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Capitals Radio Program THURSDAY'S PROGRAM. JULY 25, 1940. P.M.j_WMAL, 630k. 1 WRC, 950k. 1 WOL, 1,230k. j WJSV, 1,460k. 12:00 Farm and Home Hour News—Tunes [Luncheon Music Goldbergs, serial 12:15 Between Bookends Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt Walter Compton, news Career Alice Blair, sr. 12:30 Clipper Ship Your Treat Walkathon Ri’t to Happiness, sr. 12:45 Dipper Ship—News Devotions Church ot Air_Road ot Life, serial "^IcOO Looks From Here Light of World, serial Sports Page Young Dr. Malone, sr. 1:15 Traveling Cook Grimm s Daughter, ser. " " I Joyce Jordan, serial 1:30 U 5. Marine Band lValiant Lady, serial ” ” Fletcher Wiley 1:45 " " Church Hymns " My Son and I, serial ~2:00 DivorceOrphans, serial Mary Marlin, serial Songs—Sports Page [Society Girl, serial 2:15 Honeymoon Hill, serial Ma Perkins, serial Sports Page News 2:30 Other Wife, serial Young s Family, serial " " Scattergood Baines, sr. 2:45 [Plain Bill, serial :Vic and Sade, comedy! " " Music—Chatter ~3:00 'War News—Matinee Backstage Wife, serial Walter Compton, news Baseball Game 3:15 Club Matinee Stella Dallas, serial Sports Page 3:30 " " Lorenzo Jones, serial 3:45 Matinee—News iWidow Browmjerial_ " ”_ " 4:00 Rocky Gordon Girl Alone, serial Sports Page Baseball Game 4:15 Malcolm Clair Life's Beautiful 4:30 Irene Wicker Church in Wildwood 4:45 Bud Barton_ithe_O'Neills, serial 1 " _*' _ ”~5:00 Evening Star Flashes It's Five 0 Clock News—Music Dance Time 5:15 Jerry ot Circus, serial " " [Jimmy Allen, serial ' " 5:30 Ear Teasers—Scores News—Tunes Conservation Sullivan, news 5:45 Lowell Thomas, news Some Like It Old _Walkathon_The World Today 4:00 Easy Aces, comedy Fred Waring's Orch. Sports Resume Amos and Andy, serial 4:15 Mr. Keen, drama European News Walter Compton, news Lanny Ross, songs 4:30 Singtime Caravan Wythe Williams, news Vox Pop 4:45 News—Star Sports 1 " Syncopation Variations^ " " I 7:00 Canadian Holiday Good News of 1940 F. Lewis, ir„ news Ask-lt Basket 7:15 " | " " Cesare Sodero s Orch. 7:30 Pot of Gold Aldrich Family California Melodies Sfrange As It Seems | 7 45 " ” _1 " " '' " Strange—News "*8:00 Record Review Bing Crosby, variety Yesteryear Hits Maj. Bowes' Amateurs 1 8:15 i " " British War Front 8:30 News—Brown Book j " " Morton Gould's Orch. ^8:45Jun_WHh Revuers " "__”_ " "_ 9:00 Havana Conference Rudy Vallee, variety News Glenn Miller's Orch. 9:15 Diamond Dust—Music " ” Music—Concert Public Affairs 9:30 Montreal Symphony Streamliner Romantic Cycles War News 9:45 " Walkathon Arch McDonald__ *10:00 Quiz of Two Cities News—Dreams Blue Barron's Orch. Shirley. Hill, news 10:15 " " Dreams Come True Terrv Shand's Orch. Hits and Encores 10:30 Tommy Dorsey's Orch. Dreams—Baukhage News Xavier Cugat s Orch. 10:45 ” iTed Lewis' Orch. Leo Reisman's Orch. " "_ *11:00 European News Bill Crago, sports Ahead of Headlines Late News 11:15 Music You Desire Night Club, music Tommy Tucker's Orch. Al Donahue's Orch. 11:30 Coleman Hawkins'Or. Grift Williams' Orch. News—Herbeck s Or. 11:45 " ” News—Orchestra i " "_Ray Herbeck s Orch. *12:00 News—Night Watch Sign Off Dance Orchestra Horace Henderson's Or. 12:15 Night Watchman 12:30 " Frank Gagen's Orch. Dusty Rhodes' Orch. 12:45 "_"_Music—Convention "~1:00 New>—Sign Off | ILinger Awhile IWeather—Sign Ott EVENING STAR FEATURES TODAY Star Flashes, latest news with Bill Coyle. WMAL. 5 p.m. Star Sports, sports headlines by Michael, WMAL, 6:50 p.m. THE EVENING'S HIGH LIGHTS 6:30 p.m.—WJSV, Parks Johnson and Wally Butterworth journey direct to Wendell Willkie’s home town to interview the G. o. ?. candidate's neighbors. 7:00 p.m.—WOL, Fulton Lewis presents another review of the news high lights direct from the Pan-American Conference. 7:00 p.m.—WMAL, Canadian Holiday unwinds more historic yarns about picturesque and colorful Canada as a vacation land. 7:30 p.m.—WOL, California Melodies, directed by David Rose, with Maxine Gray and Art Tatum soloing. 7:30 p.m.—WJSV, Winifred Moore, blind prodigy, who reads Braille music with her feet while playing piano, guest on Strange as It Seems. 8:00 p.m.—WRC, summer clients of the Music Hall hear Raymond Massey, noted actor, and Mildred Dilling, harpist, with Bin? Crosby. 9.00 p.m.—WRC. the Rudy Vallee treatment of well-known char acters runs tonight to Don Quixote, the windmill tilter. 9:00 p.m.—WMAL. Edward Tomlinson, expert on Latin American affairs, reports doings at the Pan-American Conference. SHORT-WAVE PROGRAM 6:13 p.m.—BERLIN. Operetta melodies from Stuttgart. DJL, 15.11 meg., 19.8 m 6:35 p.m.—BUDAPEST—Budapest Concert Orchestra. HAT4, 9.12 meg.. 32.88 m. 7:00 p.m.—MOSCOW, broadcast in English. RV96. 15.24 meg., 19.9 m; RNE. 12 meg., 25 m. 8:00 p.m.—LONDON, Britain Speaks.’ A London commentary on the news, by J. B. Priestley. GSD, 11.75 meg., 25.5 m; GSC. 9.58 meg.. 31.3 m. 8:30 p.m.—VATICAN CITY, news broadcast and comment. 9.5 meg.. 31.06 m. 10:00 p.m.—ROME, news in English. 2R03. 31.15 m.; 2R04. 25.40 m : 2R06, 19.61 m. 11:00 p.m.—GUATEMALA, concert with the “Maderas de mi Tierra,’ Marimba Ensemble of the National Police Force. TGWA, 9.68 meg . 31. m. 11:00 p.m.—LONDON, the news. GSC, 9.58 meg.. 313 m._ A.M.I TOMORROW'S PROGRAM._ —t 00 Gordon Hittenmark . Arthur Godfrey 6:15 i " " " " 6:30 Today's Prelude ' " iArt Brown 6:45 i " " "_I " ” _ 7:00 News—Prelude European Situation Art Brown European Roundup 7:15 'Prelude—News [Gordon Hittenmark " " Arthur Godfrey 7:30 Lee Everett " " Walter Compton, news 7;45 '• “ ” [Songs—Art Brown ,Hugh Conover, news *1:00'Lee-Everett News—Hittenmark Birthday^tour—Brown Wom’n of Cour'ge, ser. S:1S " ” Gordon Hittenmark Art Brown Magic Carpet 1:30 Earl Godwin, news i " " W. Compton—News Store News 8:45 [Breakfast Club_" "_'Art Brown_Bachelors 0iild., ser. 9: OO-OrTth e^M a 11 Man I Married, serial Art Brown [kitty Kelly, serial 9:15 Vic and Sade, comedy Midstream, serial Mrs. Northcross Myrt and Marge, serial 9:30 Mary Marlin, serial Ellen Randolph, serial Keep Fit to Music Hilltop House, serial 9:45 Ranch Boys By Kathleen Norris Walter Compton, news Stepmother, serial "lO'-OO News^Brown Book David Harum, serial Music—News Short Short Story 10:15 Clark Dennis, songs Road of Lite, serial Traffic Court Martha Webster 10:30 Wife Saver Against the Storm, ser. Maids and Men Big Sister, serial 10:45 [Paradise Thunder Guiding Light, serial Johnson Family, serial Aunt Jenny's Stories ”l 1700 News^-Mary McHugh iWoman in White Musical Portraits Kate Smith speaks 11:15 Convention News Words and Music [Morning Concert Girl Marries, serial 11:30 Farm and Home Hour Mary Mason Helen Wyant, organ Helen Trent, serial 11-45 I " "_[Carters, serial Gal Sunday, serial P.M.| _____ 12:00 'Farm and Home Hour News—Tunes (Luncheon Music tGoldbergs, serial 12:15 Belween Bookends Blue Plate Platters Walter Compton, news Alice Blair, serial 12:30 Clipper Ship ,Frankie Masters' Orch. Walkathon Pi t to Happiness, ser. 12:45 Clipper Ship—News lDevotions Joe Hart’s Orch. Road to_LifeL_serial "TOO iYour Voice And-You Light-of World, serial Sports Page ]Dr Malone, serial 1:15 I " " ' Grimm's Daughter, sr. " " I Joyce Jordan, serial 1:30 N. B. C. Concert Orch, Valiant Lady, serial ! ' " 'Fletcher Wiley 1:45 l " " Crocker, cooking " ”_My Son and I, serial ” 2:00 DivorceOrphans, serial Mary Marlin, serial [Songs—Sports Society Girl, serial 2:15 ^Honeymoon Hill, ser. Ma Perkins, serial (Sports Page ;New, 2:30 Other Wile, serial Young's Family I " " Scattergood Baines 2:45 Plain Bill, serial Vic and Sade, comedy " " Music—Chatter_ “~3:00 War News—Matinee Backstage Wife, serial Walter Compton, news Baseball Game 3:15 Club Matinee Stella Dallas, serial Sports Page i 3:30 " " Lorenzo Jones, serial 3:45 Matinee—News_Widow Brown, serial " I _"_ ”4:00 (Rocky Gordon Girl Alone, serial Sports Page Baseball Game 4:15 Malcolm Clair Liles Beautiful 4:30 Stories for Children Church in Wildwood ! " 4:45 Bud Barton, Serial The O’Neills, serial _ *~5:00 Evening Star Flashes It's Five O’clock News—Melodies Dance Time 5:15 Jerry of Circus, serial " " Jimmy Allen, serial 5:30 Ear Teasers—Scores News—Tunes Jane Anderson, piano Sullivan, news 5:45 iLowell Thomas, news Some Like It Old iWalkathon The World Today LETTER-OUT . nrnnDTC Letter-Out and *o there to rest. | REPORTS i, mxTrrn Letter-Out for a sheen. 2 HLSTLER 2 _ IWESTOR Letter-Out and he's tried hard. 4 RENTED Letter-Out and stop. ^ \Spj7RSE Letter-Out and they are few. ^ Remove one letter from each word and rearrange to spell the word railed for in the last column. Print the letter in center column opposite the word from which you have removed it. If you have “Lettered-Out” correctly it's got your number. Answer to Yesterday's LETTER-OUT. Letter-Out <D> STRIVED—RIVETS (fixes in position). (R> ARREST—STARE (glaret. (A) LABELS—BELLS (ding-dong). (M> ARMLETS—SLATER (sow bug). (A) SAMOAN—MOANS (cries). Bedtime Stories By THORNTON W. BURGESS. Trouble, trouble, trouble, I leel It In the air: Trouble, trouble, trouble. It's round me everywhere. Old Granny Fox muttered this over and over and over as she kept walking around uneasily and sniffing the air. “I don't see any trouble and I don't feel any trouble In the air. It's all in the sore places where I was shot,” said Reddy Fox, who was stretched out on the doorstep of their home. "That's because you haven't got any sense. When you do get some and learn to look where you arp going you won't get shot from behind old tree trunks and you will be able to feel trouble when it is near without waiting for it to show itself. Now I feel trouble. You go down into the house and stay there!” Granny Fox stopped to test the air with her nose, just as she had been testing it for the last 10 minutes. "I don't want to go in.” whined Reddy Fox. "It's nice and warm out here and I feel a lot better than when I am curled up way down there in the dark.” Old Granny Fox turned and her eyes blazed as she looked at Reddy Fox. She didn't say a word. She didn't, have to. Reddy just crawled into his house, muttering to himself. Granny stuck her head in at the door. "Don't you come out until I come back.” she ordered. Then she add ed. “Farmer Brown's Boy is coming with his gun.” Reddy Fox shivered when he heaid that. He didn’t believe Granny Fox. He thought she was saying that just to scare him and make him stay inside. But he shivered just- the same. You see, he knew now what it meant to be shot, for he was still too stiff and sore to run, all because he had gone too near Farmer Brown's Boy and his gun. But Old Granny Fox had not been fooling when she told Reridv Fox that Farmer Browns Boy was coming with a gun. It was true. He was coming down the I,one Lit tle Path, and ahead of him was trotting Bowser the Hound. How did Old Granny Fox know it? She just felt it. She didn't hear them, she didn't see them and she didn't smell them; she just felt that they were coming. So as soon as she saw that Reddy Fox had obeyed her she was off like a little red flash. "It won't do to let them find our home." said Granny to herself as she disappeared in the Green For est. First she hurried to a little point on the hill where she could look down the Lone Little Path. Just as she expected, she saw- Farmer i Brown's Boy, and, ahead of him, j sniffing at every bush and all along j the Lone Little Path, was Bowser j the Hound. Old Granny Fox waited to see no more. Site ran as fast as , she could in a big circle, which | brought her out on the Lone Little Path below Farmer Brown's Boy and Bowser the Hound, but where they couldn't see her because of a turn in the Lone Little Path. She trotted down the Lone Little Path a very little way and then turned into the woods and hurried back up the hill, where she sat down and waited. In a few minutes she heard Bowser's great voice. He had smelled her track in the Lone Little Path and was following it. Old Granny Fox grinned. You see. she was planning to lead them far. far away from the home where Reddy Fox was hiding, for it would not do to have them find it. And Farmer Brown's Bov also grinned as he heard the voice of Bowser the Hound. "I'll hunt that fox until T get ; him." he said. You see. he didn’t ! know anything about Old Granny i 1 Fox; he thought Bowser was fol low-ing Reddy Fox. JOLLY POLLY A Little Chat an English By JOS. J. FRISCH. A. M. F.—"Neither Janyee nor Brenda is continuing her singing lessons" is the correct form, not "Neither Janyee nor Brenda are continuing their singing lessons.” NEITHER JANYCE NOR BRENDA ARE CONTINUING THEIR SINGING LESSONS. DAD SAYS THAT WHEN SOME PEOPLE SING, you're GLAD TO CLAP YOUR 3 ^HANDS - OUER YOUR EARS. X rr^.t ——r _r— So also we say “Either Joe or Bill is coming tonight,” not "Either Joe or Bill are coming tonight,” “Either Alice or June has lost her gloves,” not “Either Alice or June have lost their gloves.” POINTS FOR PARENTS By EDVTH THOMAS WALLACE. Mother-daughter similarity ex tends beyond the current fancy for clothes which arc identical. This .7-25 Mother: "This is a grand morn ing. Jt makes one glad to be alive." Daughter: “I’m happy this morn ing, too.” Not This 11M* Th* Racist** and Tribun* Pyndtcata Mother: “I'm never very well, but I try not to complain.” Daughter: “X have a headache, too." THE RED KNIGHT (You’ll like The Sunday Star’s 16-pate colored comic book.) By John J. Welch and Jack W. McGuire UeavinG- / YOUR RID -ruieiu GLORIA SAFE, KNIGHT IS TOT!** ,*!■ THE RED TOO LATE TO TELL MI THE COWr KNIGHT DONNA; OUR ^IoOkPin' intvEK^5iVi* ENTERS THE AIR SQUADRON , LOOK IN MV AA ASTER'S IS ON ITS WAY quarters; to tela; achieving invisibility, HE Overhears THE TAIL OF AN IANPORTANT conver sation; B-706 _I LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE <Mort °f Orphan Annie's thrillint adventures >« the colored comic section of The Sunday Star.) By Gray MOON MULLINS (Lansk at Moon Mullins on Sundays, too. in the colored comic section.) gy VVillord [~~ " ]l,illIfcN;| PSTI YES, GUS, I HAVE MISSUS kjru Monnov m AFTER ALjf.GUS, IT'S ] DISPOSED OF MY TELL YOU NO. NOBODY m A HUSBAND'S DOTY TO HOLDINGS HERE to do TOLO ME 1 ‘ § protect his wife from AND AM EMBARKING THAT TOO, NOTH t NO ! § ON A HOLLYWOOD WILLIE P MATTERS AND BESIDES, CAREER. _J l -J -V- T WANT A TOY WITH L C _ THIS DOUGH A WHILE. jj MYSELF. «—/ j I TARZAN (keep up with Tartan’s thrilling adventures in the colored comic section of The Sunday Star.) t gy EdgOT Rice BUFTOUgllS THEN WITH A aosutsH, chal lenging SMILE, SHE TURNED. "I'M GOING SACK TO THE BOY. BUT YOU , WON'T BE ABLE GLOATING OVER HER VICTORY, To FOLLOW ME." "MOU MAY GO,' HE 5AiD;‘BUT WHEREVER TAR2SELA COOLLY SHOULDER YOU 60 I SHALL FOLLOW YOU.' ED HER KILL. SERGEANT STONY CRAIG (stony Craif's adventures appear every Sunday in the colored comic section.) By FTO Ilk RdltfrOW Qnd Doll DicksOH (well,BUST MY BANG-BOARd/ I KNEW I WE'LL 60 TO THE ^BUT W BLADE, I BECAUSEI WAS FOLLOWING) YOU CAN NAVAL INTFlL/GENci) HECK.IKNEwA /MR BLADE, I DIDN'T ^ HI M HOTEL TO 6IVE/CAN'T FI6URE WHY THE MAN. SOONER OR. ^/TRUSTF/NK BELIEVES A RING OF (WHEN WAT6UY/ l RECOGNIZE YOU- M RIGHT ME A CHANCE TO\YOU WERE JO ALL- LATER HE WOULD HAVE ] To GUM UP SABOTEURS OPE RATES) Pt U6G ED ME \ x-- JpHTAWAY CLEAN UP,ThENToViRED JETA6AINST LED ME To OTHERS IN / THE WORKS HERE IN JAN DIEGO /HE WAS AFTER I _ , the police station Jme catching That his gang. ^^everytime. V -^moreThan just H ^ WiWwH.CEg. DAN DUNN (Dan Dunn continues his fight against crime in the colored comic section of The Sunday Star.) 0y NonHOfl MOTSH r YOU KNOW, IRWIN—I VOUVE MAKING A A IF I WANT To' THINK MAYBE. 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