Munitions Building. Maj. R. W. Schroeder, Air Reserve, | chief of the Airline Inspection Serv- | ice, Bureau of Air Commerce, and Capt. Joseph T. Shumate, jr., Air. | Reserve, of the General Inspection | Service, Bureau of Air Commerce, will ct as instructors. | 'RENOVIZE ... your home! LT 87 Yea \ 1 DISTRICT 6557 Phone “Eberiy's” NT rs INEXPENSIVE 87 Years EBERLY’S | SONS 11108 K NW. Dienity your home. | mitted to develop unfettered by too | many restraints of government.” Letter From Roosevelt. Prall read a letter from President Roosevelt in which the President ex- pressed his regrets at not being able to attend the dinner and said: “Although radio has made a general contribution to the cultural life of our people, it is the maintenance of the ' ANY ANY SHAPE AUTO SIZE GLASS OMPT DRIVE-IN SERVICE Taranto & Wasman, Inc. 1321 L S¢, N.W. NA. 2966 Why Worry All Day Long as to whether your car is taking the punish- ment of a careless public—or maybe stolen? And isn’t your time worth more than the small fee for “Capital Protection”—that saves you running out every few minutes to move your car—or get an over-time parking ticket? Be good to.your car if you want it to be good to you. Park in the Capital Garage—out of harm and the weather. ety L Capital Garag A cold neglected may be a cold regretted! in flu and pneumonia, Treat a cold quickly ahd treat it sensibly. Forego “‘cure-alls”. A cold calls for a cold treatment and not a preparation good for all kinds of ailments. A cold also calls for internal treatment, for a cold is an inter- nal infection. Grove’s Laxative Bromo Quinine is what you want for a cold. First, it is a cold tablet, made expressly for the treatment of colds and nothing else, Secondly, it is internal medica- tion, fourfold in effect. Here's what it does: First, it opens the bowels, an advisable step in treating a cold. Second, it checks the infection in the system, a vital step. Third, it relieves the headache and fever. FIX THAT COLD And Fix It Right—Depend on No Mere Half-way Measures Many a “slight” cold has ended | 35c for Theater Parking—6 P.M. to 1 A.M. Complete repair and painting service by experts. 13th Sts. 1320 N. Y. Ave.| ! Fourth, it tones the system and helps fortify against further attack. These four effects make a real cold treatment and in Bromo Qui- nine you get them all in the forn® of a single tablet. Bromo Quinine tablets now come sugar-coated as well as plain. The sugar-coated are exactly the same as the regular, except that the tablets are coated with sugar for palatability. Be prudent, be careful! At the first signs of a cold, go right to your druggist for a package of Bromo Quinine. Begin taking the tablets immediately, four hours. That prompt treatment will usu- ally stop a cold in 24 hours and that’s the speed of action you want. Bromo Quinine contains nothing harmful and is safe to take. Get these famous cold tablets at any drug store, and Insist upon getting what you ask for. The few pennies’ cost may save you a lot of expense and worry. two every | State canning contest for 4-H Club | girls, it was announced today by Miss Dorothy Emerson, Girls' Club agent ] | here. Miss Fetzer won two awards. The Montgomery and Anne Arundel County | 4-H Clubs were included among the By & Staft Correspondent ot The Star. e T cotaly cHib éliasds. Wik COLLEGE PARK, Md.. November 10. | ning entries will be sent to Chicago —Dorothy Fetzer and Catherine Stiles to compete in a national contest to of Montgomery County and Florence be held in conjunction with the Na- Giles of Anne Arundel County were tional 4-H Club Congress the first among the winners in the Maryland ' week in December. WIN 4-H CLUB PRIZES Montgomery and Anne Arunde Girls Score in Canning. THIS WEEK . .. take advantage of the 42d Anniversary Savings ON LIFETIME FURNITURE Surely you are going to make your selec- tions of Lifetime Furniture this week! We have reduced many suites and pieces especially for this Anniversary occasion. We Are Quoting Some of The Bed Room Suites CHIPPENDALE TYPE BED ROOM SUITE— Six pieces with genuine Honduras mohogany veneers on all exposed parts—gumwood cores—solid Honduras mahogany vanity bench — beautiful double bed $216 TWIN BED SUITE OF PRIMA VERA—A beautiful suite in a light golden finish— 5-ply laminated tops ond fronts on case pieces — Americon gumwood core — ot tached stationary dresser mirror 5195 and hanging vanity glass—38 pieces EMPIRE TYPE BED ROOM SUITE—Six finely made Grand Rapids pieces—hanging dresser mirror. of bone white and gold over mahogany, ond bone white base with black and gold decoration—dressing toble possesses swinging at- 369 toched mirror—double bed— $ complete. .. PSS I TWIN BED SUITE—Choice of vanity or a dressing table—8 pieces fashioned from walnut and gumwood—S5-ply lominated tops and fronts—slight black ond gold decoration — rose covered van- ity bench and chair—price com- $|95 plete and roomy case pieces—price complete 18TH CENTURY DOUBLE BED SUITE— All exposed parts of Honduras mahogany with solid Honduros mahogany posts ond rails—American gumwood core where lami- noted construction—six pieces with hanging mirrors—priced 5295 complete at Many Other Special Values Now MAYER & CO. Seventh Street Between D and E