n JTK^4Q Book ^L -C 1 ^ GopyrigM? ( OPYR1GIIT DEPOSIT Scanned from the collections of The Library of Congress AUDIO-VISUAL CONSERVATION at The LIBRARY of CONGRESS Packard Campus for Audio Visual Conservation www.loc.gov/avconservation Motion Picture and Television Reading Room www.loc.gov/rr/mopic Recorded Sound Reference Center www.loc.gov/rr/record W 29 1931 ©C1B 117135 WEEKLY . Complete Radio Programs for the Entire Week WELCOME LEWIS Half-pint Welcome Lewis has a real baritone voice in spite of |er size. She is less than five feet tall. She began a vaudeville pur at the age of 12 in California where she was born. R. C. A. Kadiotrons (WSAI) have her as soloist now. She out-lasted Jugs Baer, humorist, who master-of-ceremonied at the start of he series. Rudy Goes Juvenile Rudy Vallee, prime crooner of radio, will become a mu- sical comedy juvenile this year. And he'll appear minus his orchestra! The experts say that Rudy has now reached the peak of popu- larity in the crooning field, so they're going to build him up as a potential stage star. Op- timism prevails, despite his unsuccessful and abruptly terminated motion - picture career. Mystery Star. The Old Dutch Girl, whose identity remains concealed, has sung 390 songs in ninety broad- casts over CBS. Her programs are heard Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings, and com- prise request numbers from radio listeners. She reports that the most-called- for songs in order of popularity, are, strange as it may seem, "Here Comes the Sun," "Springtime in the Rockies," "Moonlight on the Colorado" and "Three Little Words." More than 500,000 persons in Cincinnati and vicinity are radio listeners. Every one of them wants to know exactly what program is available now, later today, or tomor- row. RADIO DIAL is de- signed to give Greater Cin- cinnati dial twisters exactly what they want. Each weekly issue will pre- sent to you the official com- plete programs of Greater Cincinnati radio stations, as well as features on the prominent radio chains. Watch RADIO DIAL for newsy interesting accounts of what s doing on your radio to- day. Camel's Quarter Hour to Feature Three of Columbia's Best A new six-day -a -week radio series featuring Morton Downey, Antony Wons- and Jacques Re- nard and his orchestra- will be in- augurated over the Columbia Broadcasting System June 1 by the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Com- pany. Downey and Renard have been signed exclusively for this series, giving up their sustaining broadcast periods. Sixty stations of the Columbia network, beaded by key station WABC. will carry the programs at 7:45 p. m. for eastern listen- ers and at 11 :30 P. M.. EDST. for western and Paci fie coast listeners, daily except Sundays. The series is to be known as The Camel Ouarter-Hour and supersedes the Camel Pleasure T-*our programs which ends May 27. Morton Downey, the radio sensation of 1931. is a high-note ♦enor. He made his radio debut as a regular broadcasting artist °arly in December. 1030- and skyrocketed to fame within a comparatively. short time. OUTSTANDING stars in the entertainment world are scheduled for radio programs here this week. Glance through the programs on Page 4 and determine for yourself just who will entertain you tonight or any night the next week. Saturday night '= another big night for the broadcasters. An- drew Mellon, Secretary of the Treasury, will be the headline attraction when he speaks for Columbia, and WKRC, at 8:30. WCKY will he on with their ever popular Cuckoo Club at o'clock. Ted Lewis and his orchestra are the feature attrac- tion at WSAI Saturday night at 6 :30. Several members of his orchestra will present novelty selections' as an added induce- ment to whirl your dial to WSAI (1,330 k) at that time. WFBE leads off for Sunday morning with a program of Ger- man music at 10 :30. Harry Hartman will provide a snappy review of the situation in sport circles from the same station at 7 :30 Sunday night. Dr. Arthur Staples, district superintendent, Methodist Episcopal Church, will be the speaker in the weekly church forum program to be broadcast by WLW Sunday morning at 9 o'clock. The Gruen Old Fashioned Garden, a feature presenting the Music Hall organ and prominent Cincinnati solo- ists, is WKRCs main attraction for Sunday (2 P. M.). Out at WSAI Maurice Chevalier, France's contribution to the talk- ing motion pictures, will be a feature at 7:00 o'clock. The Dodge Twins — Beth and Betty — will sing several songs for those who're tuned into WKRC Monday afternoon at 4:30. They specialize in "hot" selections. Stay on the same wave length until 6 :30 and per- haps Evangeline Adams will read your fortune in the stars. That's another Columbia feature that is achieving widespread popularity. She's followed by a dramatization of one of Jim Corbett's fights. The Mormon Tabernacle Choir, that famous (Continued on page 4) COMPLETE RADIO PROGRAM ON PAGE/4 As the star of the Camel Quarter Hour series- he will be heard in several solos nightly. Anthony Wpns, who will be the master of ceremonies, is an- other newcomer to radio who has won a wide following. His sustaining periods on the Colum- bia network have been listed as "Tony's Scrap Book" and in- cluded reading of his "home- spun" philosophy. Wons pos- sesses an unusually attractive radio personality and has set new records for volume of audience mail. It is interesting to note that the Camel Quarter Hour will bring three of Columbia's outstanding sustaining features into a single program — a feat never before ac- complished by a sponsor. Will Rogers Says Will Rogers, ace humorist, got in a timely "dig" against publishers at the dinner of the Associated Press and American Newspaper Pub- lishers' Association "If you really want to stop the development of radio ad- vertising," Rogers twitted the publishers, "a home - made cure for pyorrhea or kill Amos 'n' Andy. "Why, there will still be a radio in every home when people pay 10 cents to see what a printing press looked like! Radio is taking away your news. Television will take away your pictures. All you will have left will be the editorials and the letters from the people objecting to them." RADIO DIAL. SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1931. ^?* Weekly RADIO DIAL Writing a Radio Fan Letter Published every Thursday by the Radio Dial Publishing Co., 22 East 12th St., Cincinnati, Ohio. Contents copyrighted. VOL. I MAY 23, 1931 NO. 1 ". . . 8:00 p.m. dialogue (N) 9:00 p.m. talk (C) 10:00 p.m. dialogue (N) 11:00 p.m. talk (F). . ." RADIO is the cheapest and best entertain- ment offered to you today. Even the gentlest and laziest mortal can get more variety in his own home by twisting one little dial than Caesar ever got with hi; armies or Cleopatra ever captured with her graces. Do you want to know what's doing on the air to night ... or what feature is being broadcast at any hour next week? Do you want the opportunity to hear ma- jestic, sweeping sympho- nies, or breathless news events that are just happen- ing, or snappy orchestras? If so, we hope you will allow Radio Dial the privilege of telling you each week the complete official programs of Cincinnati and vicinity radio stations. And, of course, all the features of the big chains will be in- cluded as well. Bless your heart, you don't have to read Radio Dial. There are plenty ways to select the program you want to hear without resorting to our complete official guide. But, as a rea- sonable person interested in getting the most for your money for the least bother, we do believe Radio Dial will fill the bill. Make it a point to read the next few issues. They will materi- ally increase the pleasure of your evenings. We hope to count on you as a friend. You can meet us next Thursday at most any good news stand. I VIRGINIA GARDINER Miss Gardiner never thought of acting until she turned to radio. She was a concert singer. She has a half-doxen different speaking voices, however, which counts more with the radio audience than her pretty teeth and dimples. She played with Empire Builders last year. Now you hear her in the Cuckoo Club, Colliers' Hour, and many other NBC dramas. WROTE a letter to a ra- dio station and I've never heard a word from them since." In one mighty wail that dis- appointed cry goes up to the gods of Etheria and Kilocycha from enthusiastic radio fans who never will write another radio letter because their first attempt at epistolatory applause didn't produce results either in the form of the autograph of a fa- vorite entertainer, or a package of Grandma-Finklebarber's-Fa- irite-Wart-Cure sent free on receipt of a postal card or letter to the radio station to which you are now listening. 'What's the big idea?" these disgruntled pen scratchers ask each other. "These radio sta- tions are alwavs suggesting that we write letters, and then they never pay any attention to the mail." As one who has seen 50,000 or more letters arrive at WLW every week, with twice that many when a sponsor is offering a ra- dio gift that sounds like a gold brick, I have picked Up a great many useful tips on how to write and how not to write a radio letter. I know how many of those 50,000 or more letter^ never reach their destination. T know how many of them have to be returned to their senders marked "No such person," or "Opened by Mistake." And I know how manv have to he sen' to the Dead Letter Office be- cause neither envelope nor let- ter carried any return address. Believe me when I say that these orphan letters are one of the chief worries of the harried directors of radio stations. They don't cast your letters lightly aside without making every ef- fort to see that they are delivered or answered. I have seen thou- sands of letters addressed to someone unknown to WLW but sent in its care. I have seen these envelopes taken the rounds of all the office force of the sta- tion in the hope that some one may have seen correspondence mentioning the addressee. I have seen the members of staff or- chestras questioned as to pos- sible acquaintance with the one sought for. I have seen the search continue until all the or- chestra members of all the or- chestras playing at down town hotels have been questioned. T have even talked in my sleep about these undeliverable letters for I've heard people "crab" when they've written letters to radio stations and have been an- By Natalie Gidpings swered with the silence of the grave, Unless your radio fan letter is addressed to a specific individ- ual and is marked "personal," it probably will be opened directly when it reaches the mail receiv- ing desk. Here it will be read hastily to see what it is about. If it is a letter requesting one of the hundred and one articles be- ing given away by radio adver- tisers, it will be Tiut in the mail box of the sponsor whose pro- gram is mentioned. MORTON DOWNEY Morton Downey's high tern is so sweet that CBS features him as competition .to Amos n Andy at 7 p. m,, four nights a week. Like Rudy Valle he's a busy boy, forever dashing about from one job to the next. He directs the Hotel Delmonic or- chestra, sings at the Paramount, broadcasts and writes songs — "Wabash Moon" et al. Ex-Pug Is Announcer. Time was when CBS announcer Harry von Zell earned his living with his fists instead of with his vocal chords. At eighteen Harry was a promising lightweight in boxing circles on the Pacific Coast. He fought five bouts, won four, and then decided that there were easier ways of making a living. Nifty. After one of his recent Tues day evening programs over the Columbia network, Richy Craig. Jr., the Blue Ribbon Malt Jester, was discussing the country club where he had been a golfing guest that morning. "Ritzy said the Jester, "I'll say it's a ritzy club. Why, they have swivel chairs in the dining room just so the members can turn their hacks on one another !" Over-Overstuffed. Then there's the problem of George Beuchler's new over- stuffed club chair. When truckmen found the chair too bulky to be carried through the halls of the announcer's apart- ment house, they hoisted it by block and tackle and swung it into the apartment of Bert Mc- Murtrie, CBS production man. Windows, which had to be re- moved in order to admit the chair, were then replaced, and the truckmen attempted to carry the chair from McMurtrie's That's where the first diffi- culty arises. Too many fan let- ters mention too many programs, and can't be sent directly to a single sponsor, but must be re- copied so that it can be sent to each one mentioned. Let this be your first rule for a radio letter then : Mention only one Radio Program in a single letter. Here's the reason for this cardinal principle : Simnose you write a letter to your favorite announcer who happens to be Ted Husing. "Dear Mr. Husing," you say, "I have been listening to you for several years and I certainly think you are the best announcer on the air. I would like to have one of Peggy Winthrop's radio- surprise packages. I am also en- closing four labels from Libby Pineapple cans and I would like to have one of the Hawaiian seed bead necklaces they are giving away. I certainly shall be look- ing forward to hearing you an- nounce the Atwater Kent hour next Sunday. I would also like to have one of the pictures Ar- thur Chandler, Jr., is giving away, for I always listen to his organ programs." You'd send that letter ad- dressed to Station WLW to be- gin with. You have addressed the salutation to Ted Husing, Columbia announcer whom you have heard. You mention Peggy Winthrop's program, and the Libby program which are NBC features that WLW broadcasts. At first reading, it looks as if your letter mentions only NBC programs and an announcer, so the mail opener at WLW prob- ably would toss your letter into the NBC letter box to be sent on to New York City where the NBC mailing department can bother about sending a copy to someone, and the advertising agencies that handle the Libby, McNeill and Libby, the Peggy Winthrop, and the Atwater Kent programs. But what about that picture of Arthur Chandler, Jr., that you want? He's a WLW staff member. When your letter gets to the National Broadcast- ing Company, they will think that the Chandler request already has been taken care of, and they'll not worry about it. All the same, you won't get your picture of Chandler and you'll ever after nurse a grudge against him be- cause you think he's ignored your letter. From your first rule comes this second one: Address your letter to the person or program for which you intend it. In that typical letter I showed you above, each program sponsor and each entertainer should have had his individual letter. Husing and Chandler should have been iddressed personally. Each pro- gram sponsor should have been addressed in care of WLW or the National Broadcasting Com- pany either by the name of the program or the name of the company paying for the broad- cast. Don't tell me you can't tell who sponsors the programs, sponsors aren't that modest. Never ask a radio announcer or entertainer to deliver a mes- sage for you. That's the third rule to guide your radio letter writing. Be sure of this. If a radio an- nouncer gets a compliment from you in a letter, he cherishes that letter like a lock of baby's hair. You can include in that letter a message to a brother announcer that his long-lost uncle has died in Tibet, willing him a half in- terest in the New York Stock Exhange, and the one who got the letter first never will tell him. The only chance the heir has of finding out about his legacy will apartment into Beuchler's. But the chair was too large to go through the doors. And by that time the block and tackle had been hauled down. The movers left matters there. McMurtrie has the chair and Beuchler has the satisfaction of knowing that he owns it. Baffling Every Sunday evening at 9 :00 o'clock there is another in the [ series of Scotland Yard Detec- tive Dramas broadcast from the ( studios of WFBE. Young aspir-, ing thespians prominent in| Greater Cincinnati dramatic cir-i cles are cast in these productions.! RADIO DIAL. SATURDAY, MAY i WLW International Features * Include Talks in Ten Tongues TWENTY FOUR hours of . onl inuous broadi a from noon, May 2G to COUNTESS OLGA ALBANI Meet the Countess Oltfs blue-blooded S punish house. on the stage. She is now an exceptional! being featured in a series of recitals o\ of Medolago Albani, descend ent She has been in the movies and popular radio soprano, r the National Broad- casting Company system, Sunday evenings, at 6:15 (Est.) The stations include: WE.tF, New York ; WCAE, Pittsburgh ; WRC, Washington; WGR, Buffalo; KSD, St. Louis ; WOC, Davenport ; and WHO. Des Moines. come when he accidentally sees the news while having the com pitmen! shovel under liis nose for the steenth time, />'.- sure you know what station v«u are tuned to when you make up your mind to write. As ;i rule for letter writing, that sounds like advising von to know your own name before writing a check Bui it's a [act thai about halt the radio listeners have no ide i ol where their radio pro grams are coming from aboul half their listening time Sup- pose you turn on thi Station \\ I \M. Cleveland, to hear Rudy Vallee. After a while you leave the room When you come back, someone else has turned the dial to KDK \ and you come into the room just in time to hear the announ to send a handsome autographed the Declaration of Inde- dropping a fine to this station." V "u dash to your desk and write .1 letter to W IWM then and isk for your autographed cop) of the Decleration of fcde- And then you wait lor it. In the meantime, imagine the embarrassment of Station WTAM to read in your letter that you want a handsome auto graphed copy of the Declaration of Independence when they are giving away -beautifully illus- trated pamphlets on bow to de- termine the vibration number of your pet poodle doe by counting the hairs in his right ear." If the girls who open station mail had to think only about the - and entertainers on their stations, they'd have time the subject of why radio an- nouncers all arc conceited. How- ever, they have to spend their extra time scanning the pub- lished programs of all the other Stations in their vicinity so that they'll know how to forward the mail that should never have come l«> their desks in the first plact Two per cent of the articles or letters sent out by radio stations in response lo requests come back on account of wrong addresses, the result pi illegible signatures. i'i in il< d letters often cannot be read bj the time the} reach thi n di -tmation. The most legi- ble letters get first attention. In case you have mi ntii material they use on the air. They cannot afford to have cop- ies made, in the first place. In a ■!. they need to keep their material exclusive in order to retain their individuality. Only a few entertainers will send out pictures unless they have been offered on the air. their (mute .beady mapped out "" e ^ n ? e ex P e " se is P r0 " . - 1 1 niEHDVc, tor two or three offers lor,ncrn - of a picture will bring at least ( Radio entertainers cannot send , 10,000 requests to any WLW en- K> do some original research into I out copies of the songs and other ' lertainer. RAMON A DAVIES Here is Ramona, a new WLW star. Ramona, who in private life is Miss Ramona Davics, is a native of Kansas City, who after her graduation with hon- ors from the Conservatory of Music there joined the famed Kansas City Night Hawks. May noon May 87, will mail, the I I idio stations \\ i A\ and \\ BXAL to determine the extent of their international i i ence. Announcements in ten or more foreign languages will explain to foreign listeners the purpose of till a ! hour test program which officially will dedicate the new In. ono wati \\s\ \| to the serv- ice of listeners all over the world with short-wave receiving sets W Inle the ,' I hour test is planned primarily to show the coverage of the new short-wave transmitter which replaced the 250 watt set, the programs be- tween i a. m. Wednesday , \\.<\ 27, and (i :30 a. m., will he broad- cast by station WLW to reach distant listeners who have Ion- wave receivers. Many programs during the periods in which WLW regu- larly is on the air will he broad cast simultaneously by both the long and short wave stations. WLW programs which might not interest foreign listeners, however, will be replaced on W8XAL by features especially planned for this broadcast. Polish, Russian, French, tier man, ami Bohemian students and faculty members from Cincinnati music colleges and schools will produce a program of music and announcements for radio listeners in Central Europe. This will be placed at a time when it will reach foreign listeners. Chinee. Hindu, Japanese and Australian listeners will he enter- tained with a program of their native music also played and sung by students now in Cincinnati. One of these will come at 10:45 a. m. May 27, when Ih Thi Ann, 'cellist, and Won Chung Park, vocalist, Korean students at the Cincinnati Conservatory . of Music, present a program of Japanese music which they will annoujn i in thai tongue. Well, Anyway, You Can't Fall Out of a Radio Station. Making his second appear- ance in seven days before a microphone connected to a trans-Atlantic hookup, t h e Prince of Wales will be heard over the WABC-CoI- urnbia network at 4 :?0 P. M., Eastern Daylight Saving Time, Wednesday, May 27, when he speaks at a dinner in London to assist in rais- ing funds for the blind. The Prince, who has ad- hered to the principle of keeping up to the minute in matters of aviation and radio, using the former as a means of travel on most of his journeys and the latter for communication with the King while he was in South America, has been devoting attention recently to the sub- ject of radio for the blind, and will speak on that sub- ject. m£ LOWELL THOMAS Lowell Thomas, writer and lecturer, whose adventures Ii ivo carried him to the far corners of the earth, is the interpreter of the days' news on the Ltterary Digest program, broadcast every week-day at 5:45 p. m., over an N. B. C. network I he Vox I [umana concert of organ and mixed choral numbi i at 1 I :30 p. m. May T> will be dl 'In .ited to Alaska and the iar North and will he broadcast by both \\ l.U and W8XAL, The Croslej i lii Lb i al I 80 p. m. Tuesday, Wfaj 36, w ill pro- dui e .1 play aboul ganj ti i Eor Hi-' entertainment of listeners in England This probabh w ill be broadi .i-i only by W8XAL* Mary Steele, < ontralto, whose musical education was compli ted in Paris, will iing a pi ogram of French songs Tuesday, May '.'(i, at t I :\r t a. ni,, which she will ■1' dii ate to her friends in Paris who have been notified of the program and will he listening. At I I a m. the same day, the Glenn Sisters will sing a half hour pro- gram of songs in seven different languages. For the Dancers. The Columbia chain fea- tures the following dance groups: t> : V. M. — Harry Tucker and his Barclay Orchestra, ! Ifi i'. M. '- Frank Wine. gar's Barn Orchestra, ll :00 I'- M. i li t< hi i Hen di r rjii anil hi ( )nh 11 :80 P. M. Romanelli and his King Edward i tra from Toronto. i Hid. — Ozzic i [ on and his Pelham Orchestra. -it Brock, violinist, will play the Shojgrcn "Sonata for Violin and Piano" at B :30 a. m. 7, on W8XAL only. 'I In to the ■ WLW announcer, will sing a program of Italian probably at ■'. :■*."> p. m., Monday, .'"'. Announcements will be in Italian. At 1 a. m. Wednesday, May 27, the -Merry Men quartet will sing a half-hour concert dedi- cated to Australia and New Zea- Browning Mummery, tenor, and Robert Gcddes, bari- tone, were born in those respec- tive countries. RADIO DIAL. SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1931. You will find complete radio program {Continued from page 1) group of vocalists in Salt Lake City, Nevada, will be heard over Station WLW Monday after- noon at 5:15. And the Crosley Saturday Knights— Theis' Or- chestra, the Glenn Sisters, Mary Steele and Charlie Dameron— will be broadcast at 8 o'clock. Tuesday night at G :15 WCKY will feature Gus Van, motion picture and vaudeville star, in a monologue. Earl Fuller's Or- chestra will provide the music for those inclined to dance Tues- day night at 7 o'clock. The United States Navy Band will be available from WLW at 3 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. WKRC will instruct you in the intricacies of auction bridge if you care to tune in Tuesday night at 10:30. The Canadian Pacific Cru- saders, an orchestra \ .th several nationally known soloists, will be the lead attraction for Station WCKY Wednesday night at 7 :30. At the same time WLW will be offering the R. F. D. hour with "Boss" Johnson as master of ceremonies. This pro- gram, popular among city dwell- ers, is designed primarily to in- terest the listeners in the rural districts. Another of the series of talks on dogs will be presented at WLW Thursday night at 6 :30 by Dr. Glenn Adams. The Rin-Tin-Tin "thriller," a drama- tization featuring the famous motion picture dog, will be broadcast at 7 :15. The Coney Island dance orchestra, a new popular group for WKRC, will be broadcast from the up-river resort Thursday night at 10:30. The Blackberry Dudes, comedy duo, will sing and play at 11 :45. The Cities Service orchestra and quartet, with Jessica Drago- nette, soprano soloist, heads WSAI's list for Friday night. The "Confessions of a Rack- eteer," a dramatic sketch, will be featured in the WKRC lists. It will be broadcast Friday night at 6 :45. A series of odd and en- tertaining facts will be broadcast by the Gruen Answer Man from the same station at 10 :20 p. m. The King Edward band, a popular N. B. C. dance group, will be presented from WLW and other red network outlets Saturday night at 11:02. Mem- bers of the group will present several solo numbers. Bob New- hall, WLW sport authority, will sum up the events of the week in sports circles with a 15-minute talk at 10 :45. Weber and Fields, the vaudeville team that has en- tertained two generations, head- line the WSAI features Satur- day night. They will be pre- sented at 7 :00 o'clock. Tube Life. The life of a power tube is affected very materially by the fil- ament or heater voltage. Too low a voltage greatly prolongs the life but materially decreases the power output and increases the plate resistance. Too high a volt age does not necessarily improve the operation of the receiver but it does overheat the filament or heater and greatly shortens the life of the tube. Saturday, May 23, 1931. WLW (428M— 700K) 50,000W A.M.— G :00— International Fiddlers. 6:28 — Weather; Time. 6:30— Squibb Exercise. 7:45— A. & P. Program (NBC). 8:00— Bulova Time. 8:01— Jerry Foy. songs. 8:15— Junior Detectives (NBC). 8:30— Morning Devotions. 8:44— Btilova Time. 8:45 — American Food Talk. 9:00 Dance Miniatures (NBC). 9 :30— "Spain," Art talk. 9. -45— The Post Script, letters. 10:00— Organ, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 10:15— Elliot Brock, violin. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Horton's Orchestra 11 : 00— Old Time Fiddlers 11:15— Village Rhymester. 11:30— Live Stock Reports. 11:45— River; Time. Noon — Cowboy Band. P. M.— 12:20— Butova Time. 12 :2I— Organ. 12 :45 — Farm and Home Period (NBC). 1:30— Salt and Peanuts. 1:45— Sisters of the Skillet. (NBC). 2:00— Weems Orchestra Netherland Plaza. 2:15 — Merry Men Quartet. 2:30— Chicago Sernade (NBC). 3 :00 — Don Becker, Ramona. 3:15— Pacific Feature Hour (NBC). 4:00 — Merry Men Quartet. 4 :30 — Crosely Dealers Hour, 5 :00 — Bulova Time. 5 :01 — Seckatary Hawkins. 5 :30 — Doctors of Melody. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 0:00— Amos V Andy (NBC.) :15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 0:30— Rise of the Goldbergs. (NBC) 0:45 — Gruen Watch Makers (e. t.). 6 :50 — Baseball Scores. 6:55 — Piano Solos. 7 :00 — Crosley Theater. 7:30— Fuller Program (NBC). 8:00 — Crosley Saturday Knights. 8:30— Domino Orchestra (NBC). 9:00— String Trio, Vocalists. 9:30— Clara, Lu and Em (NBC). 9:45 — Horton's Orchestra, Horse- shoe Gardens. 10:00— Club Sohio. 10:30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. J 1:00— Estate Weather Man. 11:02 — King Edward Cigar Band. 12:00— Carr's Orchestra. Gibson. A. M.— 12:30— Village Rhymester. 12:45 — The Doodlesockers. 1 :00-1 :30— Cowboy Band, WKRC (545M— 550K) 1000W A. M.— 6:45— God's Bible School — Sun- rise Worship. 7:45— Ray and Bob (Gruen Time). 8:00— Madam Flor-Enz. 8:15— Morning Moods (CBS). 8 :30 — Home Furniture Company — Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45 — Traxel Galleries. 9 :00— Classified News Program. 9 :30— Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 10:00— Studio Feature, 10:13 — Steinharter — Live Stock Quotations. 10 :15— Time— Weather— Burke. 10:17— Trcmlette Tully. 10 :45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 11:00— Auto-Rad Supply Co. 11:15 — Queen City Rug Makers. 11:30— Julia Hayes. NOON— Wurlitzer Program (12:00 Sports Flash). P. M.— 12:30 — Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram. 1 :00— CBS. 1 :30 — Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2 :00— Louis A. Noelcke Melotone Program (2:00 Sports Flash) 2:30— A. L. Fink Song Recital. 3:00— God's Bible School. 3:15— Ann Leaf at the Organ(CBS) 3:30— Reaume Studio. 3 :45 — Wm. F. Grassmuck — Spanish Serenade (CBS). 4:00— Pharis Program (4:00 Sports Flash). RUTH AND KATHERINE GLENN Yes, you're right, tkey are sisters. But more than that, they are the Glenn Sisters, Ruth and Katherine, two pretty and vivaci- ous girls from New York who have but recently joined the WLW studios. And these sisters are as harmonious over the air as they are beautiful in a picture, and that's saying a lot. The Glenn Sisters will be on the air over WLW during the week of May 24th, Tuesday, at 2:15 p.m., Wednesday, at 11:00 known to radio fans, having sung over national chains and having toured with Roxy's Gang. 4:15 — Vita-Dry Program. 4 :30 — Winegar's Barn Orchestra (CBS) 4:15 Kingsbury Ann). 4 :45 — Studio Feature. 5:00— Kampf Artists (5:00 Sports Flash). 5:15 — Meyer Paint Program. 5 :30 — Stearns and Foster's Magic Mattress Man. 5 :45— Hub Clothing Co. Musicale. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast, 6:00 — Home Furniture Co. — Morton Downey (CBS) (6:15 Mr. Good). 6 :15 — Studio. 6:20— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6 :25 — Sports Review. 6 :30— Studio. 6:55 — Stocks — Cohle and Tyree. 6 :58 — Time and Weather. 7:00— Arthur Pryor's Cremo Mili- tary Band (CBS). 7:15 Studio. 7:20 — Jr. Chamber of Commerce Program. 7:25— Ben Alley— Tenor (CBS). 8 :30 — Studio Feature. 8:45 — Your Neighbors. 9:00— K. O. Hawaiians. 10:00— Bert Lown and His Orches- tra (CBS). 10:15— Ace Brogode and His Vir- ginians. 11 :00— Time and Weather (Mr. Good). 11:02 — Sports Review. 11:08— Jack Denny and His Or- chestra (CBS). 11 :30— Nocturne (CBS). 11 :45 — Blackberry Dudes. 12:00— The Barge Dance Orchestra (CBS). A.M.— 12:30— Old Time Frolic. WCKY(202M— 1490K) 5000W A.M.— 6:00 — Kentucky's "Good Morning." 6:05 — Hugh Cross. 6:30— God's Bible School. 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00 — Morning Dance Program. 9:15 — My New Kentucky Home. 9:45— Kentucky Belle's Kiddie Club 10:30— Classic Hour. 11:00 — Musical Novelties. 11:30 — Mountain Melodies. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P.M.— 12:30 — N orris Brock Live Stock Re- port. 12 :35-l :00 — Luncheon Concert. 5:45 — Melody Men, Guitars. 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash, 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 6 :30 — Liberty Ragamuffins. 7 :00— Hill Billy Kid. 7:15 — String Ensemble. 7 :45 — Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. 8:15— "Skillet Lickers." 8:45— Little Red Riding Hood. 9:00— Cuckoo Club (NBC). 9:30 — Crooning Guitarist. 9:45-10:00— Hilo Serenaders. Sunday, May 24, 1931. WLW (428M— 700K) 50,000W A.M.— 8:59 — Bulova Time. 9 :00 — Church Forum. 9 :30— Witherspoon Chorus (NBC). 10:00— Bulova Time. 10:05 — Organ; Arthur Chandler, Jr. 10:25— River; Time. 10:30— Rochester Concert Orchestra (NBC). 11:30— Troika Bells (NBC). Noon — "War," Col. Fred Palmer (NBC). P. M.— 12:30— Little Jack Little (NBC). 12 :45 — "Grand Opera, Deems Tavlor (NBC). 1 :30— Yeast Foamers (NBC). 2:00— Bulova Time. 2:01— Crosley Theater. 2:30— Henry Thies' Orchestra. 3:00— William Oilmatics (NBC). 3:30— Over Jordan (NBC). 3:45— Your Eyes in Music (NBC). 4:00 — Rhymes with Reason. 4 :30— Plantation Days. 5:00 — Henry Thies' Orchestra. 5:30 — Hymn Time. ^ 5:59— Bulova Time. 6:00— WLW Highlighs. 6:30 — Conservatory of Music. 6:55 — Baseball Scores. 7:00— Ennajettick Melodies (NBC.) 7:15— Collier's Radio Hour (NBC). 8:15— BayukGgar Program (NBC). 8:45— RKO Vaudeville Acts. 9:15— Variety. 9:30— Kaffee Hag Slumber Hour (NBC). 10:00— Estate Weather Man, 10:02 — Horton Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. 10:15 — Heel Hugger Harmonies (NBC). 10:30— Musical Dreams. 11 :00— Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. 11:15 — Village Rhymester. 11 :30— Thies' Orchestra (to NBC "blue" network). 12:00— Weems' Orchestra. Netherland Plaza. A.M.— 12:30-1:50— Cowboy Band. WKRC (545M—550K) 1000W A. M.— 6:45 to 7:45— God's Bible School- Sunrise Worship. 9:00— God's Bible School. 10:00— Watchtower Program (E.T.) 10 :15 — Jim Lightfield — Veteran Civic Hour. Noon — Dr. Alia Rageh — Astrologer. P. M.— 12:15— OXOL Feature (CBS). 12 :30 — American Legion Program — Robt. E. Bentley Post. 1:30— Ballad Hour (CBS). 2 :00 — Gruen Old-Fashioned Garden. 3 :00— Cathedral Hour (CBS). 4 :00 — Rev. Donald Grey Barnhouse (CBS). 4 :30— Pastorale (CBS). 5 :00 — Louis A. Noelcke Program. 5 :30 — Twilight Reveries. 5 :58 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00— Dr. Klein's News Reels (CBS). 6:15— Studio. 6 :20 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 6 :25 — Sports Review. 6:30— The Gauchos (CBS). 6:58— Time and Weather. 7:00 — Devils, Drugs and Doctors (CBS). 7 :15— Dr. Alia Rageh. 7:30— Kaltenborn Edits the News (CBS). 7:45— Studio Feature. 8:00— The Coty Playgirl (CBS). 8:30— Graham-Paige Hour (CBS). 9:00— Royal's Poet of the Organ (CBS). 9:30— Fortune Builders (CBS). 9:45— Star Reveries (CBS). 10:00— Continental String Quartette (CBS). 10 :30— Coney Island Dance Or- chestra. 11:00— Time and Weather. 11:02— Sports Review. 11:07— The Barge Dance Orchestra. 11 :37— Nocturne (CBS). 12:00 — (Mid.) Newton Announcm't. WCKY (202M— 1490K) 5000W A. M — 6:00 — Kentucky's "Good Morning." 0:30— God's Bible School. 7 :30 — Morning Dance Programs. 9:00— God's Bible School. 9:00— Nomads (NBC). 10:30— Hugh Cross. 10 :45 — Hilo Serenaders. 11 :00— Sparklets (NBC). 11:15— Hill Billy Kid. 11:30— Little Red Riding Hood. 11:45 — Studebakcr Champions (ET). Noon — Arabelle Chambers, Crooner. P.M.— 12:15— "Skillet Lickers." 12:45-1:00— Lena Pope, Soprano. 5:45 — Sacred Quartette. 6:00 — Superior Studios, Music. 6:15 — Italian Serenaders. :30— Kentucky Belle, Contralto. 6:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :00— Enna Jcttick Melodies (NBC). 7:15 — College of Music. 7 :45 — Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. 8:15— "Skillet Lickers." 8:45 — Westinghouse Salute (NBC). 9:15— Floyd Gibbons (NBC). 9:30— Little Red Riding Hood. 9 :45-10 :00— Crooning Guitarist. There are only 26 radio stations in Argentina, and the most powerful of them uses only 30,- 000 watts. RADIO DIAL, SATURDAY. MAY 83, 1981. of all local stations here each week WSAI (225M— 1330K) 500W A. M.— I -Concordia Lutheran Church, sign Off. r M.— 12:45— "Grand Optra." Deems Taylor (NBC). 10 Sign Off. -' 00 Sermonette and Hymn Time. 2 SO Manhattan Guardsmen (NBC). —Dr. S. Parkes Cadman {NBC). 1:00 Pop Concerts (NBC). ' atlmlic Services (NBC). 6:00— Old Stagers' Memories I [Bl i 0:80— RCA Victor Program (NBC). 7:00— Chase & Sanborn Program I NBC). 8:00 — "Our Government," Uavid 1-awrence (NBC). 8:15— Atwater Kent Hour (NBC) 8:45 — Iodcnt Program (NBC). 9 :15-":45— Famous Trials in His tory (NBC). WFBE (2S0M— 1200K) 100W A, M.— 8:00 Voices at Dawn. 9:00 — Morning Concert. 9:30— Invitation to the Waltz. 9:45 — Watch Tower Program. 11:15— Radio Circus. 10:01)— "Take Time To Be Beautiful.' 10:80 — German Program. 10:15 — Berning Ford. II :00 — League of Independents. II [15 — "The Home Finder." 1 1 .-10— Pymacide Program. 11:15 — Mountain Vallev Greetings. Noon— Radio Circus. P. M.— :15 — Kleeman Program. :30— Galvano & Cortez. Ho— Fuller House Party. :00 1 uiy Friday, Jewish Hour. :00 — National Players. :10 — "Sleepy" Mothers. :i)0 — Dance Frolic. :00— Kelly & Matthews Program. :16 — Hawaiian Bluebirds. :30 — Peanut Boys. :00— Cincinnati Trade School. :I0 — Fuller, Inc. :;W — George Eiche, Jr. :4B— Rev. Charles Hamilton. :00— Parkview Symphony Hour. ■'15 — Mildred Eichler, soprano. :oD — Radio Circus. :00— Reading, Mrs. Lloyd Hosliaw :15— Travelogue. Joe Sweeney. :80— Church Federation Hour. :(I0 — Larl Fuller's Orchestra. :80 — Hartman's Sport Review. :0(l— First Baptist Church, Newport :00— Scotland Yard. :30— Mountain Valley Varieties. :«J — Earl Fuller's Orchestra. :15 — Radio Circus. :30-10:45— Slumber Music. Monday, May 25, 1931. WLW (428M— 700K) 50.000W A M._ International Fiddlers. " 89 Bulova Time. 0:30 — Gym Classes. - :ll— Bulova Time. I '"I iV* P " Program (NBC). II 00 -Bulova Time. 8 "l-Scger Ellis, Songs. S :1 ,\ i — p/san ; Arthur Chandler, Jr B:30— Morning Devotions. 8 M -Bulova Time. 8 g-Miracles of Magnolia (NB( I 9:00— Housekeeper's Chats. 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9 80— Musical Journev. Organ 9:45— Winifred Carter (NBC). >yncopaters (NBC). K>— Live Stock Reports. Salt and Peanuts. JO Vocal Ensemble 'I 80— Piano; Vocal Solos I US-River: Time. N ood— Organ Program. Bulova Time. 18:18— Can's Orchestra. Hotel Gibson. Ihio Sprav Talk, ive Stock Talk. 1 ive Stock Reports. 1 flO— Farm andHomePeriodlXBO 1 :30 — Jim and Walt, Harmony. 1 . 10— Market Reports. 1 :4o — Wcems' Orchestra, Ncthcrlaiid Plaza. J:lo — Village Rliymcsler. £ :3d — Chicago Serenade (NB( I :0U— Henry Thies' Orchestra. ,i;tj— Uorld Book Man. 4:00— Chats, Peggy Winthrop(NBC). 4:15 — Glenn Sisters, Kanioua. 4:30 — Live Stock Reports, -1 :40 — Afternoon Revelers. :UU— Music treasure Box I X LI C ) . 5 :lo — Mormon Tabernacle Choir (NBC). 5 :30— Bulova Time. o:31— Old Man Sunshine— Children's Club. 5 :45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 0:00— Anius 'if Andy (NBC.J 0:15— WLW Highlights. 0:30 — Thermoid Doctors (e. t.) (1:45 — Baseball Scores. 0:50 — Roxy's Gang (NBC). 7:30— Gold Medal Express (NBC), S:W— Maytag Orchestra (NBC). «:30— Real 1-olks (NBC). 9:00— Vision- Airs. 9:30— Empire Builders (NBC). 10 :00 — Great Composers. 10 :30— Variety. 10:45 — Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 10:08— Estate Weather Man. 11:00— Willys Memory Hour. 12:00 — Busse Orchestra, Castle Farm. A. M.— 12:30 — Weems' Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 1 :00-l :30— Carr Orchestra, Gibson. WKRC (545M— 5S0K) 1000W A. M.— 6 :45 — God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Ray and Bob (Grucn Time). 8:00— Morning Moods (CBS). 8:15— Travel Galleries. 8:30 — Home Furniture Co. — The Four Clubmen (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9:00 — Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 9:30— Mr. Fixit (CBS.) 9 :45 — Classified News Program. 10:13— Steinharter's — Live Stock Quotations. 10:15 — Studio Features. 10:30— Uneeda Bakers (CBS). 10:45— Woman's Hour— (Burke). 11:13 — Time and Weather. 11:15— Julia Hayes. 1 1 :45— Columbia Revue (CBS). (11:45 Kingsbury Announce- ment. Noon— Wurlitzer Hour (12:00 Sports Flash). P. M.— 12 :30 — Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram. 1 :00— A. L. Fink Program. 1 :30 — Madam Flor-Enz. 1 ;45 — Studio Feature. 2:00 — Louis A. Noelckc — Salon Orchestra CBS (2:00 Sports Flash). 2:30 — Ann Leaf at the Organ (CBS). 2 :45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 3:00— Pilaris Program. 3:15 — Queen City Rug Makers. 3 :30 — Reaume Studio. 3 :45 — Wm. F. Grassmuck — Ward- man Park Orchestra (CBS). 4:00— God's Bible School (4:00 Sports Flash). 4:15 — Vita-Dry Program. 4:30— Dodge Twins (CBS). 4:45 — La Gerardine Progrom (CBS). 5:00— Kampf Artists (5:00 Sports Flash). 5:15— Meyer Paint Program. 5:30 — Magic Mattress Man. 5:45— Babes of Radio— Hub Cloth- ing Company. a :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6 :0O— Current Events CBS (6:15 Mr. Good) 6:15— Stocks— Cohle and Tyree. 6:17 — Time and Weather. 6:19 — Studio (Coney Rsland — Lewis Medicine — Title Guarantee). 6:20 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 6:25 — Sports Review. 6:30 — Evangeline Adams "Astrol- oger" (CBS). 6 :45— Jas. J. Corbelt "Fights" E. T. 7:00 — Arthur Prvor's Cremo Mili- tary Band (CBS). 7:15— The Barbasol Program(CBS) 7 :30 — Your Neighbors. 7:45 — American Beauty Mall Pro- gram. Bradley Kincaid sings Kentucky mountain ballads with such sweetness that two hundred thousand WLS (Chicago) listeners have bought his song books. Now he's at WLW with his fourth song book and is breaking his own records. Most of his songs never saw paper before he put them down for publication. Ken- tucky mountaineers have been singing them more than a century. 8:00— The Three Bakers (CBS). 8:30— An Evening in Paris (CBS). 9:00— Robt. Burns Panatella Pro- gram (CBS). 9 :30— Beltzhoover Bright Lights. 9:45— The Song Hit of the Week Program (E, T.). 10:00— Paul Tremainc and His Or- chestra (CBS). 10:15— Peter Paul Limericks. 10:20— Gruen Answer Man (E. T.). 10:25— Happy Feet. 10:30— The Barge Dance Orchestra. 11 :00 — Time and Weather. 10:03— Sports Review. 11:08— Asbury Park Casino Or- chestra (CBS). 11 :30— Nocturne (CBS). 11 :45 — Blackberrv Dudes. 12:00— Mid. Sign'Oft* (Newton Ann.) WSAI (225M— 1330K) SOOW A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:1c; — Campbell Soup Orchestra 'NBC). 8 :45 — Records. 9 :00— Old-Time Fiddlers. 9:30— Jean Carroll (NBC). !' :45 — Jerrv Foy. banjo. 111:00— Blue Streaks (NBC). 10:16— Household Institute (NBC) 10:30-11:00— Scgcr Ellis, songs. P. M — 12:50-1:00— Live Stock Reports. 2 :00 — Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 4 :00 — Crosley Singers. 1:30— Records. 4:45 — Sam Wilson, vocal solos. 5 :00— Records. ">:15 — Piano Solos. 5:30 — The Gossipers (e. t.). 5 :45 — Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC). 6 :00— Records. 6:15— "The World Today" (NBC). 6 :30 — Mrs. Lee Ach, poems. G:45 — Vocal solos. 7:00— "How's Business?" (NBC). 7:15— Webster Program (NBC). 7:30— A. & P. Gypsies (NBC). 8:30 — General Motors Program (NBC). 9 :00 — A d ventures of Sherlock Holmes (NBC). 9:30— Cheramy Knights. 10:00— Weems Orchestra. Netherland Plaza. 10:30-11:00— Busse Orchestra, Castle Farm. WFBE (250M— 1200K) 100W A. M — 00— Voices at Dawn. 15 — Radio Circus. 30— Classified Directory. 45 — Radio Circus. 00— Eighth and Walnut Garage. 15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 30 — Bacca Coal and Iron Program. 45 — Magnecoil Program. !) :00 — Hyde Park Community Prog. 9:15 — Radio Circus. 9;45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00 — Tid-Bits, Corinna C. Cur ran. 10:05— League of Independents. 10:20 — Princess Garment Program. 10:35 — Radio Circus. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:5!) — Simper Time. 11 :00 — Sherwin-Williams Program. 11 :15 — Tcnnenbaum Program. 1 1 :30— Friendly Wall Paper Program, 11:45 — Paul Electric Program. Moon — Doll Time Announcement. P. M.— 12:01— Grau Piano Recital. 12:15 — Radio Circus. 12:30 — Fuller Program. 12:45 — Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00 — Zolvo Program, 1 :15 — Matinee. 1 :30 — Radio Circus. 1 :45 — Cook Upholstery Program. 2:00 — "The Home Finder." 2:15 — Union Mutual. 2:30 — Fuller Garden Party. 3:45 — Reds vs. St. Louis. 4:30— Radio Circus. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30 — Crown Program, 5 :45 — Down South, (i :00— Variety. (5:15 — Berning Ford Program. i!:30 — Milncr Musicale. 7:00 — Xavier University Rambles 7:30 — Hartman's Sport Review. " :38 — Calliope Notes. 7 :45 — Three Peanut Boys. B.00 — Luckey Boys. «:15 — Radio Circus. S:30 — Camel Cigars. 8:45— Variety. 0:00 — Evening Chimes. 0:15 — Radio Circus. 9:4S — Shoppers' Hour. 10:15 — Mountain Valley Varieties 10:30— Radio Circus. 10:45 — Slumber Music. WCKY(202M— 1490K) 5000W A. M.— 6 :00— Kentucky's "Good Morning." 0:30 — God's Bible School. 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00 — Morning Dance Program. 9 :00— Theronoid Talk. 9:15— My New Kentucky Home. 9 :45 — Dance Records. 10:30— Classic Hour. II :00— Musical Novelties. 11:30 — Mountain Melodies. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— [2:80— Norris Brock Live Stock Re port. 12:35-1:00— Luncheon Concert. 5:45— Hill Billy Kid. 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 6:30— Bill and Bob. 6:45 — Hugh Cr, 7:00— Little Red Riding Hood. 7:15 — Kentucky Belle, Contralto. 7:30— "Skillet Lickers." 8:00— Ukulele Travelog. 8:15 i '. v'oodi I harm. fi IS Stev< Bati ■-, I h tofoni t, 9 i Strombcrg Carlson Orel (NB< ,i - 10 i oi i ! luartctte. 9 13 10:00 -Wally. Radio I lown Tuesday, May 26, 1931. WLW (428M— 700K) 50,000W A.M. International Fiddh ■ 0,2c — Bulova Time. 6:30 — Gym Classes. r. 15- A. & I'. Program (NB( 1 1" : 39— Bulova Time. S 00 Mm and Walt, 11 13 8:15— Mouth Health, Marlej hoi ris (NB( 1 8 :30 — Morning Devotions, II Bulova Time. 8 :40— American Talk. D 00 Morning Ballads, 0:15— Frances Ingram (Nlii 1 9 10 I ilass of Fashion. ;i : 15 — Premium Man. 10:00— Island Serenadi ra 10:30— Live Stock Reports, 10:40— Organ, Vocal. 11 :00— Morton's Orchestra. 11:30— WLW Stars. 1 1 : 15— River ; Time. Noon — Tuxedo Trio. P. M.- 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. l :00— Farm and Home Period (NBC). I :30— Salt and Peanuts, I :4Q — Market Reports. 1:45— Weems' Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 2:15 — Village Rhymester. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 2:45— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBl I 3:00-U. S. Navy Band (NBC). 3:45— Eumer Relik, Pianist. 4:00— Beauty Secrets, Rigaud. 1 : 15— Organ; Vocal. 1 ;30f— Live Stoci Rep 1 1 . 4:40— Glenn Sisters: Rai .1 5:00 — Horton's Orchestra, •> :20— Bulova Time. 6:30 — Old Man Sunshine, 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NB< 1 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC.) 6:15— WLW Highlights. 0:30— Bery Brothers (e. I.) 6:45 — Gruen Watch Makers (c. t.) 6:50— Baseball Scores. 6:55 — Scger Ellis, Songs. 7:00— Whi'teman's Painters (NBC). 7:30 — Weems' Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 7; 15— Sterling Jack— Songs, Pi 8:00 — Weems' Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 8 :13 — Singin' Sam — Piano, Songs. 8:30— Werk Bubble Blowers (to WCAE, WJR, WGAR). ;00— Barbasol Program 1, 11 9:15— Tastyeast Kandykids, 9:30— Chevrolet Chronicles (c. t.) IO:U0— Cotton Ou, , „ \[j | 10:30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 10:58— Estate Weather Man. II :00— Los Amigos— Spanish Music. 11:30— Organ and Voices. Midnight— Village Rhymestoi A. M — 13:15— Weems* Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 12:30— Busse Orchestra, Castle Farm, 1 :00 — Gibson Orchestra, 1:30— Busse Orchestra, ( a tie 1 2:00— Technical Staff. 8.30— Seger Ellis, Songs. - 45 Southern Singers, '■', :15 — Records. nils Br triers. '■'■ . 15- -Bob Pierce, Monoli 1 00 Oklahoma Cowbov Band Records. 5:00— Guitar and Songs. 5 :i-"i — Records. Bugs" Emerick. 5:45— Records (clat 1 ii al | WKRC (545M— 550K) 1000W A. M — 6:45— God'l Bible -School — Sun rise Worship. Ray and Bob (Gruen Time). » M»— Starr-Freeze Mel 3:15— -Morning Moods (I 8:30 — Home Furniture Co. — The Ambassadors [dam Flor-Enz. 9:00— OXOL Feature (CBS). RADIO DIAL. SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1931. 9 15— Traxcl Galleries (9:15 Kings- bury Announcement). 9:80 -Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. I" "" Studio Feature. 10:15— Stcinharter — Live Stock Quotations. 10:17 Classified News Program. [0:45 Woman's Hour. 11:18 Time and Weather. ll IS— Paul Tremaine and His Or- chestra ii BS). 11 ;80— Julia Haya N i -Wurlitrer Program (12:00 Sports Flash). P. M.— 12 10 Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram. 1:00 Papst-ett Varieties (CBS). 1 :15— Art-Dry Program. I ;30 -Dr. Alia Kageh— Astrologer. 2:00— Louis A. Noelcke Melotone Program (2:00 Sports Flash) 2:1S -Dream Home. 2:80- A. L, Fink — The Three Doctors (CBS). ! 15 -A. L. Fink — The Capti- vators (CBS). 8:00 Italian Idyll (CBS). 3:15 — Pharis Program. 8:80 — Reaume Studio. 8:45 — Win. F. Grassmuck Program. •1 :00— Queen City Rug Makers (4 :00 Sports Flash). 4 :15— Vita-Dry Program. 1 :30 — Indiana Merchants Program. 4 :45 — Sweethearts of the Air (CBS). 5:00— John Schcrz Program (5:00 Sports Flash). 5:16 — Meyer Paint Program. 5:30 — Magic Mattress Man. 5:45_Babes of Radio— Hub Clout- ing Company. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00 God's Bible School (6:15 Mr. Good). 6:15 Studio. :20 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 6:25 — Sports Review. 6:30 — Queen City Awning Period. 6 :35— Studio (Title Guarantee — Coney Island). 6:10— Stocks and Cohlc and Tyree. (I :!'t — Time and Weather. 6:45— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 7 ;00 — Arthur Pryor's Cremo Mili- tary Band (CBS). 7:15 — John Schcrz — Tommie and Willie. 7:30— Kaltenbom Edits the News (CBS). 7 ; 15 American Beauty Malt Pro- gram. 8:00 Henry George (CBS). 8:30— Philco Sy mphony Hour (CBS). 9:00 — Graybar' s Mr. and Mrs. (CBS). 915— Blue Ribbon Malt Jesters (CBS). 9 :30— Paramount Public Radio Playhouse (CBS). [0:00— Coney Isl'd Dance Orchestra. Hi :15 — Peter Paul Limericks. 10:20— Sports Review. 10:25— Happy Feet. 10:30 — Tom Collins, Jr.— Bridge Les- sons. 10:45 — Coney Island Dance Orchestra. 11:00— Gruen Witching Hour. 11:30— Time and Weather (Mr. Good). 11:32— Studio Feature. 11:45— Blackberry Dudes. 12:00— Mid. The Barge Dance Or- chestra (11:30 Newt. Ann). . WCKY(202M— 1490K) 5000W A. M.— 6 :00— Kentucky's "Good Morning." 6:30— God's Bible School. 7 :n» -Cheerio (NBC). 6 :00— Morning Dance Program. 9:15 — My New Kentucky Home. 9:45— Gibson's Food Talk (NBCl. 1" 00 Mr. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 1" !0 ( lassu Hour. U :00— Musical Novelties. 1 1 :30 — Mountain Melodies. Noon — Dance Tunes. P. M— [9 80— Horn's Brock Live Stock Re- port. 1 I 50 i :00— Luncheon Concert. 5:45— Hill Billy Kid. D :55— Avers Sport Flash. 8:00 r\moa V Andy (NBC). 6 15— Gus Van, Kcd's Man (NBC). 6 10 The Crooning Guitarist. 6 15— Dr. Scholl Ramblers (NB< I 7:00— Otl & Otten, Pianist. Blues. 7 :i"i— Tri-Siatc Entertainers. 7 ;30 — Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. B 00- \lma Ashcraft. Soprano. B 15 — Hurler Brothers. B 10— Death Valtev Davs (NBC). 9:00— Happy-Go-Lucky Girls. 9:15— Arabelle Chambers. Crooner. 9:30 [0:00— "Skillet Lickers." WSAI (225M— 1330K) 500W A. M — « : 00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8 :15— Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8:45— Records. 10:00— "Your Child" (NBC). 10:15— Household Institute (NBC). 10:30-11:00—11. S. Marine Band (NBC). P. M.— [2:50-1:00— Live Stock Reports. 8:00— Woman's Radio R e v ie w (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 4:00— Pond's Afternoon Tea (NBC). 1:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4 :45 — Records. 5:15 — Vocal Solos. 5:30— The Gossipers (e. t.). 5 :45— Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC). (J:00— Voters' Service (NBC). 6:30— Scger Ellis. 6:45 — Larrv Grcuter, accordionist. 7:U0— Blackstone Plantation (NBC). 7:30— Florsheim Frolic (NBC). 8 :00 — McKesson Musical Magazine (NBC). 8:30— Fuller Brush Man (NBC). 9:00— Lucky Strike Orchestra (NBCL 10:00— Busse Orchestra, Castle Farm. 10:30-11:00— Gibson Orchestra. WFBE (250M— 1200K) 100W A. M.— 7:00 — Voices at Dawn. 7 :15 — Radio Circus. 7 :30 — Classified Directory. 7:45 — Radio Circus. 8 :00 — Shoppers' Hour. 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30 — Bacca Coal and Iron Program. 8:45 — Magnecoil Program. 9:00— The Islanders. 9 :15 — Radio Circus. 9:30— Vaudeville. 9 :45 — Klecman Program. 10:00 — Tid Bits, Corinna C. Curran. 10:05 — Leaguq of Independents. 10:35 — Musical Brevities. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement. 11 :00 — Sherwin-Williams Program. 11:15 — Tennenbaum Program. 11:30 — Friendly Wall Paper Program. 1 1 :45 — Paul Electric Program. Noon— Doll, Time. P. M.— 5ALT AND PEANUTS 01 — Grau Piano Recital. 15 — Clean Up and Paint Up. 30— Fuller. Inc. 45 — Betlonby Melodies. :00 — Zolvo Program. .15 — Murphy & Goebel Program. :30 — Radio Circus. 45 — Cook Upholstery Program. :00 — The Home Finder. :15 — National Protective Program. : ;10 — Fuller Garden Party. :45 — Reds vs. Chicago. :00— Lyric Hour. :30— Crown Furniture. :45 — Race Auto and Radio Feature. :00 — Dinner Music. :15 — Berning Ford Program. :30 — Milner Musical e. :00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. :30 — Hartman's Sport Review. :45 — Barker News. :00 — Luckey Boys. :15 — Radio Circus. :30 — Camel Cigars. :45 — Musical Newsreel. :15 — Radio Circus. :4B — Shoppers' Hour. :00— Mountain Valley Varieties. :I5 — Licking River Fiddlers. :30 — Radio Circus. :45— Fuller's Orchestra. :15-11 :30 — Slumber Music. Wednesday, May 27, 1931. WLW (428M— 700K) 50,00OW A. M.— 6 :00— International Fiddlers. :2!>— Bulova Time. 6:30— Gym Classes. 7 15 -A & P. Program. - 00— Bulova Time. 8:01 — Sail and Peanuts. 8:15 — Organ Program. 8 :30 — Morning Devotion*. 8:44— Bulova Time. 8:45— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC). I U try Hale Martin (NBC). 9:15 — Good Looks Workshop. 9:30— Dance Miniatures (NBC) 10:00— Old Time Fiddlers. 10:15— Jim and Walt, harmony, 10 30— Live Stock Reports, 10:40— Organ, Arthur Chandler, Jr. From big time vaudeville came the Salt and Peanuts 'harmony team to join the staff of WLW. "Peanuts" won't tell what her name was before Salt adopted her as his partner. 11:00 — Glenn Sisters, Ramona. 11:30— WLW Stars. 1 1 :43 — River ; Time- Noon — Crosley Singers. P. M.— 12:15 — Bulova Time. It) — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 49— Livestock Health Talks. :50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00 — Farm and Home Period. ;30 — Seger Ellis, Songs. -Market Reports. -Weems' Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 2:15 — Village Rhymester. 2:30 — Chicago Serenade (NBC). 3 :00— Weather. 3:01 — Henry Thies' Orchestra. 3;45— World Book Man. 4 :00 — Organ, Instrumentalist. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4 :40 — Jane Froman, Don Becker. 5:00— Tea Time Trio. :30— Old Man Sunshine. 5:44 — Bulova Time. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 0:00— Amos W Andy (NBC.) 0:15— WLW Highlights. ii :25 — Baseball Scores. 0:30— Phil Cook (NBC). (1:45— "Believe It Or Not," Ripley. 7 :00 — Crosley Singers, 7:15 — Ruskin Dance Orchestra. 7 :30— R. F. D. Hour. 8:00— The Buddy Bovs (to WGBS, KQV and WJJD). 8:30— Camel Pleasure Hour (NBC). 9:30— Canova Coffee Hour. 10:00— Busse Orchestra, Castle Farm. 10:30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 11:00— Estate Weather Man. II :02— Strings, Organ, Poems. 1 1 :30— Crosley Theater. 12:00 — Gibson Orchestra. A. M.— 12:30 — Weems' Orchestra. Netherland Plaza. 1 ;ft0-l :30— Busse's Orchestra. WKRC (545M— 550K) 1000W A. M.— 0:45 — God's Bible School — Sun- rise Worship. 7:45 — Rav and Bob (Gruen Time). 8:00— Morning Moods (CBS). 8:30— Three Modern Maids (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9:00— Traxel Galleries. 9:15 — Madam Flor-Enz. 9 :30— Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 10:00— Studio Feature. 10:13— Steinharter's Live Stock Quotations. 10:15— Woman's Hour (Burke). WKRC Heads Chain For Dance Group. Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians will continue to broad- cast from cities outside of New York on at least three of their Robert Burns Panatela programs over the Columbia Broadcasting System during June. June 1 Lombardo and his band will go on the air for WABC, New York, but the other dates are as f ollwos : June 8, from WCAO, Baltimire. June 15, WDBJ, Roanoke. June 22, WKRC, Cincinnati. 10:43— Time and Weather. 10 :45— Classified News Program. 11 :15 — Julia Hayes. 11:45— Columbia Revue (CBS). Noon— Wurlitzer Hour (12:00 Sports Flash). P. M.— 12 :30 — Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram. 1 :00— God's Bible School. 1 :15— Studio Feature. 1 :30— Dr. Alia Rageh— Astrologer. 2:00— Louis A. Noelcke Melotone Program (2:00 Sports Flash) 2:30— Queen City Rug Makers. 2 :45 — Pharis Program. 3 :00— Syncopated Silhouettes(CBS). 3:15 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 3 :30 — Reaume Studio. 3 :45 — Wm. F. Grassmuck — Artists Recital (CBS). 4:00— Asbury Park Casino Orches- tra (CBS) (4:00 Sports Flash). 4:15— Vita-Dry Program (4:00 Kingsbury Announcement). ! :30— A .L. Fink Program. 5:00— Kampf Artists (5:00 Snorts Flash). 5:15 — Meyer Paint Program. 5 :30 — Magic Mattress Man. 5:45— Babes of Radio— Hub Cloth- ing Company. 5 :59— Burke Weather Forecast. 0:00— Kate Smith and Her Swanee Music (CBS) (6:15 Mr. Good). 0:15 — Stocks— Cohle and Tyree. 6:18— Time and Weather (Tittle Guarantee — Coney Island — Lewis Medicine). 0:20— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6:25 — Sports Review. G : 30— Evangeline Adams "Astrol- oger" (CBS). G:45— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). :00— Arthur Pryor's Cremo Mili- tary Band (CBS). :15 — The Barbasol Program(CBSl :30— To Be Announced. :45 — American Beauty Malt Pro- gram. :00— Gold Medal Fast Freight :30— Studio Feature, :45 — Valvoline Dance Orchestra (E. T.). :00 — Vitality Personalities (CBS) :15— Peter Pan Forecasts (CBS) :30— McAleer Polishers (CBS).' :45 — Johnson Sea Horse Orches- tra (E. T.). :00— Allegator Program (E. T.). :15 — Peter Paul Limericks. :20 — Gruen Answer Man (E. T.). :25 — Happy Feet. :30 — Coney Island Dance Or- chesra. :00— Time and Weather (Mr. Good). :03 — Sports Review. :08— St. Moritz OrchL-stra (CBS). :30— Nocturne (CBS). :45 — Blackberry Dudes. :00— Mid. The Barge Dance Or- chestra (12:30 Newt. Ann.) WCKY (202M— 1490K) 5000W A.M.— 6:00 — Kentucky's "Good Morning." 6:30— God's Bible School. 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00 — Morning Dance Program. 9:00— Theronoid Talk. 9:15 — My New Kentucky Home. 9:45 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10 :30— Classic Hour. 11:00 — Musical Novelties. 11:30 — Mountain Melodies. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P.M.— 12 :30— Norris Brock Live Stock Re- port. 12 :35-l :00— Luncheon Concert. 5:45 — Melody Men, Guitars. 5 :55 — Ayers News Flash. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6 :15 — Italian Serenaders. 6 :30— Bill and Bob. 6:45— Little Red Riding Hood. 7 :00— Tommy Ott, Pianist. 7:15— Kentucky Belle, Contralto. 7:30 — Canadian Pacific Crusaders (NBC). 8:00 — Liberty Ragamuffins. 8:15— Steve Bates, Octofonist. 8 :30— Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. 9:00— Molly Moore, Soprano; Ellis Frakes, Basso. 9:30— Wally, Radio Clown. 9:45-10:00— "Skillet Lickers." WSAI (225M— 1330K) 500W A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8 :15— Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45— Records. 9:15 — Organ Program. 9:30— National Home Hour (NBC). 10:00— Records. 10 :15— Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10:45-11— Records. P. M.— 2:00 — Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— E d n a Wallace Hopper (NBC). 3:15 — Records. 4 :00 — Don Becker, ukelele. 4:15 — Minabelle and Jerry. 4:30 — Poems, Harry Holcombe. 4:45 — Records. 5:00— Old Man Sunshine. 5:25— Civil Service Talk. 5:30 — The Gossipers (e. t.). 5:45— Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC). 6 :00— Records. 6:30— Boscul, Madame Frances Alda (NBC). 6:45— Newg in Washington 'NBC). 7:00— Listerine Program (NBC). 7:1.5— Radiotron Varieties (NBC). 7:30— Mobiloil Concert (NBC). 8:00 — Halsey Stuart Program (NBC). 8 ;30— Palmolive Hour (NBC). 9:30— Coca Cola Program (NBC). 10:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 10:30-11:00— Weems Orchestra, Neth- erland Plaza. WFBE (250M— 1200K) 100W A. M.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn. 7:15 — Radio Circus. 7:30— Classified Directory. RADIO DIAL. SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1931. 7:-15 — Radio Circus. 8:00— Shoppers' Hour. 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30 — Bacca Coal and Iron Program. 8:45 — Magnccoil Program. 9:00 Union Mutual Life Program. 10:20- Princess Gomen Program. '.1 :15 — Radio Circus. •I : :ill— Variety. It :4~ — Klceman Program. 10:00— Tid Bits, Corinna C. Curran, 10:05 — League of Independents. 10:35 — Radio Circus. 10:50— Polar Ray Hcallh Talk. 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement. 1 1 :00 — Sherwin-Williams Program. 11:16 — Jake Tennenbaum Program. Jl:30 — Friendly Wall Paper Program. 11:45 — Paul Electric Program. Noon — Doll Time Announcement. P. M.— 12:01— Otto Grau Piano Recital. 12:15 — Radio Circus. 12:30— Fuller, Inc. 1 2 :45 — Bel lonby Melodies. 1 :00 — Zolvo Program. 1 :15 — Matinee. 1 :30— Radio Circus. 1 :45 — Cook Upholstery Program. 2:00— Galvano & Cortez Program. 2:15— "The Home Finder." 2:30— Radio Circus. 2:45 — Reds vs. Chicago. 4 :45 — Radio Circus. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30 — Crown Furniture Program. 5 :45 — Dinner Music. 6:15 — Berning Ford Feature. 6:30 — Milucr Musicals. 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7:30 — Hartman's Sport Review. 7 :38— Calliope Notes. 7:45 — Vaudeville. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15 — Radio Circus. 8:30— Camel Cigars. 8:45— Musical News Reel. 9:00— The Islanders. 9:15— Radio Circus. 9:45 — Shoppers' Hour. 10:00 — Cin'ti Messianic Testimony. 10:30— Radio Circus. 10:45 — Rarl Fuller's Orchestra. II :15— Slumber Music. Thursday, May 28, 1931. WLW (428M— 700K) 50,000W A. M.— 0:00 — International Fiddlers. 6:29— Bulova Time. 6 :30 — Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Program (NBC). 7:59— Bulova Time. 8:00 — Jim and Walt, harmony. 8:15— Organ Program. 8 :30 — Morning Devotions. 8:44— Bulova Time." 8:45 — American Food Talk, 9:00— Rav Perkins (NBC). 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9:30— Community Health, Dr. Wilz- bach. 10 :00— Horton's Orchestra. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Glenn Sisters; Ramona. 11:00— The Venetian Three. 11:30— Piano, Vocal Solos. 11 :l.j — River; Time. Noon — Seger Ellis, songs. P. M.— 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:45 — American Cvanamid Program. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00 — Farm and Home Period (NBC). 1:30— George. Soap Man (NBC). 1 :45— Market Reports. 1 :50— Wcems Orchestra. Nctlierland Plaza. 2:15— Village Rhymester. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 2 : 45— Edna Wallace H o p p e r (NBC). 3:00— Home Decorations (NBC), 3:15 — Afternoon Revelers. 3:30— U. S. Army Band (NBC). 4:00— Jim and Walt, harmonv. 4:15— Gems of Melodv (NBC). 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4 :40 — Croslev Singers. 5 :00— Seger "Ellis* 5:15 — The Ramblers, orchestra. 5:29— Bulova Time. 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). b:00— Amos V Andv (NBC) S : l5~"I asl >' east J« ,ers (>JBC). S : « £ og TaIk - Dr - Glenn Adams. t l : tr~ £ nien Wa,ch takers (e. t). 6:50— Baseball Scores. S : ^~. Sc * rcr E»is. songs. <:00-WLW Highlight! ^:I5— Rm-Tin-Tin (NBC). <:30— Weems Orchestra. Netherland Plaza. 8:f&-Barbasol Barbers ( c . t.). qIa S!' nn Si ' terf : Ramona. (C.-iO— Phoenix Orchestra (e. L). JESSICA DRAGONETTE Miss Drag'onette is to radio what Mary Pickford is to the movies. The same sweet gen- tleness is an aura around both. Jessica Valentin a (a February 14 baby, you know) made a hit* in Philco's Musical Com- edy Memories. Now she's Cities' Service soloist. N. B. C. took her from the only solo part in The Miracle." She has played musical comedy too. -550K) 8 :45 — Horton Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. 9:00 — Crimelights, mystery play. 9:30— Clara, Lou and Em (NBC). 9:45 — Chesapeake & Ohio Program (WJR). 10:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 10:30— Estate Weather Man. 10:31— Variety. 10:45— Bob Ncwhall, Sport Slices. 10:58— Estate Weather Man. 11 :00 — Old Masters Chime Reveries. Midnight — Village Rhvmester. A. M.— 12:15— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:30 — Busse Orchestra, Castle Farm. 1 :00-l :30— Weems Orchestra. WKRC (545M- a. m- ioow 6:48— God's Bible School — Sun- rise Worship. 7:45— Ray and Bob (Gruen Time). 8:00— Madam Flor-Enz. 8:15 — Traxel Galleries. 8 :30 — Columbia Mixed Quartet (CBS). 8:45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 9:00— Queen City Rug Makers. 0:15 — Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 0:45— Barbara Gould Beauty Talk (CBS). 10:00— Steinliarter's Live Stock Quotations. 10:02— Classified News Program. 10:30— Uneeda Bakers (CBBS). 10 :45— Woman's Hour (Burke). 11 :13 — Time and Weather. ll:15-Dream Home. 11 :30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11:45— Streit Mfg. Program. Noon— Wurlitzer Hour (12 :00 Sports Flash). P. M — 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram. 1 :00— Auto-Rad Program. I :15 — God's Bible School. 1 :30— Dr. Alia Rageh— Astrologer. 2:00— Louis A. Noelcke Mclotone Program (2:00 Sports Flash) 2:30— A. L. Fink — The Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45— A. L. Fink — Rhythm Ram- blers (CBS). 3:00— Julia Hayes. 3:30— Reaume Studio. 3:45— Wm. F. Grassmuck— Rhvthm Kings (CBS). 4:00— Asbury Park Casino Or- chestra (CBS). 4 :15— Vita-Dry Program. 1 :30 — Indiana Merchants Program (4:30 Kingsbury Announce- ment). 4 :45— Studio Feature. 5 :00— Pharis Program (5 :00 Sports Flash). 5 :15 — Meyer Paint Program. 5 :30 — Magic Matlress Man. 5:45— Babes of Radio— Hub Cloth- ing Company. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. :00 — Kate Smith and Her Swanee Music (CBS) (6:15 Mr. Good). 6:15 — Queen City Awning Period. 6 :20 — Eureka Baseball Scores. " ;25— Sports Review. 6:30 — Studio (Title Guarantee — Conev Island). 6:40— Stocks — Cohle and Tyree. 6 :43 — Time and Weather. 6:45— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). :00 — Arthur Prvor's Cremo Mili- tary Band (CBS). :15 — Red Top Malt Program. :30— Kaltenborn Edits the News (CBS). :45 — The Hamilton Watchman (CBS). :U0— The Premier Salad Dressers (CBS). :15 — John Schcrz — Tonnnie and Willie. :30 — Detective Story Program (CBS). :00— The Lutheran Hour (CBS). :30— Fortune Builders (CBS). 45— Peter's Parade (CBS). 00 — Big Yank Workshirts Pro- gram (E. T.). 10 :15 — Peter Paul Limericks. 10 :20— Sports Review. 10:25— Happy Feet. 10:30— Coney Island Dance Or- chestra. 11 :00— Gruen Witching Hour. 11:30— Time and Weather (Mr. Good). 11 :32— Studio Feature. 11:45— Blackberry Dudes. 12:00— Mid. The Barge Dance Or- chestra (12:30 Newt. Ann.). WCKY (202M— 1490K) 5000W A. M — 6 :00 — Kentucky's "Good Morning." 6 :30— God's Bible School. 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8 :00 — Morning Dance Program. 0:15 — My New Kentucky Home. :45 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:30— Northan- Warren (NBC). 10:45 — Classic Hour. 11 :00— Musical Novelties. 1 1 :30 — Mountain Melodies. Noon — Popular Dance Program. P. M.— 12:30— Norris Brock Live Stock- Re- port. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. 12:45-1:00— Rev. Chas. A. Vander- muelen. 5:45— Little Red Riding Hood. 5:55— Amos 'n' Andv (NBC). 6:15— Tastycast Jesters. (NBC). 6 :30 — Alma Bohlkc, Soprano. 6:45 — Tri-State Entertainers. 7:00 — Dixie Spiritual Singers (NBC). 7:15 — Arabelle Chambers, Crooner. 7 :30— Blue-Green Blues. 7 :45 — Hugh Cross. 8 :00— Blackstonc Plantation (NBC). 8:30— Betty Mav, Contralto. 8 :45— Ukulele Travelog. 0:00— Earl Arnold's Orchestra. 0:30-10:00— Lexington Red Peppers. WSAI (225M— 1330K) 500W A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45 — Records. :00— Cercsota Program (NBC). 0:15— Records. :45 — Organ Program. 10:00— Records. 10:15— Household Institute (NBC). 10:30-10:45— OM-Time Fiddlers. P. M — 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :45— Dr. Scholl Reveller (NBC). 2 :00 — Woman's Radio R c v i e w (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 4:00— Mona Motor Organ. 4:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). I : l.i — Records. 5 :00 — Travel Talk. Toseph Ries. 5:15 — Seger Ellis, songs. 5:30 — The Gossiners (e. t. ). 5:45— Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC). 6 :00— Records. 6 :25 — Better Business Bureau Talk. 6:30— Public Health Talk. 6 :45 — Du Pont Speed Blenders (e. t.V 7:00— Fleischmann Hour (NBC). 8:00— Arco Birthdav Party (NBC). 8 :30— Frost's Melodv Moments :00— Luckv Strike Orchestra fNBC). 10:00 — Horton Orchestra. Horseshoe Gardens. 10:30-11:00— Busse Orchestra. Castle Farm. WFBE (250M— 1200K) 100W A. M.— 7 :00 Voices at Dawn. 7:15 — Radio Circii*. 7:30— Classified Directory. 7:45 — Radio Circus. *:0fi— Shonper*' Horn-. 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30— Bacca Coal and Iron Program. B -4-1— Macnecoi! Program. 9 :nn_ Dance Frolic. OTT & OTTEN WCKY'S personality twins — Otten (Mildred) sing's blues with a sob, and Tommy (Ott) plays the piano as few can — His piano playing is of the hottest kind — the boy with the acrobatic fingers — They are popular with theatre-goers. 9:15 — Radio Circus. 9 :30— Organ Recital. 9 :45— Kleenian Furniture Program. 10:00— Tid Bits. Corinna C. Curran. 10:05 — League of Independents. 10:20— Zolvo Program. 10:35— Radio Circus. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement. 11 :00— Sherwin-Williams Program, 11:15 — Jake Tennenbaum Program. U :30— Friendly Wall Paper Program. 11:45 — Paul Electric Pronram. Noon — Doll Time Announcement. P. M.— 12:01— Grau Piano Recital. 12:15— Clean Up and Paint Up. 12 ;30— Fuller Program. 12 :45 — Bellonbv Melodies. 1 :00— Radio Circus. 1:15 — Murphy and Gnebcl Program 1 :'10— Radio Circus. 1:45— Cook UpholMerv. •2:00— Matinee. 2:15 — "The Home Finder. 2:30— Radio Circus. 2:45 — Reds vs. Chicago. 4:45 — Radio Circus. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30 — Crown Furniture Program. 5:45— Race Auto and Radio Supply 0:00 — Dinner Music. 6:15 — Berning Ford Program. 6:30 — Milner Musicafe. 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7:30 — Hartman's Sport Review. 7 :45 — Barker News, 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15 — Radio Circus. 8:30— Camel Cigars. 8:45 — Musical News Reel. 9:00 — Merchants' Review. 9:15 — Radio Circus. 0:45 — Mountain Valley Varieties. I0:nu— Shoppers' Hour. in -30— Fuller's Orchestra. 1 1 :0i>— Radio Circus. 11:15-11:30— Slumber Music. Friday, May 29, 1931. WLW (428M— 700K) A M _ 50.000W :00— International Fiddlers. 0:20— Bulova Time. 6:30— Gvm Classes. 7:45— A. & P Program (NBC). 8:00— Bulova Tim.'. 8:01- — lim and Walt, harmony. 8:15 — Organ. Arthur Chandler. Jr. 8:30 — Morning 1 Devotions. 8:44 — Bulova Time. 8:45 — Miracles of Magnolia (NBC). 9:00— Ray PerWns (NBC). 0:15 — Famous Recines. 9 :30— "Roses." Addie Rcuter. 9:45— Premium Man. 10:00 — Island Serenaders. 10:15 — To be announced. 10:30— Live Stock Reports . 10:40 — Vocal Ensemble. 11:00— Organ, Instrumental soloist. 11:30 — Piano and vocal solos. 1 1 :45 — River : Time. Noon — Tuxedo Fiddlers. P. M — 12:1 5— Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:49— Live Stock Talk. 12:50— Live Stock Report.; l :00— Farm and Home Period (NBC). 1:30— Croslev Artist Bureau. 1 :40— Market Reports. i : 15 Weems Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 2:18— Village Rhymester. 2:30 Chicago Serenade i \ B( I 3 un— Inn ami Wall, harmony. ; L5 Radio '.nil.! (NB( I i 15 Ramona, piano, songs. 1 :S0— Raymond Milthetn, Mill" Brothers. 5:00— Words and Music, :, 29 Bulova Time. ;. 30 i >i,] Man Sunshine, 5:45 Lowell Phomas (NB( I 6:00 Amos 'n Andj iX'BC). 6:15— Bosciil, Madame Aid;. (NB< I C:30— Phil Cook ixr.i. i. 6:45— WLW lliuhlijzht:,. 7:00— Man From Nestlc's (NBC), 7 :80— Hotel Gibson Orchestra, 7:I."> — Sterling Jack, songs, piano. 8:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra, 8:15— Singin' Sam. 8 :30— Hoosicr Editor. .S :45— Armour Program (NBC), 9:00— Croslcy Concert Hum-. 0:30— Clara, Lou and Em (NB< |, 9:45— Mills Brothers, Ramona, 10:00 — Kingtastc Sonneteers. 10 ; :10— Variety. 10:45— Bob Ncwhall. Sport Slices. 10:58— Estate Weather Man. 11 :m>— Russe Orchestra, Castle Farm. 11:15 — Glenn Sisters, Ramona. 11:30— Wcems Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. A. M.— 12:30— Busse Orchestra, Castle Farm. 1 :00-l :30— Weems Orchestra. WKRC (545M— 550K) A M ._ 1000W :45 — God's Bible School ; Sunrise Worship. 7 :45— T raxel Galleries (Gruen Time). 8 :00 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 8:15 — Pharis Program. 8 :30— Sweethearts of the Air (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9:00-OXOL Feature (CBS). 9:15 — Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 9:43 — Steinliarter's Live Slock Quo- tations. 9:45— Don and Betty (CBS). 10:00— Emily Post Camay (CBS). 10:15 — Winifred Carter, Cooking Travelogues (CBS). 10 :30 — Commonsensc for Mothers (CBS). 10 :45 — Ivory Snow, Helen Home (CBS). 11:00— Woman's Hour. 11 :28 — Time and weather. 11 :30 — Classified News Program, 12:00 NOON— Wurlitzer Hour (12:00 Sports Flash). P. M.— 12:30 — Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00— Pabst-ctt Varieties (CBS). 1:15— Art Dry Cleaners. 1 :30 — Madame Flor-enz. 1 :45 — Studio Feature. 2:00— Louis A. Noelcke, Salon Or- chestra (2:00 Sports Flash). 2:30— Queen City Rug Makers. 2:45— God's Bible School. 3:00— Julia Hayes. 3:30— Reaume Studio. 3:45 — Wm. F. Grassmuck Program. 4:00— Light Opera Gems (CRS) ; (4:00 Sports Flash). 4:15 — Vita-Drv Program. 4:30— A. L. Fink Program. 5 :00 — John Scherz-Winegar's Barn Orchestra (CBS); (5:00 Sports Flash). 5:15 — Meyer Paint Program. 5:30 — Magic Mattress Man. 5:45— Babes of Radio, Hub Clothing Company. 5:5!) — Burke Weather Forecast. 0:00 — Kate Smith and Her Swanee Music (CBS); 6:15 Mr. Good). 6:15— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 0:17 — Time and Weather. 6 :18 — Studio (Lewis Medicine, Title Guarantee, Coney Island). 6:20— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6 :25 — Sports Review. 6:30— Red Goose Adventures (CBS). 6:45 — Confessions of a Racketeer (E. T.)- 7:00— Arthur Pryor's Cremo Mili- tary Band (CBS). 7 :15— T he Barbasol Program (CBS). 7:30— The Dutch Masters (CBS). 8:00— True Story Hour (CBS). 9:00— Van Heusen Program (CBS). 9:30— The March of Time (CBS). I —Fletcher Henderson and His Orchestra (CBS). 10:15— Peter Paul Limericks. 10:20— Gruen Answer Man (E. T.). ■ Happy Feet. 10:30— Conev Island Dana OrcheJ tra. RADIO DIAL. SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1931. [1:00— Time and Weather (Mr. Good). 11 :03— Sports Review. 11:08—- Jacques Renard and His Or- chestra (CBS). II -30— Nocturne (CBS I. 1 1 ;.).-,_ Blackberry Dudes. 12:00 MID.— The Barge Dance Or- chestra ( 12:30 Newton An- nouncement). WSAI (225M— 1330K) am.- 500W 6:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 6:15— Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 ;45— Records. 9:00— Organ Program. 9:15 — Records. 0:30— National Home Hour (NBC). 10:00— Hawaiian Sercnaders (NIK ). 10:30— Realities of Romance (NBC). 11 :(I0— Records. 11:30-11:45— Seger Ellis, songs. P. M.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 2:00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3:00— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 3:15— Records. 3:45— Organ Program. 4 :30— Moore Paint Program (NBC). 4 :45 — Records. 5:00— Poems, Harry Holcombc. 5:15 — Don Becker, ukulele. 5:30— The Gossipers (e. t.). 5:45— Black and Gold Orchestra. 0:00— Organ Program. 6:30— Alice Richard. :45 — Records. 7:00— Cities Service Orchestra. 8:00— Cliquot Club (NBC). 8:30— Pond's Afternoon Tea (NBC). 9 :00— K o d a k Week-End Hour (NBC). f) :30— RKO Theater of the Air (NBC). 10:00— Busse Orchestra, Castle Farm. 10:30-11:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. WFBE (250M— 1200K) am- 100W 7:00 — Voices at Dawn. 7:15— Radio Circus. 7:30— Classified Directory. 7 :45 — Radio Circus. 8 :00— Eighth and Walnut Garage. 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30— Bacca Coal and Iron Program. 8:45 — Magnecoil Program. !):00— The Islanders. 9:15 — Radio Circus. 9:30— Light Opera. 9:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00— Tid-Bits, Coriuna C. Curran 10:05 — League of Independents. 10:20 — Princess Garment Program. 10:35 — Radio Circus. s 10:50— Polar Ray Health Taik. 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement. 11 :00 — Sherwin-Williams Program. 11:15 — Jake Tcnnenbaum Program. 11 :30— Friendly Wall Paper Program. 11:45 — Paul Electric Program. Noon — Doll Time Announcement. P. M.— 12:01— Grau Piano Recital. 12:15— Radio Circus. 12:30— Fuller Program. 12:45— Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00 — Zolvo Program. 1 :15— Vaudeville. 1 :30— Radio Circus. 1 :45 — Cook Upholstery Program. 2:00— Afternoon Melodies. 2:15 — "The Home Finder." 2:30— Radio Circus. 3 : n — Crown Furniture Program. 3:15— Union Mutual Life. 3:30— Fuller House Party. 4:00— Organ Recital. 4:15— Reds vs. St. Louis. 5 :45 — Lyric Hour. 6:15 — Berning Ford Program. :30 — Milner Musicale. 7 :00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7:30 — Hartman's Sport Review. 7 : 38— Calliope Notes. 7:45— Novelty Notes. 8:00— Luckcy Boys. 8:15 — Chicago Market Program. 8:30— Camel Cigars. S:45 — Champion Sparkers. H:00 — Evening Chimes. 0:15— Radio Circus. 9:45 — Musical News Reel. 10:00— Shoppers' Hour. 10:15 — Mountain Vallev Varieties. 10:30— Radio Circus. 10:45— Fuller's Orchestra. 11:15-11:30— Slumber Music. Saturday, May 30, 1931. WLW (428M— 700K) a. m- 5000W 6:00— International Fiddlers. 6:29— Bulova Time. 0:30— Gvm Classes. MARIAN HOPPLE Miss Hopple, contralto solo- ist, is one of the staff enter- tainers in the N. B. C. studios New York. She is heard in several programs each week hich are relayed by Greater Cincinnati broadcasting stations. 45— A. & P. Program (NBC). 00 — Bulova Time. 01 — Guitar and songs. 15 — Junior Detectives (NBC). 30 — Morning Devotions. 8:44— Bulova Time. 8 : 1 ■"•—American Food Talk, 9:00— Lance Miniatures (NBC). 9 :30— Memorial Exercises, Vallev Forge (NBC). 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10 :40— Horton's Orchestra. 11 (in — Old-Time Fiddlers. 1 :15 — To be announced. 11:30— Live Stock Reports. 11:45— River; Time. Noun— Governmental Glimpses. P. M.— 12:15 — Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra, 12 :45 — Farm and Home Period (NBC). 1:45— Sisters of the Skillet (NBC) 2:00— Weems Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 2:15— Jim and Walt, harmony. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NEC). 3:00— Glenn Sisters; Ramona. 3:15— Pacific Feature Hour (NBC). 4:00— Merry Men Quartet. 4:30 — Croslev Dealers' Hour. 5:00— Bulova Time. 5 :01— Seckatary Hawkins. 5:30 — Doctors of Melody. 5:45 — Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 6:30— WLW Highlights. 6:50 — Baseball Scores. 6 :55 — Seger Ellis, songs. 7:00— Crosley Theater. 7:30— Fuller Program (NBC). 8:00 — Croslev Saturday Knights. 8:30— Domino Orchestra (NBC). 9 :00 — String Trio, vocalists. 9:30— Clara, Lou and Em (NBC). 9 :45 — Horton Orchestra, Horsesho; Gardens. 10:00— Club Sohio. 10:30— Piano, tenor, guitar. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices, 11:00— Estate Weather Man. 11:02 — King Edward Cigar Band. Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. A. M.— 12:30— Village Rhymester. 12 :45 — The Doodlesockers. 1 :00-l :30— Weems Orchestra. WKRC (545M— 550K) a. m.- 1000W 6 :45 — God's Bible School, Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Ray and Bob (Gruen Time). 8:00 — Madame Flor-enz. 8:15— Morning Moods (CBS). 8 :30 — Home Furniture Company, The Round Towners (CBS). 8:45 — Traxcl Galleries. 9:00 — Classified News Program. 9:30 — Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:00— Studio Feature. 10:12 — Live Stock Quotations. 10:14— Time and Weather (Burke). '0:16 — Woman's Hour. 10:45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 11:00— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11:15— Queen City Rug Makers. 11:30— Julia Hayes. 12:00— NOON — Wurl it zer Hour (12:00 Sports Flash). 12:30 — Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. :00— Studio Feature. :30— God's Bible School. :00— Louis A. Noelckc Melotone Program (2:00 Sports Flash). :30— A. L. Fink Song Recital. :00— God's Bible School. :I5 — Studio Feature. ;30— Reaume Studio. : 45— Win. F. Grassmuck, Spanish Serenade (CBS). ; I10— Pharis Program (4:00 Sports Flash). :I5 — Vita- Dry Program. :-".0— Winegar's Barn Orchestra (CBS). :45— Studio Feature (4:45 Kings- bury Ann.). :00— Kampf Artists (5 :00 Sports Flash). :15 — Meyer Paint Program. :30 — Magic Mattress Man. :45 — Bahes of Radio, Hub Clothing Company. :5!) — Burke Weather Forecast. :00— Rhvthm Ramblers (CBS) ; (6:15 Mr. Good). :15 — Studio. :20 — Eureka Baseball Scores. :25 — Sports Review. : 30— Studio. :55 — Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. :58 — Time and Weather. :00 — Arthur Pryor's Cremo Mili- tary Band (CBS). : 15— Studio. :25 — Happy Feet, :30 — Junior Chamber of Commerce Program. :00— Ben Alley, tenor (CBS). :30 — Your Neighbors. :45 — Studio Feature. :00 — C. A. C. Hank Simmon's Show Boat. :45 — Studio Feature. :00— K. 0. Hawaiians. :15 — Studio Feature. :30 — Coney Island Dance Orchestra. :00 — Time and Weather (Mr. Good). :02 — Sports Review. :08 — Jack Denny and "His Orches- tra (CBS). 11 :30— Nocturne (CBS), 11:45— Blackberry Dudes. 12:00 MID.— The Barge Dance Or- chestra (12:30 Newton An- nouncement). WSAI (225M— 1330K) A, M._ SOOW 8:1)0— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15— Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45 — Records. 0:00— Seger Ellis, songs. 9 :1T — Procter & Gamble Program (NBC). 10:13— Household Institute (NBC). 10:30— Keys to Happiness (NBC). 11:00— Records. 11:30— Live Stock Reports. 11:45-12:00— Piano Solos. P. M — 3:00— Classic Gems (NBC). 4:00— Records. 5 :00 — Crosley Artist Bureau. 5:30 — The Gossipers (e. t.). 5 :45 — Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC). 6 :00— Records. 6:30— Club Valspar, Ted Lewis (NBC). 7:00— Webster Program. 7:15— Radiotron Varieties (NBC). 7 :30— The Silver Flute (NBC). 8:00— General Electric Hour (NBC). 8:30— Over the Heather (NBC). 9 :00— Lucky Strike Orchestra (NBC). 10:00 — Busse Orchestra, Castle Farm. 10:30-11:00— Horton Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. WFBE (250M— 1200K) A. m- 100W 00 — Voices at Dawn. 15 — Radio Circus. 7 :30— Classified Directory. 7 :45 — Radio Circus. 00 — Shoppers' Hour. 15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. -Bacca Coal and Iron Program. 8:45 — Magnecoil Program. 9:00 — Dance Melodies. 9:15 — Radio Circus. 9 :30— Serenade. 9:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00— Brevities. 10:05 — League of Independents. 10:20— "The Home Finder." 10:35— Radio Circus. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:59— Simper Time Announcement. 11 :00— Sherwin-Williams Program. 11:15 — Tennenbaum Program. 11:30— Friendly Wall Paper Program. 11:45— Paul Electric Program. Noon — Doll Time Announcement. P. M.— 12:01— Otto Grau Piano Recital. 12:15 — Radio Circus. 12:30— Fuller Program. 12:45 — Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00 — Zolvo Program. 1:15 — Murphy & Goebel Program. 1 :30— Radio Circus. 1 :45 — Cook Upholstery Program, 2:00— Vaudeville. 2:15— Memorial Day Program. 2:45 — Fuller House Party. 3:15 — Union Mutual Life Program. 3 :30— Victor Herbert's Melodies. 3:45 — Catholic Telegraph. 4:00— Dance Frolic. 4:30— Radio Circus. 4:45— Organ Recital. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30 — Crown Furniture Program. 5:45 — Race Auto & Radio Program. 6:00 — Dinner Music. 6:15 — Berning Ford Feature. 6:30— Milner Musicale. 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7 :30 — Hartman's Sport Review. 7 :45 — Barkern News. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15 — Radio Circus. 8 :30 — Camel Cigars. 8:45 — Dance Frolic. 9:00 — Shoppers' Hour. 9:15 — Radio Circus. 9:45 — Musical News Reel. 10:15 — Mountain Vallev Varieties. 10:30— Musical News Reel. SPECIAL OFFER RADIO DIAL 5 weeks for lUC DADIO DIAL — the official weekly publica- tion of all radio programs. New programs — guest artists — friendly familiarities about your radio favorites. The Radio Dial will be bigger and better every week. Send in your subscription TODAY! Delivered to your home Mail this Coupon — enclose 10c RADIO DIAL 22 E. 12th Street Cincinnati, Ohio Gentlemen: Send RADIO D1A1 5 weeks for 10c. Enclosed find .... 10c in cash. . . . . 1 Oc in stamps. Name Address City State ©C1B 117205 - M -3 1331 WEEKLY; Volume I, No. 2 Thursday, May 28, 1931 Price 5c Local Radio Stations Have Brilliant Array of Stars In This Week's Features Annette Hanshaw, pretty soloist on the Van Heusen program (WKRC ana* Columbia, Friday at 9 p. m.) is one of radio's most popular artists both on and off the air. She comes from a promi- nent New York family. When she isn't broadcasting. Miss Han- shaw is busy running about to appear as soloist at Manhattan social affairs. Everett Marshall Is Atwater Kent Soloist Sunday Everett Marshall, baritone of the Metropolitan Opera Com- pany, will be soloist in the At- water Kent program through WSAT on Sunday night (May 31) at 8:15. The program follows: The Wedding of the Rose Jessel Orchestra Yours is My Heart Alone, from "The Land of Smiles" I.char El Guilarrico (The Guitar) Soriano Danny Denver Damrosch Mr. Marshall Paraphrase on "1 Might lie Your Once- m-a-While," from "Angel Face" Herbert Orchestra The Hills of Home Fox Screnatn Toselli Song of the Vagabonds, from "Tile Vaga- bond King" Friml Mr. Marshall Gibson Organizes Own Orchestra Instead of bringing "big name" bands to the Hotel Gib- son this summer, C. C. Schifreler. managing director, has organized the Greater Hotel Gibson orches- tra to play in the Roof Garden, to broadcast through station WLW and WSAI, and to make occasional good will tours for the hotel. Engineers Engineers of the iron and steel industries will be saluted during the Westinghouse program, via NBC and WCKY, Sunday at 8 :45 p. m. F. O. Schnure, President of the Association of Iron and Steel Electrical Engi- neers, will be the guest speaker. The orchestra is directed by Zoel Parent eau. Kenneth Roberts, new CBS announcer, is heard locally through station WKRC on net- work programs. He left the stage in favor of radio broad- casting. Camels Are Coming The Camel Pleasure Hour has gone off the NBC net- work and WLW. May 27 was the last program. As noted in Radio Dial last week, WKRC now has the Camel Quarter-Hour every day. except Sunday, at 6 :45 p. m., with Antony Wons (Scrap Book Man of WLS, WLW, CBS), Morton Downey (Columbia's croon- ing sensation), and Jacques Renard and his Orchestra. Like Pulling Teeth Graham McNamee thinks there will be women announcers when the profession of radio announc- ing is as firmly established as dentistry. Ruth Etting of "Simple Simon", "Whoopee" is WKRC Guest Artist RUTH ETTING, who not long ago drew more than $3,000 for her week at the RKO Albee, wi" broadcast from station WKRC at 9 o'clock Wednesday night (June 3) in the Vitality Personalities program, a weekly CBS feature. She will sing "Faithfully Yours" and "I'm Crazy 'Bout My Baby." Assisting her will be Freddie Rich and his orchestra, the Roundtowners Quartet, and Ted Husing in the role of master of ceremonies. Miss Etting has reached star- dom in four fields of entertain- (Continued on page 3) Best of Week's Radio Features Are Selected for You Here Amos 'n' Andy — WCKY and WLW daily except Sunday, at ti o'clock. Camel Quarter-Hour — WKRC and CBS, every day except Sunday, at 6:45 p.m.. starting June 1 (Monday). "Mass in B Flat," by Merca- dante— Cathedral Hour, WKRC and CBS, Sunday afternoon (May 31) at :i o'clock. Detroit Symphony Orchestra — Graham-Paige program, WKRC and CBS, Sunday night (May 31) at 8:30. Rosa Ponselle, prima donna — WKRC from London at 2 o clock Monday afternoon (June 1). Roxy Symphony Orchestra — WLW and NBC, Monday night (June 1) from 0:50 to 7:30. Joe Weber and Lew Fields — Webster program, WSAI and NBC, Monday night (June 1) at 7:15. Adventures of Sherlock Holmes —WSAI and NBC, Monday night (June 1) at 9 o'clock. Cincinnati Reds vs. Philadelphia — WFBE, Tuesday (June 2). Thurs- day (June 4) at 2:45 p.m. Philco Symphony Orchestra — WKRC and CBS, Tuesday night (June 2) at 8:30. Ruth Etting, Stage and Screen Star— Vitality Personalities, WKRC and CBS, Wednesday night (June 3) at 9:00 o'clock. Ray Perkins, Comedian — Libby program, WLW and NBC, Thurs- day and Friday mornings (June 4 and 5) at 9 o'clock. Clara, Lou and Em— WLW and NBC. at 9:30 p.m. on Thursday, Friday and Saturday (June 4, 5 and 6). Chic Farmer, Yodeler — Nestle program, WLW, Friday night (June' 5) at 7 o'clock. Rosa Ponselle, American-born prima donna, will sing through WKRC Monday afternoon (June 1) at 2 o'clock, in the Columbia Broadcasting System's trans-At- lantic broadcast from the stage of the Royal Opera House in London. She will sing the part of Leonora in Verdi's opera, "La Forza del Destino." The part is considered one of her greatest roles. She sang it op- posite Caruso in her operatic de- but in 1916. Salt and Peanuts Play RKO Albee Week of June 6 Salt and Peanuts (WLW) will play the RKO Albee in Cincin- nati the week of June G. They have been making a hit in per- sonal appearances with their comedy and singing act in the- aters in Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia. Complete Radio Programs Begin on Page 4 RADIO DIAL, THURSDAY, MAY 28. 1931. Weekly RADIO DIAL Published every Thursday by the Radio Dial Publishing Co., 22 East 12th St., Cincinnati, Ohio. Contents copyrighted. Guy Lombardo is Scheduled For Busy Week in Cincinnati VOL. I MAY 28. 1931 NO. 2 Hilo Serenaders Are Texas Boys When Robert Hodge and Ray Jones boarded a steamer for a cruise to Hawaii little did these Texas youths dream that they would become I lie Milo Serenaders and tour the country for three y ears. Neither youth knew the other. Then they learned that each played Hawaiian guitars. So well did they master the haunting melodies of Hawaii that they have become popular with the radio audience over Wi'KY every Saturday at 9:45 p. in., and also in their theatrical appearances. St. Martin's Choir to Sing Monday atWLW St. -Martin's Church opera chorus will sing the concertized version of (iounod's "Faust" in the (ireat Composers' program at station WLW at 10 o'clock Monday night (June 1). Directed by Joseph Febring, the 30-voiced choir of the West- wood church has been studying the number for some three years. William C. Stoess will conduct the orchestra which will accom- pany the singers. It will open the half hour with the overture tn Rossini's "Cinderella," and will conclude it with Verdi's "Aida." French Opera Star Sings Tuesday With Los Amigo Musical Review Star and Pianist Have Daily Spot Lottie Gee, lately star of "Shuffle Along," negro musical review, is singing at station WFRE every night at 8:15 and on Sunday morning at 10 :15. Her accompanist is Murdock Williams, a piano star in bis own right. For some in o n t h s he played at WLW as "The Song and Piano Man From Dixie." He also has entertained crowds downtown theater lobbies. Their programs arc listed as Kentucky Healing Springs Mineral Water Program. Music lovers listening to WLW Tuesday night (June 2) will hear Mile. Alys Michot, in- ternationally famed French so- prano, in a group of classical solos during the Los Amigos hour at 1 1 o'clock. "Mirami Asi" (Spanish), by Fuentes, and "Chanson Flori- an" (French), by Godard, will be Mile. Michot's solos. Mile. M ichot was born in Paris where her father, M. Alex- ander Michot, was a noted opera singer. She received her musical and dramatic education in Paris under various masters and her marked talents were early devel- oped. At the age of 13 years she played the organ in the Ba- silique du Sacre Coeur and when IS years of age she sang with the Opera Comique where her talents soon won for her leading so- prano roles. Mile. Michot's car- eer includes appearances before the King and Q ueen 0l Belgium as well as leading roles with the Chicago Opera company. Big Yank Contest Winners Will Be Chosen Thursday The Big Yank radio vaudeville circuit brings a special program of in u s i c a 1 entertainment to WKRC listeners Thursday nighl (June 4) at 7:1-V Big Yank, cowboy announcer, will tell all about the winners in the contest be announced several weeks ago. Armstrong Quakers Armstrong Quakers (NBC) are back on WLW at 9 p. m. Friday for eight weeks, starting this week ( May 29 ) . Crosley Concert goes back to 10:30 Si day night to make room. After June 14 the concert will be heard from 10:15 to 11 o'clock. "Clara" is Only Wife in Girls' Trio "Clara" is the only married member of the "Clara, Lu and Em" trio heard over WLW" and an NBC network every Thurs- dav. Fridav and Saturday, at 0:30 p. m. Bob Bishow Glows at Radio Dial's Newsstand Sale Boh Bishow, genial proprie- tor of the Fountain News and Book Shop at 426 Walnut Street says the Radio Dial is the greatest improvement that has been put before radio fans since the inception of daily programs. Since Radio Dial made its appearance last week. Bob has sold out several times. His many friends are congratulating him upon hav- ing recommended Radio Dial to them. Cincinnati will entertain one of the country's most popular or- chestra leaders when Guy Lom- bardo comes to town the week of June 20. Cincinnati also will be enter- tained most generously by Lom- bardo and his Royal Canadians. Here's what the famous or- chestra is tentatively scheduled to do in one busy week: Headline the vaudeville bill at the Albee theatre ; broadcast the Robert Burns Panatela program over station WKRC at fl p. m. Mon- day. June 22. for relay over the Columbia Broadcasting System ; broadcast daily from the Nether- land Plaza over WLW and pos- sible WSAT. Lombardo has been engaged to bring his Roval Canadians to the Netherland Plaza TTune 20 to play daily in that hotel's Restau- rant Continentale and Pavtllion Caprice. His daily broadcast over WLW will be picked up from the hotel. Probably no other orchestra has exerted so definite an influ- ence on th° public preference in dance music as this famous ae- gregation. Lombardo is largely responsible for. the present taste for muffled brasses and slow, crooning rhythm, as compared to the blatant syncopation of a few vears ago. Since the Royal Canadians made their debut 11 vears ago in London, Ont.. with voune Guy playing the violin, his broth- er Carmen, now famed as the composer of such song hits as "Coquette", "Sweethearts on Parade", and "Last Night T Dreamed Vou Kissed me", play- the flute and Fritz KreitzeF at the piano. Another brother, Lebert. was enlisted, and mu- sicians were gradually added un- til the orchestra numbered 11 in all. Of this number, nine mem- bers of the present orchestra be- long to the original Royal Cana- dians, including Carmen, who does most of the arranging for the orchestra, as well as the play- ing". Lombardo's initial broadcast was in Cleveland, where the or- chestra first gained wide nrom- inence. and where thev nlayed for three years. Then followed a lengthy Chicago eneaeement, a vaudeville tour of the United States, and a return trip to Can- ada. Present headquarters nf the Royal Canadians is the Hotel Roosevelt in New York City. Thev broadcast daily from the hotel's Grill when in New York, and have played for several of the leading sponsored chain pro- grams. Guy Lombardo, who will bring his Royal Canadians to Cincin- nati the week of June 20th, to play at Netherland Plaza, RKO Albee, and to broadcast from loral radio stations. WCKY Starts New Scrap Book Time Station WCKY now has a scrap book. A period called "Fascinating Philosophy" to be read by Bob White every week-day morning at N o'clock and at 9:15 on Tuesday night has been announced by Jerry Alers, manager of the station. The scrap book will appeal to listeners of all ages, Alers says. Philco Symphony Play Through WKRC Tuesday "Parsifal" selections, the over- ture to Borodin's "Prince Igor," and the overture to Smetana's "Bartered Bride" will be played by the Philco Symphony Orches- tra under the direction of How- ard Barlow through station WKRC at 8:30 Tuesday night (June 3). Also included will be Bee- thoven's whimsical scherzo from the "F Major Symphony " The movement is an ingeniously con- trived orchestration suggesting the mechanical beat of the metro- nome, just invented at the time Beethoven wrote the symphony. Mobiloil Concert Goes Up In Clouds With its bright lights making Broadway appear as a silver strip dissecting the dark pool of buildings nearly 1,000 feet be- low, the Mobiloil Concert Hour will be broadcast from the S3nd floor of the Empire State Build- ing at 7:30, Wednesday night (June 3), over WSAI and other NBC stations.. The keynote of the program will be the orchestra's rendition of "Manhattan Skyscraper", by Rube Bloom, who is said to have been inspired by the rising tower of the Empire State building. Nathaniel Shilkret will lead the orchestra. From their birdseye post, the artists will try to con- vey to the audience their impres- sions of Broadway far below with Henry M. Neely, "the Old Stager", interpreting the scene. One-Man Show Seger Ellis, who sings popular songs in a baritone voice at WLW, also plays his own piano accompaniments and does his own announcing. Tramo Starr Has Two WKRC Dates Tramp Starr. Hoosier poet, will read his poetry at WKRC on Tuesday afternoon, June 2, at 4:45. and at 4 :3f1 on Thursday afternoon. Tune 4. WLW had Starr on its R. F. D. program for awhile. Mail showed that bis homely philosophy and his re- memherable rhymes are what the radio puhlic wants. "Surprise" Guest Is On Board Gold Medal Freight Carrying another "surprise package" in the form of a guest artist whose identity won't be re- vealed until the first musical stop, the Gold Medal Fast Freight will travel over the Columbia Broad- casting System to WKRC Wednesday, June 3, at 8 p. m. Eddie, the organist, and a male quartet will back up the guest artist. Songs include "Happy Little Tune." "M i n n i e the Moocher," "Faithfully Yours," "Let Me Dream," "Jig Time,' and "Stout Hearted Men." Mystery Drama Radio listeners soon may learn the solution of the mystery drama heing broadcast by the WCKY Players every Monday night at 8:15. Episode five of the series of six broadcasts wil he presented Monday. PHIL COOK Phil Cook, "The Quaker Man, is radio's one-man-show. WLW carries his program every Wednesday and Friday at 6:30 p. m. Most radio fans are familiar with his ''Okay, Colo- nel !" ; those sidelights on the day's news which he presents to a chant beginning, "I See By the Papers . . ."; and the radio- comic-strip built around the characters of "Pop Dingle," his son, "Abner" and the city boy, "Eddie." Frequently listeners find it hard to believe that all the voices heard in these 15- minute acts emanate from ihe one throat of Phil, himself, hut they do. In addition to the facile quality of his voice, the versa- tile commedian is also a com- poser, humorous writer, singer, guitar player, and artist. RADIO DIAL, THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1931. Mass in B Flat Is Cathedral Hour Offering Papa! decrees limiting the length and number of variations permitted in certain parts of the Mass will be observed in the broadcast of Mercadante's "Mass in B Flat" during the Cathedral Hour at VVKRC and the Colum- bia network at 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon (May 31). The complete program fol- lows: Processional : Faith of Our Fatherj Whitehead Cathedral ensemble Mass in B Flol-- Kyrie; Gloria; Credo Meroadante Solo voices, choir, orchestra Al the Offertory — My Home is in the Everlasting Earl Palmer Ave Verum Mozart Choir Ah, who can tell (Seven Last Words) Mcrcadante Earl I'alnur and Crane Caldcr Mass in B Flat— Sanctus; Benediclus; Agnus Rei ; Merc adnnti Solo voices, choir, orchestra Praise Ve the Lord Randeggci Cathedral i mble Reardon, Titus to Play Recital Next Sunday Night Casper Reardon, solo harpist of the Cincinnati Symphony Or- chestra, and Parvin Titus, or- ganist of Christ Church, will play a joint recital at WLW Sunday, May 31, at 6 p. m. Both men are members of the artist faculty of the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music and are being presented by the institu- tion. The Conservatory will have the 6 o'clock period every Sun- day night and will present others of its artist faculty, all of whom are nationally and internationally celebrated musicians. Heretofore the Conservatory has had the period every other Sunday night, alternating with students of the College of Music of Cincinnati. 2V 2 Miles Per Gag! Hink and Dink, end men of the Cotton Queen Minstrels at WLW (Thursday at 10:30 p. m.) are much-travelled radio entertainers. They live at Ox- ford, Ohio, forty miles from Cincinnati and WLW. In the four years they have been broadcasting they figure they have driven about 12,500 miles to and from their radio programs. They say they have used a little more than 5000 jokes on the air in that time. In other words, they have broadcast one joke for every two and a half miles of trav- eling. Old Maestro Ben Bernie, the "old Maestro himself, is master of ceremonies in the Phoenix Hosiery program WLW broadcasts by electrical transcription o n Wednesday nights at 8 :30. Bernie's orches- tra plays and he cracks wise. Perfect Hostess How to be a perfect hostess will be revealed by Mrs. Lutye M. Sohngen, social hostess of the Hotel Gibson, in 13 weekly talks at WLW at !) :15 on Friday mornings, beginning June 5. Mrs. Sohngen created her posi- tion with the Cincinnati hotel with the idea of bringing to s_ cial affairs at the hotel the charm and individuality of a perfect hostess in her own home. Her first three talks are "Outstand ing Points in Personality," 'Making the Home Attractive," and "Hot Weather Luncheon and Dinner Suggestions." Radio Astrologer Fails to Foretell Police Reaction to his Broadcasts; Lands in Court After Week on WKRC Fashion Talk Fashion talk by the editors of Vogue Magazine is relayed via NBC to WCKY every Thursday morning at 10:30. Ruth Etting (Continued from page 1) ment — radio, the stage, phono- graph recordings and talking pic- tures. Ambitious to be a clothes designer (now one of the best- dressed women on the stage), she went to Chicago and enrolled at the Academy of Fine Arts. She ran out of money before she fin- ished her course and turned to the stage for part-time work. Paul Ash, orchestra leader, gave her a chance to sing at the Oriental Theater and she made good there, as did Helen (boop- oop-a-doop) Kane. Night club appearances further paved the way for her jump to the Broad- way stage. She played in two editions of Ziegfeld's "Follies," in "Whoopee" with Eddie Can- tor and in "Simple Simon" with Ed Wynne. Recently she's been on a vaudeville tour, with time out for talking shorts for Para- mount. Incidentally, her records are said to sell more than those of any other blues singer. WFBE Broadcasts Two Red Baseball Games This Week Two baseball games are on WFBE's card of entertain- ment this week. The Parkview station will broadcast the games between the Cincinnati Reds and Phila- delphia direct from Redland Field on Tuesday afternoon (June 2) at 2:45 and on Thursday afternoon (June 3) at the same time. Harry Hartnmn, popular sport announcer, will he at the microphone. Perhaps you didn't know that Earl Fuller, managing director of Station WFBE, is internationally known as the "Daddy of Jazz," having directed the first synco- pated orchestrations on Broad- way. Perhaps you didn't k n o w, either, that Fuller started on the road to musical success such .bright young orchestra leaders as Ted Lewis, Johnny Hamp, Ted and Art Weems, Eddie Peabody, Irving Aaronson, Bennie Selvin, Rudy Wiedoft, and a score of others. His 18-piece dance orchestra, hich WFBE broadcasts twice each night, beginning on Decora- ration Day will be picked up from Fuller's, on Reading Road, where they will play during the summer. Sanderson-Crummit "Isn't It Wonderful," from 'Oh, My Dear" ; "Loving You the Way I Do," and "I'm All Bound 'Round With the Mason Dixon Line" will be vocal duets to be sung by Julia Sanderson and Frank Crummit during the broadcast of the Blackstone Plantation program from NBC to WCKY and WLW Thursday (May 28) at 8 p. m. "DADDY AND ROLLO" "Daddy and Rollo." presenting a typical American business man trying to answer his young son's innumerable questions, are Heard over WKRC and a Columbia chain every Tuesday, Wed- nesday and Thursday, at 6:45 p. m. J. P. MacEvoy. famed author of Show Girl," and creator of the comic-strip, "Dixie Dugan," writes this series of 15-minute sketches, depicting the amusing situations which arise from a boy's persistent interrogations of his father. Nick Dawson and 11-year-old Donald Hughes have ! the title roles. What has become of "Dr." Alia Regeh, 31-year-old astrolo ger of Pittsburgh, who for slightly more than a week fore- cast future events in broadcasts from Station WKRC? His strange "death" has been puzzling the station listeners ever since. Truth of the matter that Regeh was arrested for practicing astrology without a license, after two city detectives appeared at the station to listen to his broadcast while two others made a shorthand record of his talk while listening at a down- town radio receiver. "When I first arrived in Cin- cinnati I submitted my proposi- tion to Maj. E. D. Kirgan, chief of detectives, and Col. William Copeland, chief of police," Regeh said. "Both informed me I need only take out an occupational li- cense, which I did immediately." Arraigned in Police Court, "Dr." Regeh refused to obtain counsel. Because there is no li- cense provided for the practice of astrology, he said he felt certain he could not have broken the law. Judge George E. Tebbs fined him $100 and costs and gave him suspended sentence of three months in jail. Regeh paid the fine and left for New York to resume his broadcasts there "Dr." Regeh (whose real name is Charles Lawrence Nelson) made this statement for readers of Radio Dial: "I have been in this line of work for more than 12 years and much of that time I have been broadcasting. I have written seven books on astrological sub- jects. "The City Prosecutor even ad- mitted to me that he didn't know what the science of astrology or horoscopes are. When I asked them about Evangeline Adams and Lorna Fantin, both of whom broadcast similar material from New York through stations WKRC and WLW, they told me that these people were outside their jurisdiction and that they could do nothing about them. "When I pointed out that a Cincinnati newspaper is giving away printed horoscopes to its readers, I was told that the city officials were not interested in prosecuting. My talks and my books are based on science. I am in no sense a 'mind reader' or anything like it. I am an ordained min ister of the Church of Infinite Science in San Diego, California, a graduate of two colleges and a member of the National Astro- logical Association." GEORGIA BACKUS Russian Tragedy Is Frazier Hunt's Story on June 2 In the wastes of Northern Si- beria, Frazier Hunt, war cor- respondent, witnessed a tragedy in the human life of a Russian peasant that will be the theme of his story in the Chevrolet Chronicle WLW will broadcast by electrical transcription Tues- day, June '2, at 9:30 p. m. Dramatic Director of the Co- lumbia Broadcasting System is the title acquired recently by Miss Georgia Backus. That title is a milestone marking a brief out remarkably interesting career. Born in Columbus, Ohio, Georgia was reared in the tra- dition of the theatre. She was named after an uncle, George Backus, who is still remembered as the original Professor In "Way Down East." Her grand- father had built and managed a famous wax museum, and her mother was a concert singer. At fourteen Georgia's talent gained her a job in a local stock company ; at eighteen she was touring Ohio as manager and leading lady of "Strollers," the Ohio State University dramatic organization. She attended Smith College, as well as Ohio State, deserting both for the stage. While she struggled with small parts in New York pro- ductions, Georgia occupied her spare time writing plays and short stones, but parts with road companies and a hasty decision to take a trip abroad stopped that for a while. Returning to New York from Europe on a freighter, broke, Georgia was offered a radio job through a shipboard acquaintance. Out of sheer desperation, she took the job. Soon Georgia was writing, di- recting and acting radio drama. Her varied experience and ver- satile talents caused her superi- ors to name her director of dra- matics for the Columbia chain. She still acts, writes and directs. Mortons Band Greets the Dawn What is believed to be the first Cincinnati dance band to go on the air at so early an hour as 6:30 a. m. is Murray Horton's Orchestra, now heard over WLW daily, except Sunday, from that hour until 7:45 a. m. Every fifteen minutes during this novel program Robert Burdettc, popular physical education in- structor, broadcasts setting-up i exercises. RADIO DIAL, THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1931. You will find complete radio program Falling Cotton Market Keeps Quartet on Air As long as cotton sells for seven cents a pound in Georgia, and phonograph records are still 75 cents each, the Four Skillet Lickers of WCKY "reckon" they will continue to hroadcast and make records instead of go- ing back to their cotton planting. Since they started to record their old Southern tunes and mountain songs eight years ago, several million of their 300 Co- lumbia records have been sold. Riley Puckett, who plays the guitar and banjo and sings Southern songs with the Skillet Lickers, is blind. Local RKO Acts Off Air Until End of Summer No more RKO vaudeville acts from the Albee in Cincinnati for WLW this summer. Sunday, May 24, was the last date for the 8:45 Sunday night program. Al Lever, Albee manager, says the acts will be available in the fall. RKO New York office says, "No broadcasting in the summer." Marimba Serenaders Three marimbas (overgrown xylophones), a guitar and a bass viol play at WCKY every Fri- day night at 6:15 as Eilerman's Marimba Serenaders. Eilerman's Songstress, on the same hal f hour, is a former musical corn- ed v star. FRIDAY May 29 WCKY(202m.-1490kc.) A. M.— li:00— Kentucky Good Morning. 6 :30— God's Bible School. 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Early Morning Dance. !> : 00— Thcrenoid. 0:15— My New Kentucky Home, Jetta Crane. !) 15- Josephine Gibson's Food Talks (NBC). 10:00— Dance Melodies. 10:30— Classir Hour. 1 1 :00— Musical Novelties. 1 1 :30— Mountain Melodies. Noon— Popular Danrr Times. P. M,- 13:80 — Live Stock Reports. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. I :00— Sign off. .i:45— Red Riding Hood. 3:55— Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— Eilerman's Marimba Senenad- :45— Bill and Bob. :00— Hugh Cross. :15— Herbert DeFord. tenor :H0— Earl Arnold's Orchestra. Lookout House. :00— Interwoyen Pair (NBC). : -10— Francis Rebnear, Mildred Myers. :45— Wally. the Radio Clown. : 00— Armstrong Quakers (NBC). :30 — Benson's Band. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. At.— 7:00 — Voices at Dawn. 7:15 — Radio Circus. 7:30— Classified Directory. 7:45 — Radio Circus. Friday, May 29 8:00— Highlit and Walnut Garage. 8:15 — Mountain Vallcv Greetings. 8:30 — Bacca Coal and Iron Program 8 :45 — Magnecoil Program. 9:00— The Islanders. 0:15 — Radio Circus. ,0:30— Light Opera. 0:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00— Tid-Bits. Cormna C. Curran 10 :05 — League of Independents. 10 :20 — Princess Garment Program. 10:35 — Radio Circus. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Taik. 10:50 — Simper Time Announcement. 11 :00 — Sherwin-Williams Program. 11:15 — Jake Tennenbaum Program. II :30 — Friendly Wall Paper Program, 1 1 :45 — Paul Electric Program. Noon— Otto Grau Piano Recital. P.M.— 12:15— Radio Circus. 12:30 — Fuller Program. 12:45— Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00 — Zolvo Program. 1 :15 — Vaudeville. 1 :30— Radio Circus. 1 :45 — Cook Upholstery Program. 2:00 — Afternoon Melodies. 2:15 — "The Home Finder." 2:30— Radio Circus. 3:00 — Crown Furniture Program. 3:15 — Union Mutual Life. 3:30— Fuller House Partv. 4:00— Organ Recital. 4:15 — Reds vs. St. Louis. 5:45 — Lyric Hour. 6:15 — Berning Ford Progranl. G:30— Milner Musicale. 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7:30 — Hartman's Sport Review. 7 :38— Calliope Notes. 7:45— Novelty Notes. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15 — Chicago Market Program. 8:30— Camel Cigars. 8:45 — Champion Sparkers. 9:00 — Evening Chimes. 9:15 — Radio Circus. 9:45 — Musical News Reel. 10:00— Shoppers' Hour. 10:15 — Mountain Vallev Varieties. 10:30— Radio Circus. 10:45 — Fuller's Orchestra. 11 :15-11 :30— Slumber Music. -550 kc. WKRG (545 m.- A. M.— 6 :45 — God's Bible School ; Sunrise Worship. 7 :45 — T r a x e 1 Galleries (Gruen Time). 00 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. -Pharis Program. 8:30— Sweethearts of the Air (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS) 9:00-OXOL Feature (CBS). :15— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. :43— Steinharte tations. 0:45— Don and Bcttv (CBS). 10:00— Emilv Post Camay (CBS). 10:15— Winifred Carter, Cooking Travelogues (CBS). 10:30 — Com moil sense for Mothers (CBS). 10:4r — Ivorv Snow, Hcler Home (CBS). 11:00— Woman's Hour. 11 :2R — Time and weather. 11:30 — Classified News Program. Noon— Wiirlitzer Hour. Live Stock Quo- P.M.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS). 1:15 — Art Dry Cleaners. 1 :30 — Madame Flor-en*. 1 :45 — Studio Feature. 2:00— Louis A. Noelcke. Salon Or- chestra (2:00 Sports Flash). 2:30— Queen City Rug Makers. 2:45— God's Bible School. 3:00— Tulia Hayes. 3 :30 — Reaume Studio. 3:45 — Wm. F. Grassmuck Program. 4:00— Light Opera Gems (CBS): (4:00 Sports Flash). 4:15— Vita-Dry Program. 4:30— A. L. Fink Program. 5 :00 — lohn Scherz-Winegar's Barn Orchestra (CBS); (5:00 Sports Flash). 5:15 — Meyer Paint Program. 5:30— Magic Mattress Man. 5:45— Babes of Radio, Hub Clothing Company. WEBER AND FIELDS Most famed of all "Dutch." comics, Joe Weber and Lew Fields now appear as featured entertainers of tke Webster hour, heard over WSAI and an NBC network, every Saturday, at 7 p. m. Friday, May 29 5:59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6 :00— Kate Smith and Her Swanee Music (CBS): 6:15 Mr. Good). 6:15— Stocks, Coble & Tyree. G :17 — Time and Weather. fi:I8 — Studio (Lewis Medicine. Title Guarantee, Conev Island). 6:20 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 6 :25 — Sports Review. 6:30— Red Goose Adventures (CBS). 6:45 — Confessions of a Racketeer (E. T.). 7:00— Arthur Prvor's Cremo Mili- tary Band (CBS). 7 : 15— T he Barbasol Program (CBS). 7:30— The Dutch Masters (CBS). 8:00— True Storv Hour (CBS). 9:00— Van Heuscn Procram (CBS) 9:30— The March of Time (CBS). 16:00 — Fletcher Henderson and His Orchestra (CBS). 10:15— Peter Paul Limericks. 10:20— Gruen Answer Man (F. T.). 10:25— Harmv Feet. 1(1:30— Concv Island Danrr Orches- tra. 11:66— Time and Weather (Mr. Good). 11:03— Snorts Review. 11 ;08— Jacques Renard and His Or- chestra (CRS). 11 :36— Nocturne (CBS). 11 :45— Blackberry Dudes. Midnight— The Barge Dance Or- chestra. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— :00— International Fiddlers 6:28— Bulova Time. 6 :30 — Gvm Classes. 7:45— A. SI- P Program (NBO. 8:00— Bulova Time. 8:01 — Tim and Walt, harmonv. 8:1-1 — Organ. Arthur dandier. Jr. 8 :30 — Morning- Devotions. 8 :4-l — Bulova Time. 8 :45— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC) 0:00— Rav Perl-ins (NBC). 0:15 — Famous Reeioes. 0:30— "Roses." Addir Renter. : 1.1 — Premium Man. Friday. May 29 10:00— Island Serenaders. 10:30— Live Stock Reports . 10:40— Vocal Ensemble. 1 1 :00 — Organ, Instrumental soloist. 11.-1S— Swift Program (NBO. 1 1 :30 — Piano and vocal solos. 11 :45— River; Time. Noon— Tuxedo Fiddlers. P. M.— 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:40— Live Stock Talk. 12:50— Live Stock Renorts. 1 :00 — Farm and Home Period (NBC). 1 :30— Salt and Peanuts. 1 :40— Market Reports. 1 :45 — Weems Orchestra. Netherland Plaza. 2:15 — Village Rbvmester. 2:30— Chicago Serenade tNBC). 3 :00 — Tim and Walt, harmonv. 3:15— Radio Guild (NBC).' 4:15 — Ramona. piano, songs. t :30— Raymond Mitchem. Mills Brothers. 5:00 — Words and Music. 5:29— Bulova Time. 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 5:4.5— Lowell Thomas (NBO. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andv (NBC). 6:15— Boscul. Madame Alda (NBC). 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC). 6:45— WLW Highlights. 7:00— Man From Nestle's (NBO. 7:35— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 7:45 — Sterling Tack, songs, piano. 8:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 8:15 — Singin' Sam. 8:30— Hoosier Editor. 8:45— Armour Program (NBO. 0:00— Armstrong Qua'-ers (NBO 0:30— Clara. Lou and Em (NBO. 0:45— Glenn Sisters, Ramona. 10:00 — Kinetaste Sonneteers 10:30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall. Sport Slices 10:58— Estate Weather Man. 11:00— Weems Orchestra. Netherland Plaza. 11:15 — Glenn Sisters. Ramona. 11:30— Busse Orchestra. Castle Farm. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra A. M.— | 12:30— Otto Grav's Cnwbor Rand. 1 :00-l :30— Weems Orchestra. Friday, May 29 WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A.M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15 — Campbell So 11 p Orchestra (NBC). 8 : 4 5— Records. 9:00 — Organ Program. 9 :15— Records. 9 :30— National Home Hour (NBC). 10:00— Hawaiian Serenaders (NBC). 10 :30— Realities of Romance (NBC), 11:00— Records. 11:30-11:45— Scger Ellis, songs. P.M.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 2:00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). :00 — E d n a Wallace Hopper (NBC). :15— Records. :45— Organ Program. :30 — Moore Paint Program (NBC). :45 — Records. :00 — Poems, Harry Holcombe. :15 — Don Becker, ukulele. :30 — The Gossipers (e. t.). :45 — Black and Gold Orchestra. :00 — Organ Program. :30— Alice Richard. :45 — Records. :00— Cities Service Orchestra. :00— Cliquot Club (NBC). 30— Pond's Afternoon Tea (NBC). :00— Kodak Week-End Hour (NBC). 30— RKO Theater of the Air (NBC). :00 — Busse Orchestra, Castle Farm. :30-ll:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. SATURDAY May 30 WCKY (202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. AL— 6:00 — Kentucky Good Morning. 6:30— God's Bible School. 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8 :00— Early Morning Dance. 9:15— My New Kentucky Home, Jetta Crane. 45— Kentucky Belle's Kiddie Club. 30— Classic Hour. 00— Musical Novelties. Mountain Melodies. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— 12:30— Live Stock Quotations. 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert. 1 :00— Sign off. 5 :45 — Melody Men. 5:55 — Avers Sport Flash. 0:60— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 6 :30 — Liberty Ragamuffins. 7:00— Hill Billy Kid. 7:15 — Medley Five. 7 :45 — Earl A mold's Orchestra. Lookout House. 8:15— Al Miller and his Fiddlers. 8:45— Little Red Riding Hood. 0:00— Cuckoo Club (NBC). 9:30 — Hugh Cross, mountain ballads. 0:45 — Hilo Serenaders. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A.M.— 7 :00— Voices at Dawn. 7:15 — Radio Circus. 7 :30 — Classified Directory. 7:15 — Radio Circus. 8:00 — Shoppers' Hour. 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30 — Bacca Coal and Iron Program. 8:45 — Magnecoil Program. 0:00— Dance Melodies. 0:1.5— Radio Circus. 0:30— Serenade. 9 :45 — Kleeman Furniture Program- J0 :00— Brevities. iO:(i.")— League of Independents. 10:20— "The Home Finder." 10:35— Radio Circus. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement. 11 :00 — Sherwin-Williams Program. II :I5 — Tennenbaum Program. 11 :30— Friendly Wall Paper Program. 1 1 : 15 — Paul Electric Program. Noon— Grau Piano Recital. RADIO DIAL, THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1931. of all local stations here each week P.M.- Saturday. May 30 :I5 — Radio Circus. :30— Fuller Program. :45 — Bellonby Melodies. :00 — Zolvo Program. :15 — Murphy & Goehel Program. :30— Radio Circus. :45 — Cook Upholsterv Program. :00— Vaudeville. :15 — Memorial Day Program. :4B — Fuller House Party. :I5 — Union Mutual Life Prog ran :30— Victor Herbert's Melodies. :45 — Catholic Telegraph. :00— Dance Frolic. :30 — Radio Circus. :45 — OrgaTi Recital. :00— Lyric Hour. :30 — Crown Furniture Program. :45— Race Auto & Radio Progran :00— Dinner Music. :1B — Beruing Ford Feature, :30 — Milucr Musicale. :00 — Earl Fuller's Orchestra. :30 — Hartman's Sport Review. ;45 — Barkcrn News. :00 — Luckey Boys. :15 — Radio Circus. :30 — Camel Cigars. :45 — Dance Frolic. :00 — Shoppers' Hour. :15 — Radio Circus. :4i) — Musical News Reel. :15 — Mountain Valley Varieties. :30 — Musical News Reel. WKRG (545 m.— 550 kc.) A.M.— 6 :45 — God's Bible School, Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Ray and Bob (Gruen Time). 8:00 — Madame Flor-enz. 8:15— Morning Moods (CBS). 8 :30 — Home Furniture Company, The Round Towners (CBS). 8:45 — Traxel Galleries. .0:00— Classified News Program. 0:30 — Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:00— Studio Feature. 10:1*2— Live Stock Quotations. 10:14— Time and Weather (Burke). 10:1 6" — Woman's Hour. 10:45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 11:00— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11:15 — Queen City Rug Makers. 11:30— Julia Hayes. Noon— Wurlitzer Hour. 12:30 — Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00 — Studio Feature. 1 :30— God's Bible School. 2:00 — Louis A. Noelcke Melotonc Program (2:00 Sports Flash). 2:30 — A. L. Fink Song Recital. 3:00— God's Bible School. 3:15 — Studio Feature. 3:30 — Rcaume Studio. 3:45 — Wm. F. Grassmuck, Spanish Serenade (CBS). 4:00— Pharis Program (4:00 Sports Flash). 4:15— Vita-Dry Program, f :30— Winegar's Barn Orchestra (CBS). 4:45— Studio Feature (4:45 Kings- bury Ann.). 5:0ft— Kampf Artists (5:00 Sports Flash). 5:15 — Meyer Paint Program. 5:30 — Magic Mattress Man. 5:15— Babes of Radio, Hub Clothing Company. 5:5!'— Burke Weather Forecast. (> :0ft— Rhythm Ramblers (CBS) ; (6:15 Mr. Good). (i:15— Studio. ti:20— Eureka Baseball Scores. t> :25 — Sports Review. 6 :30— Studio. 6:55— Stocks, Cohlc & Tyree. ii:5S — Time and Weather. 7 :00 — Arthur Prvor's Cremo Mili- tary Band (CBS). 7- 15— Studio. " :25 — Happy Feet. 7 :30 — Junior Chamber of Commerce Program. 8:0ft— Ben Allev, tenor (CBS). 8:30— Your Neighbors. 8 :45 — Studio Feature. !i ;00 — C. A. C. Hank Simmon's Show Boat. 9:45 — Studio Feature, lft :00— K. O. Hawaiian*. 10:15 — Studio Feature. 10:30 — Conev Island Dance Orchestra. II :0ft— Time and Weather (Mr. Good). 1 1 :03— Sports Review. AROUND THE SAMOVAR These vocal and instrumental soloists participate in the Russian program known as "Around the Samovar," heard over WKRC and Columbia every Sunday at 10:30 p.m. Left to right they are: Valia Valentmova, contralto; Eli Spivak, baritone; Eliena Kazanova, violinist, and Peter Biljo, director of the balalaika orchestra. Saturday, May 30 11:08 — Jack Denny and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11:30— Nocturne (CBS). 11:45— Blackberry Dudes. Midnight — Barge Dance Orchestra. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6 :00— International Fiddlers. 6 :29— Bulova Time. 6:30 — International Fiddlers. 7 lOO— Organ. 7 :30 — Southern Singers. 7:45— A. & P. Program (NBC). 8:00— Bulova Time. 8 :01 — Guitar and songs. 8:15— Junior Detectives (NBC). 8 :30 — Morning Devotions. 8:44— Bulova Time. 8 :45 — American Food Talk. 9:00— Lance Miniatures (NBC). 9 :30 — Memorial Exercises, Vallev Forge (NBC). 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Horton's Orchestra. 11:00— Old-Time Fiddlers. 11:30— Swift Program (NBC). 1 1 :45— River ; Time. Noon — Governmental Glimpses. P.M.— 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:10— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:45 — Farm and Home Period (NBC). 1:45— Sisters of the Skillet (NRC). 1:30— Salt and Peanuts. 2 :00 — Weems Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 2:15 — Jim and Walt, harmony. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 3:00 — Glenn Sisters: Ramona. 3:15— Pacific Feature Hour (NBC). 4:00 — Merry Men Quartet. 4:30 — Crosley Dealers' Hour. 5:00— Bulova Time. Come to our store For some- thing that is sure to help you set PERFECT RADIO RECEP- TION! This service Absolutely FREE For further announcements Tune in WKRC Every Day, 2 P. M.i Sunday, 5:30 P. M. LOUIS H.N0ELCKE Phone, Wdbn. 7051 955 e. McMillan Saturday, May 30 5 :01 — Seckatarv Hawkins. 5:30— Doctors of Melody. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 0:00— Amos W Andy (NBC). 6:15 — Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 6:30— WLW Highlights. 6 :50 — Baseball Scores. 6 :55 — Seger Ellis, songs. 7:00— Crosley Theater. 7:30— Fuller Program (NBC). 8 :00 — Crosley Saturday Knights. 8:30— Domino Orchestra (NBC). 9:00— String Trio, vocalists. 9:30— Clara. Lou and Em (NBC). 9 :45 — Horton Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. 10:00— Club Sohio. 10 :30 — Piano, tenor, guitar. 10:4,5— Bob Newhall. Sport Slices. 1 1 :00— Estate Weather Man. 11:02 — King Edward Cigar Band. Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:30— Village Rhymester. 12:45 — The Doodlesockers. 1 :00-l :30— Weems Orchestra. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc) A.M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :4o— Records. 9:00 — Seger Ellis, songs. 9:15— Procter ft Gamble Program (NBC). 10:15— Household Institute (NBC). 10:30— Keys to Happiness (NBC). 1 1 :00— Records. II :30— Live Stock Reports. 11:45-12:00— Piano Solos. P. M.— 3:00— Classic Gems (NBC). 4:00— Records. 5 :00 — Crosley Artist Bureau. 5:30 — The Gossipers (e. t). 5:45 — Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC). 6 :00— Records. 6:30— Club Valspar. Ted Lewis (NBC). 7:00— Webster Program. 7:15 — Radiotron Varieties (NBC). 7 :30— The Sliver Flute (NBC). 8 :00 — General Electric Hour (NBC). 8:30— Over the Heather (NBC). 9 :00— Luckv Strike Orchestra (NBC). 10:00 — Busse Orchestra. Castle Farm. 10:30-11:00— Horton Orchestra. Horseshoe Gardens. National Dairy Products has dropped Fatuous Trials in His- tory (WSAI, Sunday, 9:15 p. m.) in favor of a program of orchestra music. SUNDAY May 31 WCKY (202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— (i ;00— Kentucky Good Morning. fi:30— God's Bible School. 7:30— Earlv Morning Dance 8:45— Bob White. 9:00— God's Bible School. 10:00— Nomads (NBC). 10:30— Hugh Cross. 10:45— Hilo Sercnaders. 11:00— Sparklets (NBC). 11:1.1— Hill Billv Kid. 11:30— Little Red Riding Hood. 11 :4.1— Studehaker Champions (c. O Noon— Arabclle Chambers. P. M.— 12:15— Skillet Lickers. 12:45 — Lena Pope, soprano. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45 — Sacred Quartette, 0:00 — Superior Studios, music. 0:1.1— Italian Serenaders. 0:30— Kentucky Belle, contralto. 6:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7:00— Enna Jcttick Melodies (NBC). 7:15 — College of Music, classics. 7 :45— Earl Arnold's Orchestra. Lookout House. 8:15— Bob White. 8 :30— Arabelle Chambers. 8 :45— Westinghouse Salute (NBC). 9:15— Flovd Gibbons (NBC). 9 :30— Little Red Riding Hood. 9 :45 — Crooning Guitarist. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Voices at Dawn. 9:00 — Morning Concert. 9:15 — Radio Circus. 9 :30— Invitation to the Waltz. 9:45 — Watch Tower Program. 10:00— Dry Ridge Springs. *50 FOR YOUR OLD RADIO or PHONOGRAPH! ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS We also feature NORGE and MAJESTIC electric refriger- ators ... at the most reasonable prices in town. A small down payment, and . . . A Whole Year to Pay! To readers of RADIO DIAL, we offer a special allowance of $50 on your old radio or pho- nograph, to apply on the purchase of a new radio or electric refriger- ator! Come in . . . and mention this ad! NINE-TUBE 1931 PHILCO The famous PHILCO bah iced-unit radio . . . with PHILCO tone control. 9 tubes. Razor edgeselectivity. Volume, distance and power without distortion. Easy terms. $2 a week pays for this marvelous 9 -tube set. FRANK'S MUSIC and RADIO SHOP "Cincinnati's Personal Interest Store" 1207 VINE STREET Just Above Twelfth 6 RADIO DIAL, THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1931. Sunday, Mav 31 10:30 — German Program. 10:45 — Berm'ng Ford, 11:00 — League of Independents. 11:15 — The Home Finder. 11:30— Take Time lo Be Beautiful, 11:46 — Mountain Valley Greetings. Noon — Radio Circus. P. M.— :15 — Kleeman Furniture Program. :30 — Galvano & Cortcz. :45 — Fuller House Party. :00 — Every Friday Jewish Hour. 00— Sleepy Notheis. :15 — Mr. Lloyd Hoshaw. ;30 — Sundown Screnader. 45 — Dance Frolic. 00 — Travelogue, Joe Sweeney. 15 — Hawaiian Bluebirds. 30— Peanut Boys. 00 — Cincinnati Trade School. :10— Fuller, Inc. :30 — George Eiche, Jr. :45 — Rev. Chas. Hamilton. :00 — Parkview Symphony Hour. :I5— Mildred Eichler. 1 — Radio Circus. :00— Payne Brothers and Herman Chitison. :15 — Travelogue. Joe Sweeney. :30 — Church Federation Hour. :00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. :30— Harry Hartman's Sport Review. :00— First Baptist Church of New- port. :00— Scotland Yard. :30 — Mountain Valley Varieties. .'•15 — Earl Fuller's Orchestra. :15 — Radio Circus. :M0— Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6:45-10:00— God's Bible School- Sunrise Worship. 10 :00— Watchtower Program (e. t.) 10:15 — Jim Lightficld — Veteran's Civic Hour. Noon— French Trio (CBS). P. M.— 12:15—0.vol Feature (CBS). 12:30 — American Legion Program 1:30— Ballad Hour (CBS). 2:00— Gruen Old-Fashioned Garden. 3 :00— Cathedral Hour. 4:00— Rev. Donald Grey Barnhouse (CBS). 4 :30— Pastorale (CBS). 5 :00 — Louis A. Noelcke Program. 5 :30 — Twilight Reveries. li :00— Dr. Klein's News Reels(CBS). 6:15 — Studio. 6:20— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6:25 — Sports Review. 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS) 6:45— Studio. 7:00— Devils, Drugs and Doctors (CBS). 7:15 — Kate Smith. Swanee Music CBS). 7:30 — Kaltenborn Edits the News (CBS). 7 :45 — Studio. , 8:00— Coty Program (CBS). 8:30— Graham Paige (CBS). :00— Grand Opera Miniature ( CBS ) . 9 :30— Fortune Builders (CBS). 9 :45— Star Reveries (CBS). 10:00— Concv Island Orchestra. 10:30— Around the Samovar (CBS). 1 1 :00— Sports Review. 1 1 :07 — Quiet Harmonies. 11 :30— Nocturne (CBS). Midnight— Barge Dance Orchestra. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 9:00— Church Forum — Rev. Walter A. King. Wyoming Baptist Church. 9 :30— Witherspoon Che us (NBC). 10:00— Bulova Time. 10:05— Organ, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 10 :25— River Reports ; Time. 10:30 — Rochester Concert Orchestra (NBC). 11:30— Troika Bells (NBC). Noon — Metropolitan Echoes. P. M.— 12:30— Little Jack Little (NBC) 12:45— Grand Opera talk. Deems Tay- lor (NBC). 1:30— Yeast Foamers (NBC). 2 :00— Croslev Theater. 2:30— Henry Thies' Orchestra 3:00— William Oilomatics (NBC), 3 :30— Over Jordan (NBC). 3:45— Your Eyes (NBC). 4:00 — Rhymes with Reason. 4 :S0 — Plantation Davs. 5:00— The Roamios. 5:30— Hymn Time, 6:00— WLW Highlights. 6:30 — Conservatory of Music. 6 :55 — Raseball Scores. ADELE VASA— BEN ALLEY Featured as "Sweethearts of the Air," Adele Vasa and Ben Alley are heard at 4:45 p.m., every Tuesday over WKRC and tht Columbia network. Alley is a former Cincinnatian, having begur his radio career in this city. Sunday, May 31 7:00— Enna Jettick Melodies(NEC). 7:15— Collier's Radio Hour. 8:15— Bayuk Stag Party (NBC). 8:45— Ted Weems' Orchestra, Neth- erland Plaza. !):15 — Variety. 9 :30— Kellogg Slumber Music ( NBC) . 10:02 — Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. 10:15 — Heel Hugger Harmonies (NBC). 10 :30— Crosley Concert. 11:00 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. 11 :15 — Village Rhymester. 11:30— Henry Thies Orchestra. Midnight — Ted Weems' Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. WSAI (225 m.- P. M.— -1330 kc.) :30 — "Grand Opera," by Deems Taylor. :00— Sermonette and Hymn Time. :30— Manhattan Guardsmen (NBC). :00— Dr. S. ParkcsCadman(NBC). :00— Pop Concerts (NBC). :00— Catholic Services (NBC). :00— Gold Seal (NBC). :30— RCA Victor (NBC). :00— Chase and Sanborn (NBC). :00 — "Our Government." David Lawrence (NBC). .15— Atwater Kent (NBC). :45— Iodent Big Brother (NBC). :15— National Dairy (NBC). M OND A Y June 1 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.l A. M.— 6:00 — Kentucky Good Morning. 6:30— God's Bible School. 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Bob White. 8:15 — Early Morning Dance. Q : 00— Theronoid. Monday, June 1 9:15— My New Kentucky Home, Jetta Crane. 9 :45 — Dance Records. 10 :30— Classic Hour. 11 :00— Musical Novelties. 11 :30 — Mountain Melodies. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— 12:30- 12:35- 1:00- 5:45- 5:55- 6:00- 6:15- 6:30- 6:45- 7:00- 7:15- 7:30- 8:00- 8:15- 8 :45- 9:00- Norris Brock. Luncheon Concert. Sign off. Hill Billy Kid. ■Ayers Sport Flash. Amos V Andy (NBC). Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). Bill and Bob. Little Red Riding Hood. Hugh Cross. -Kentucky Belle. Christian Glee Club. -Steve Bates. ■The Voodoo Charm. ■Ukelele Travelogue. Stromberg Carlson (NBC). ■U. of C. Quartet. ■Wall v. the Radio Clown. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn. 7 :15 — Radio Circus. 7:30— Classified Directory. 8 :00— Eighth and Walnut Street Garage Program. 8 :15— Mountain Valley Greetings. 8 :30— Bacca Coal and Iron Program. 8 :45— Magnecoil Program. 9:00— Hyde Park Community Pro- gram. 9 :45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00— Tid-Bits, Corinna C. Curran. 10:05 — League of Independents. 10:20 — Princess Garment Program. 10:3.5— Radio Circus. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 11:00— Scherwin Williams Program. 11 :15 — Jake Tennenbaum Furniture Program. 11:30— Friendly Wall Paper Program. Chitison. II :4o — Paul Electric Program. Noon—Otto Grau Piano Recital. P. M.— 12:15— Radio Circus. 12:30— Fuller. Inc. 12:45— Bellonbv Melodies. Monday, June 1 1 :00— Zolvo Program. 1 :15 — Matinee. 1 :30— Radio Circus. 1 : 45— Cook Upholstery Program. 2:00— The Home Finder. 2:15 — Union Mutual Life Insurance Program. 2 :30— Fuller Garden Party. 2 :45 — Memory Lane. 3:15 — Payne Bros, and Herman Chitison. 3 :30— Victor Herbert's Melodies. 4 :00— Organ Recital. 4:15 — National Protective Associa- tion. 4 :30 — Radio Circus. 5 :00— Lyric Hour. 5 :30 — Bell Furniture Program. 5 :45 — Down South. 6 :00 — Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special. 6:15 — Berning Ford. 6 :30 — Milner Musicale. 7 :00 — Xavier University Campus Rambles. 7 :30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7 :45 — Three Peanut Boys. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15 — Dry Ridge Spring Program. 8:30 — Camel Cigars. 8:45 — Radio Circus. 9:00 — Jewish Commercial Hour. 10:00— Shopper's Hour. 10 :15 — Radio Circus. 10 :30 — Mountain Valley Varieties. 10:45 — Radio Circus. 11:00— Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A.M.— 6 :45 — God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship. 7:45 — Ray and Bob. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8:15 — Traxel Galleries. 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9:00 — Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 9:30— Mr. Fixit (CBS). 9 :45 — Classified News Program. 10:13 — Live Stock Quotations. 10:15— The Madison Singers (CBS). 10:30— Uneeda Bakers (CBS). 10:45 — Time and weather. 10:48 — Woman's Hour — Tremlettc Tully. 11 :15 — Homemaker's Talk by Julia Hayes. 11 :4f> — Drink-Mor Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12:30 — Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram. 1:00— A. L. Fink Program. 1 :30— God's Bible School. 2:00 — Melotone Program. 2:30 — Studio Feature. 2:45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 3:00— Pharis Program. 3:15 — -Queen City Rug Makers. 3 :30 — Reaume Studio. 3 :45— Hotel Roosevelt Orchestra (CBS). 4:00— God's Bible School. 4:15— Gvpsv Music Ma'-crs (CBS). 4:30— The Dodge Twins (CBS). 4 :45 — La Gerardine Program (CBS). 5:00— Kampf Artists, 5 :15 — Meyer Paint Prneram. 5 :30 — Manic Mattress Man. 5 :4S — Cin'ti Trade School Musicale fi : 00— Current Events (CBS). 6:15— Stocks; Time: Weather. 6 :20— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6 :25— Sports Review. 6:30 — Evangeli"e Adams. "A^trolo- eer" (CBSL 6:45— Jas. J. Corhett. "Fights" CE. T.) 7:00— Prvor's Cremn Military Band (CBS1. 7 :15— The Barhasol Program (CBS). 30— Your Neighbors 45 — Old Wurzhurc Mall Proeram 00— The Three Bakers (CBSV -An Evening in Paris (CRSl ;00— Roht. Bums Panatella Pro- gram (CBS^. 0-30— ReltEboovcr Rrioht Liehts. n-ir_Sonc Hit of the Week (E. T.) 10:00— p-,,,1 Tremaine Orchestra (CBS). m-tn—P^ter Paul Limrrc'-s. 10:20— Gruen Answer Man (e. t.) 10:?.t— Happv Feet 10:30— Rlarkberrv Dudes. 10 ;45— Ozzie Nelson Orchestra (CBS). 11-00— Time; Weather: Snorts. 11 :08— G-'orfp Olsci a-id his Music CCBS). 11 -30— Nor turn e (fRSV MMni<»ht — Barge Dance Orchestra, Monday, June 1 WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6 :00— International Fiddlers G :29— Bulova Time. 6:30 — Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 8:00— Bradley Kincaid. 8:15— Organ Program. Arthur Chand- ler, Jr. 8 :30 — Morning Devotions. 8:45 — Miracles of Magnolia (NBC). :00 — Housekeeper Chats. 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9 :30 — Musical Journey. 9:48— Winifred S. Carter (NBC) 10 :00— Syncopatcrs (NBC) 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Jim and Walt. 11 :00— Vocal Ensemble. 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45— River Reports: Time Signals Noon— Salt and Peanuts. P. M.— 16:16 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— N a t i o n a 1 Farm and Honte (NBC). 1 :30— Seger Ellis. 1 :40— Market Reports. 1 :45 — Ted Weems' Orchestra, Neth- erland Plaza. 2:15 — Village Rhymester. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 3 :00— Matinee Players. 4:00— Chats with Peggv Winthrop (NBC). 4:15 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4 :40 — Afternoon Revelers. 5:00— Music Treasure Box (NBC). 5:15 — Mormon Tabernacle Chair (NBC). 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 6:00— Amost 'n' Andy (NBC). 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:15— WLW Highlights. 6 :30 — Thermoid Brake Doctors (e. t.) 6 :45 — Baseball Scores. 6:50— Roxv's Gang (NBC). 7:30— Gold Medal Express (NBC). 8 :00— Maytag Orchestra (NBC). 8:30— Real Folks (NBC). 9 :00— Vision-Airs. 9:30— Empire Builders (NBC). 10:00— St. Martin Church. O p.ej-_i Chorus. 10 :30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 11:00— Willys Memory Hour. Midnight — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. 12:30— Ted Weems' Orchestra, Neth- erland Plaza. 1 :00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC).. 8:1.5 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC)". 8 :45— Records. 9 :00— McCormick's Old Time Fid- lers. 9:30— Jean Carroll (NBC). 9 :45 — Jerrv Foy. 10:00— Blue Streaks (NBC). 10:15 — Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10:30— Seger Ellis. 1 1 :00— Sign off. 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— Sign off. P. A1-— 2 :00 — Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 4:00 — Crosley Singers. 4 :30— Records. 4:45 — Sam Wilson, vocal solos. 5 :00— Records. 5 :15 — Cecy Gordon ; Gene Perazzn. 5:30 — The Gossipers (e. t.) 5:45— Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC). 6 :00— Records. 6:15 — "The World Today," James G. McDonald (NBC). 6 :30 — Mrs. Lee Ach. poems. 6 :45 — Vocal Solos. 7:00 — "How's Business?", Merle Thorpe (NBC.) 7:15— Webster Program (NBC). 7:30— A. & P. Orchestra (NBC). 8 :30 — General Motors Program (NBC). 9 :00 — Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (NBC). 9:30— Cheramy Knights (e.t.) 10 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 10:30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. RADIO DIAL, THURSDAY, MAY 28. 1931. TUESDAY June 2 WCKY(202m.— 1490 kc.) 0:00— Kentucky Good Morning. 0:30— Sunrise Worship. 7:30— Cheerio (NBC) 8:00— Bob White. 8:15— Early Morning Dance. ii-ir,_Mj New Kentucky Home, Jetta Crane 9:45— Josephine Gibson's Food Talks (NBC). in —Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). [0 30 -Classic Hour. ] I :»()— Musical Novelties. II :30— Mountain Melodies. P. M.— 12:30— Live Stock Quotations 12:35— Luncheon Concert. I ;00— Sign off. 5:45— Hill Billy Kid. ~t ;f)G — Avers Sport Flash. 0;00— Amos V Andv (NBC). 0:15— Gus Van (NBC). 0:30 — Odas Mattox, guitar. 0:45— Dr. Sertoli's Ramblers (NBC). 7:00— Ott & Otten. pianist, blues. 7:1!) — Tri-State Entertainers. 7:30— Crinoline Girl. Alma Asberalt. 7 :45 — Ham & Lim, comedy. 8:00— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. S:30— Death Valley Days (NBC). 9:00— Happy-Go-I. nek v Girls. 0:15— Bob White. !l:3H— Arabellc Chambers. 9:45— Hugh Cross. « fi n nn n i» HELEN OELHEIM Helen Oelheim, soprano, sings on the Dutch Masters pro- gram, heard over WKRC and Columbia at 7:30 p. m., every Friday. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.~ 7:00 — Voices at Dawn. 7:15 — Radio Circus. 7 :30— Classified Directory. 8 :00 — Shoppers' Hour. 8 : 1 5 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30 — Bacca Coal and Iron Program 8 IS— Magnecoil Program. 9:00 — The Islanders. 0:15— Radio Circus. 9:30— Vaudeville. 9:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00— Tid Bits, Corinna C. Curran. 10:05 — League of Independents. 10 :20— Musical Brevities. 10:35— Radio Circus. 10 :fj0— Polar Ray Health Talk. 11 :00— Sherwin-Williams Program. 11 : 15— Jake Tennenbauni Furniture Program. 11 :S0— Friendly Wall Paper Program. 11:45 — Paul Electric Program. Noon — Otto Grau Piano Recital. P. M.— 12:15— Clean Up and Paint Up. 12:80— Fuller, Inc. 12:45— Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00— Zolvo Program. 1 :15 — Matinee. 1 :30 — Radio Circus. 2:00— Payne Brothers & Herman Chitison. 3:15 — The Home Finder. 2:80— Fuller Garden Parly. 2:45— Reds vs. Philadelphia at Red- land Field. 5:00 — Lyric Hour. 5:30 — Bell Furniture Program. "i:!")— Race Auto and Radio Supply. 6:00 — Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special". 6": 15 — Burning Ford. 0:30 — Milner Musical Company. 7 :IH» — Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7 :3u— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7 :4."i— Barker News. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15— Dr> Ridge Springs Program. S;;iil — Camel Cigars. 8:45— Musical Newsreel. 9:10 — Radio Circus. 9:45 — Shoppers' Hour. [0 ;00 — Mountain \"alley Varieties. 10:15 — Licking River Fiddlers. ' u :30 — Radio Circus. 10:45— Fuller's Orchestra. Il:l5-Slumher Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc. A. M.— 8:45— God's Bible School, Sunns Worship. ~ 8*5— Ray and Bob. 8:00— Starr-Freeic Melodies. Tuesday, June 2 8:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45 — Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- gram. 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS). 0:15 — Traxel Galleries. :30— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:00— Drink- Mor Program. 10:15 — Live Stock Quotations. 10:17 — Classified News Program. 10:45 — Time and Weather. 10 : (8 — Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tully. II : 15— Paul Tremaine's Orchestra (CBS). 11 :30— Homemaker's Talk by Julia Hayes. Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12:30 — Cincinnati Pro- Merchant: gram. 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS). 1:15 — Art Drv Cleaning Program I :30— God's Bible School. 2:00 — Louis A. Noelcke Melotone Program. ■J: 15— Dream Home, Jimmy and Joan. 2:30— The Three Doctors (CBS) 2:45— The Captivators (CBS). 3:00— Italian Idyll (CBS). 3 :15 — Pbaris Program. 3:30 — Home Furniture Studio. 3:45— The Four Clubmen (CBS). 4:00— Queen City Rug Makers. 4:15— Adventures in Words (CBS). 4:30 — Tramp Starr. 4:45 — Sweethearts of the Air (CBS), g : 00— H a r r v Tucker's Orchestra (CBSj. 5:15— Meyer Paint Program. g : 30 — Magic Mattress Man, 5 :45— Cincinnati Trade School Mu- sicale. 0:00— God's Bible School. 6:15— Queen City Awning Period. 0:10— Stocks; Time; Weather. 6:21— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6:26— Sports Review. 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:45 — Camel Quartet hour. 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15 — Tommic and Willie. 7 :30— Kaltcnborn Edits the Mews (CBS). 7-45— Old Wurzburg Malt Program. 8:00— Henrv-George (CBS). ■ 8:30— Philco Svmphony (CBS). J»:00— Blue Ribbon Malt Jesters (CBS). 9:16— Tito Guizar (CBS). 9:30— Paramount Publix Radio Play house (CBS). 1U:00— Conev Island Orchestra. 10:15— Peter Paul Limericks, n :20 — Sports Review. 10:25— Happy Feet. 10:30— Bridge Lessons by Tom Col Hns Jr. 10:45— Coney Island Orchestra. 11:00— Gruen Witching Hour. I I :32— Studio Feature. 1 1 :45— Blackberry Dudes. .Midnight— Barge Dance Orchestra. Tueidav. June 2 WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— G :00— International Fiddlers. 6:30— Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 8:00— Bradley Kincaid. 8 15— Mouth Health (NBC) 8:30— Morning Devotions, 8:45 — Popular Gems. 'i:Oi'— Morning Ballads. 9 1 5 — Frances Ingram (NBC) 9:30— Fashion Talk 9 : 15— Premium Man. 10:00 — Murray Hortou's Orchestra. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40 — Organ and Vocal Solos. 11:00 — Island Serenaders. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 1 1 :30— WLW Stars. 11:4-5— River Reports: Time Signals, Noon — Tuxedo Trio. P. M.— 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. I2:5n— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30 — Salt and Peanuts. 1 :40— Market Reoorts. 1:45— Ted Weems* Orchestra, Neth erland Plaza. 2 : 15— Village Rhymester. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 2:45 — Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 3:00— U. S. Navy Band. 3:30— The Ramblers. 3:45— Eumcr Refik. Pianist. 4:00— Beauty Secrets by Rigaud. 4:15 — Organ and Vocal Solos. 4:30— Live Stock Rcporls. -1 :40 — Glenn Sisters and Ratnona. 5:00 — Murrav Horton's Orchestra. 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— WLW Highlights. 0:30— Berry Brothers (e. t). 6:45 — Gruen Watchmakers (e. t.). 6 :50 — Baseball Scores. 6:55 — Seger Ellis. 7 :00— Paul Whiteman's Pa inters (NBC). 7:30— Ted Weenis" Orchestra, Neth. erland Plaza. 7:45 — Sterling Jack. 8:00— Ted Weems' Orchestra, Neth erland Plaza. 8:15 — Singin' Sam. 8:30— Werk Bubble Blowers. 9:00— Barbasol Barbers (e. I.). 9:30— Chevrolet Chronicles (e. t.) 10:00 — Cotton Queen Minstrels. 10:30— Variety. '0:45— Bob Newhall. Sports Slices. 11 :00 — Los Amigos. 11:30 — Vox Humana. WEDNESDAY June 3 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A.M.— 6 :00— Kentucky Good Morning, 6:30— God's Bible School 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Bob White. 8:15— Early Morning Dance. 9:00— Theronoid. 9:15— My New Kentucky Home Jctta Crane. 9:45 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs, A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:30— Classic Hour. II :00— Musical Novelties. 1 1 :30 Mountain Melodies, Noon— Popular Dance Melodies, P. M.— 12:30— Live stuck Reports. 12 :35— Luncheon Concert. I :G0— Sign off. 5:45— Hill Billy Kid. 5 :55 — Aycrs Sport Flash, 0:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 6:15— Italian Serenaders. 6:30— Bill and Bob. 6:45— Little Red Riding Hood. 7:00— Tommy Ott. Pianist. 7:15 — Kentucky Belle, Crooner. 7 :30— Canadian Pacific Crusaders (NBC). 8:00 — Liberty Ragamuffins. 8:15 — Steve Bates, octofone. 8:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. !l :00— Classic Recital: Molly Moore, Ellis Frakes, Harvey Harding. 9:30— Walk, the Radio Clown. 9 :45— Skillet Lickers. Vallee's Vocal Twin Confuses Campbell Fans That's not Rudy Vallec you heai singing with the Campbell Soup I irehestra through WSA1 and other NBC stations at * In" every morning except Sunday It's Lew Conrad. 1 [is voice i-^ so much like Rudy's that a man in Minneapolis bet a thousand dollars it was the famous \ allee boy crooning on his way home from a midnight broadcast. Then the hi, from M. wont to the Na tional Broadcasting Company in New York to sec for himself that his thousand was gone. The orchestra is a fooler, too, Many wagerers say it's R. A. Rolfe's orchestra tile same that plays the Lucky Strike p rog i a m (VVSA1, Tuesday. Thursday, Saturday, at !» p. m.). But it's really Andy Sanella's hand. And he's the wizard with the guitar and saxophone on many other NBC programs. WFBE {250 m, A. M.— -1200 kc.) 7:00- 7:15- 7:30- 8:00- R:lfj •Voices at Dawn. -Radio Circus. -Classified Directory. -Shoppers' Hour. ■Mountain Valley Greetings. Midnight — Village Rhymester. A. M.— 12:15— Ted Weems' Orchestra. Neth- erland Plaza. 12:30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra. Cas- tle Farm. 1 :00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.; A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8 : 1 ,T — C ampbcll Soup Orchestra S : 15— Records. ll 1; 0n— "Your Child." Grace Abbott (NBC). 11115— Rad io Household Institute (NBC). 10:30— U. S. Marine Band (NBI ). 1 1 :00— Sign off. P. At.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop. Comm. Assn. ! :0ft— Sign off. ■i 00— Woman's Radio Review CNBC). 3 :t)0— Records. 4. 00— The I-ady Next Door (NBC) 4-30— Rinso Talkie (NBC) 4:45— Records. 5:15— Vocal Solos. 5:30— The Gossipers (e. L). 5:45 — Ryder Cup Team Talk 0:00— Organ Program. 6:30— Seger_Ellis. 0:45 — Larry Grueter, Accordion. 7 : 00— Blackstone Plantation (NBC) 7 :30— National Dairv Program (NBC). g -00— McKesson Musical Magazine (NBC). 8:30— Fuller Brush Man (NBC). >>:i*i— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC). 10:00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 10 : 3fl— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 30 — Bacca Coal and Iron Program. 8:45 — Magnecoil Program. 9 :00 — Union Mutual Life Program. 9:15 — Radio Circus, 9 :30— Variety. 9:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00— Tid-Bits. Corinna C. Curran. 10:05 — League of Independents. 10:20 — Princess Garment Program. 10:35 — Radio Circus. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 1 1 :00 — Sherwin-Williams Program. U:15 — Jake Tennenbauni Furniture Program. 1 1 :30— Friendly Wall Paper Pro gram. 11:45 — Paul Electric Program. Noon — Otto Gran Piano Recital. P. M.— 12:15 — Radio Circus. 12:30— Fuller. Inc. 12:45— Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00— Zolvo Program. 1 :15 — Matinee. I :30 — Radio Circus. 1 :45 — Serenade. 2:00 — Galvano & Cortez. 2:15 — The Home Finder. 2:30 — Radio Circus. 2:45— Reds vs. Philadelphia ai Red- land Field. ■ 4:45 — Radio Circus. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30 — Bell Furniture Program. 5:45 — Dinner Music. 6:00— Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special. 6:15 — Berning Ford. 6:30 — Milner Musicale. 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7:45 — Payne Brothers & Herman Chitison. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15— Drv Ridge Spring Program. 8:30— Camel Cigars. 8:45 — Musical Newsreel. 9:00— The Islanders. 9:15— Radio Circus. 9:45 — Shoppers' Hour. 10 :00— Cincinnati Messianic Testi- mony. Dr. Reed. 10 :30— Radio Circus. 10:45— Earl Fuller's Orchestra 1:15— Slumber Music WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) Detroit Symphony, Edgar A. Guest On Sunday Hour The Entrance of Ihe Gods to Valhalla, from Wagner's "Gol- terdammerung", will be the feat- ure of a concert by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra during the Graham-Paige program at 8:30 p. m., Sunday (May 31) over the Columbia network and WKRC. Edgar A. Guest, poet, will read from his works. The com plete program follows : Overture i Beautiful Galatea Suppc Rumoresquc Dvorak EDGAR A. CURST From the Land of the Sky Blue Waters Cadnian Muriel Kyle, soprano Entrance of the Goils to Valhalla. .WaRiicr Ace Brigode Band Is New WRKG Dance Orchestra Another nationally know n dance group has been made available to Cincinnatians who get their dance music from their radio. It is Ace Brigode and his Virginians, who began broadcast- ing last week from Coney Island over WKRC. Brigode comes on ihe air with the orchestra singing "Carry Me Back to Old Virginia." They are on the air every night except Monday. Consult your Radio Dial programs for their appear- ances. 6:45 — Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Ray and Bob. Wednesday, June 3 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The OKI Dutch Girl (CBS). 9:00— Traxel Galleries. 9: IB— Madam Flor-enz, Beauty Pro- gram, 10:00— Melody Parade (CBS). 10:13— Live Stock: Time; Weather. 10:18— Woman's Hour. 10 :45— Classified News Program, 11:15— Homemakers" Talk by Julia Hayes, U :4S— Drink-Mor Program. Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 .hi— God's Bible School. 1:15 — Studio Feature. 1 : 3o— God's Bible School. 2:00— Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2:30— Queen City Rug Makers. 9 ;45 — Pharis Program. .', :00— Syncopated Silhouettes (CBS). RADIO DIAL, THURSDAY^MAYj^JStai^ Wednesday, June 3 ! Starr-Freeze Melodies. Reaume Studio. .'1:45— Artists' Recital (CBS). : M . I.un Park Casino Orches- tra (CBS). 10 y l Fink Program. 8:00— Kampf Artists. 5:18 Mcver Paint Program. .1:30— Magic Mattress Man. 8:48— Cincinnati Trade School Mu sicale. . 11:00— Kate Smith Swancc Music (CBS). ,, i i tocleli Timi : Weather. 20- Eureka Baseball Scores. ;28 SpOrbl Review. 8:80 Evangeline Adams "Astrol- CBS) 18 Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS). 7-00— Pryor's Crcmo Military Band (CBS). 7 18— The Barbasol Program (i l:si 7:30— Rhythm Chorusters (CBS). , 16 I1M Wurzburg Malt Program. t mi Gold Medal Fast Freight (CBS). 8 :30— Blackberry Dudes. 8 :45— Vincent Lopez and His Val- voltners (e. t.). !l : llll_ Vitality Personalities (CBS). 9:16- Symphonic Hour (CBS). 9:80— McAlcer Polishers (CBS). 9:48— Johnson Sea Horse Orchestra (e. 1.1. In. tin— Allegata* Dance Orchestra (c. I.). 10:15— Peter Paul Limericks. 10:30 — Gruen Answer Man (e. t.). 10:20— Happy Feet. 10:80— Coney Island Orchestra. LljOO— Time; Weather; Sports Re- view. 11:08— St. Moritz Orchestra (CBS). 11:80— Nocturne; Ann leaf. Ben Alky (CBS). Midnight— Barge Dame Orchestra. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— li :00— International Fiddlers, old- time music. 6:80— Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 8:00— Salt and Peanuts. 8:15 — Organ Program. B:80 — Morning Devotions. 8:45— Derby Day from Epsom Downs, England (NBC). 9:15— Florence Frey's Workshop. 0:80— Dance Miniatures (NBC). [0:00 -MeCorniick's Fiddlers. 10:16 lim and Walt. I" 80— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Organ Program. Arthur Chandler Jr. 1 1 :00— Glenn Sisters and Rainona. 11:15— Swill Program (NBC). II 80— WLW Stars. 1 1 :45— River Reports ; Time Signals. Noon — Salt and Peanuts. P. M.— 12:16 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra 1 9 -I' -Live Stock Reports. I :00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Seger Ellis. 1 :40— Market Reports. 1:48— Ted Weems' Orchestra. Neth erlaud Plaza. 2:18— Village Rhymester. ■ 30 i hicago Serenade (NBC). 9 no -Weather Forecast. : nl —The Matinee Players. 4":00— Chats with Peggy Winthrop tXP.1 > 4:15 — Organ with Instrumentalist. 4:30 — Live Stock Reports. 1 In -lane Froman, Don Becker. 5 on -Afternoon Revelers 5.-30 -Old Man Sunshine, i C. 1 ..well Thomas (NBC). i. o" Vmos W \nds i NBC) 8:15— DuPout Speed Blenders (e. t.). ,. 30 Phil Cook (NBC). 6:45— "Believe It or Not. " Riplev (NB( ' i 00 Baseball Scores 7 05 -WLW Highlights. 7:18— John Ruskin Orchestra (c. t.). 7 30— R. F. D. Hour. s 00— The Buddy Boj - S 80 Siufonetta. 9:80 Canova Coffee Hour. 10:00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tic Farm. 10.-30— Variety. IO:47i— Boh Newh.ill, Spon S| 1Cl - v 11 .HI— Night Sunes I I :30— Crosley Theater. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. A. M.— 12 30— Ted Weems' Orchestra, Neth. crland Plaza. ""-Henry Busse's Orchestra. Cas tie Farm. Thursday, June 4 5-45— Red Riding Hood. 5:65— Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos W Andy (NBl- 1 . 615— Tastyeast Jesters (NBLl. 6 :]o— Alma Bohlke, soprano, u -45 — Tri-State Entertainers. 7:00— Dixie Spiritual Singers. 7 15 Arabelle Chambers, blues. 7 -30— Blu-Grecn Blues. 7:45— Hugh Cross. 8:00— Blackstonc Plantation (Nrii.1 8:80— Betty May. cou'ralto s -45— Ukelele Travelogue. O;ll0— Earl Arnold's Orchestra. 9:30— Skillet Lickers. 9 IRENE BORDONI An inimitable French accent plus an appealing soprano voice, combine to make Irene Bordoni, (ormer stage and screen star, one of the most popular recruits to radio. Miss Bordoni's lilting ,dies and droll wit are hi elodies ( at 8 every Sunday WKRC and other Columbia sta- WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — Voices at Dawn. 7:173 — Radio Circus. 7 :30— Classified Directory. 8 :00— Shoppers' Hour. 8 15— Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30— Bacca Coal and Iron Program. § :45— Magnecoil Program. !l :0C— Dance Frolic. (1:15— Radio Circus. 9:30— Organ Recital. 9:45— Kleeman Furniture Program 10 :00— Tid-Bits, Corinna C. Curran 10:05— League of Independents. 10:20— Zolvo Program. 10:35— Radio Circus. 10:50— Polar Rav Health Talk. 1 1 :00— Sherwin-Williams Program. 11:15— Jake Tennenbautn Furniture Program. 1 1 -30— Friendlv Wall Paper Program 11:45— Paul Electric Program. Noon— Otto Grau Piano Recital. Band -Clean Up and Paint Up Cam- Wednesday, June 3 WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A M. — g 00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8-15— Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45 — Records. 9:15— Organ Program. 9:30— National Home Hour (NBC). 10:00— Records. 10-15— Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10; 15— Records. 1 1 :00— Sign off. P. M.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1:00— Sign off. •2:00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3:00— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 3:15 — Records. 4:00— Don Becker, ukulele. 4:15 — Minabclle and Jerry. 4 .30— Poems by Harry Holcombe. -1 : 15 — Records. 5:00— Old Man Sunshine. 5:25— Civil Service Talk. 5:30— The Gossipcrs (c. t.). 5:45— Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC). (i :00— Records. ii::ill— Moments with Madame Alda (NBC). 6:45— Back of the News in Wash- ington (NBC). 7 :00— Listerine Program (NBC). 7:15— Radiotron Varieties (NBC). 7:'i0— Mobiloil Concert (NBC). 5 :00— Halsi-v Stuart Program (NBC). 8:30— Palmolive Hour (NBC). 9:30— Coca Cola Program (NBC). 10:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 10 :30— Netherland Plaza Orchestra 11 :00— Sign off. P. M.- 12:1 paign. 12:30— Fuller. Inc. 12:45— Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00— Radio Circus. 1 :15 — Serenade. 1 :30— Radio Circus. 1 :45— Dance Frolic. o. 00— Payne Brothers & Herman Chitison. 2:15— The Home Finder. 2 :30— Radio Circus. 2:45— Reds vs. Philadelphia at Red- land Field. 4:45— Radio Circus. 5:00 — Lvric Hour, 5:30— Bell Furniture Program. 5:45 — Race Auto and Radio Supply. R:00— Murphy &■ Goehel Furniture Special. 6:15— Berning Ford, 6 : 30— Milncr Musical Company. 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re view. 7 :45— Barker News. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15— Dry Ridge Springs Program 8:30— Camel Cigars. 8;45 — Musical Newsreel. :00— Merchants' Review. 9:15— Radio Circus. :45— Mountain Valley Varieties. 10:00— Shoppers Hour. 10:1,5— Fuller's Orchestra. 10:15— Radio Circus. 1 1 :00— Slumber Music. Thursday, June 4 l:30u-Tramp Starr (Aurora Mer- chants). ■1 -45— Meet the Artist (CBS). 5-00— Pharis Program. 5:15-Mevcr Paint Program. 5:30— Stearns & Fosters Magic Mat tress Man. 5 :45— Cincinnati Trade School Mu sicale. (I 00— Home Furniture Company. 615— Queen City Awning Period. 6:19— Stocks: Time; Weather. ,; ^l—Eureka Baseball Scores Sports. O-l'o — Sports Review. 6:30— Daddv and Rollo (CBS). 6:15— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7.1IO— pryor's Cremo Military n " (CBS). 7 15— Red Top Malt Program, 7 :30— Kaltenborn Edits the News 7 -45— Hamilton Watchman (CBS). 8-00— The Premier Salad Dressers (CBS). , , 8:15— Tommie and Willie (John Scherz). 8 :30— Detective Story Program (CBS). r . DC ^ 9:00— The Lutheran Hour (LBS). 9 : 30— Fortune Builders (CBS). 9'45— Peter's Parade (CBS). 10 00— Big Yank Workshirt Program (e. t.). , , 10:15— Peter Paul Limericks. 10:20— Sports Review. 10:25— Happy Feet. 10-30— Coney Island Orchestra. 11:00— Gruen Witching Hour. 11:30— Time and Weather. 11:32— Studio Feature. 1 1 :45— Blackberry Dudes. Midnight— Barge Dance Orchestra. THURSDAY June 4 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 1, 00 — Kentucky Good Morning. 6:30 — Sunrise Worship 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Bob White. 8:15 -Early Morning Dance. ;) ;15— My New Kentucky Hume, Jetta Crane. !' :45— Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:30— Northam-Warren (NBC). 10:45 — Classic Hour. 11 :00— Musical Novelties. 11 :30— Mountain Melodies. Noon — Popular Dance Tunes. P. M.— 12:30— Live Stock Quotations. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. 12:4-5 — Rev. Chas- A. Vandermnelen. I :on— Sign off. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6:15— Sunrise Worship. 7 :45— Ray and Bob. 8 :00— Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro gram. 8:15— Traxel Galleries. 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8 15— Starr-Freeze Melodies. 9:00— Queen City Rue Makers. 9:15— Consolidated Merchants' Pro gram. 9:45— Barbara Gould Beautv Talk (CBS). 10:00— Live Stock: Classified News Program. 10:30— Uneeda Bakers (CBS). 10 :48— Woman's Hmir, Tremlette Tully. 11:15 — Dream Home. Jimmy and Joan. 11:30 — Drink-Mor Program. 11 :45— Streit Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12 :S0— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00— To be announced. 1:15— God's Bible School. 2:00— Melotone (Louis A. W.dckei 2:30— The Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45— Rhvthm Ramblers (CBS). 3 :00— Homemakers Talk by Julia Hayes. 3:30 — Home Furnishing Studio. 3:45— Luna Park Orchestra (CBS). 4 00— Asburv Park Casino Orches- tra (CBS1. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.; A. M.— :00— International Hddlers. 6:30— Gvm Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 8:00— Seger Ellis. 8:15— Organ Program. 8 :30— Morning Devotions. 8:45 — Popular Gems. 9:00— Rav Perkins (NBC). 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9 :30— Community Health, Dr. Carl Wilzbach. 0:4.)— Housekeeper Chats. 10:00— Murray Horton Orchestra. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10.40— Jim and Walt. 11:00— The Venetian Three. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45— River Reports; Time Signals. Noon— Salt and Peanuts, P. M.— 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— George, Lava Soap Man (NBC). 1 :15— Market Reports. 1 :50— Ted Weems' Orchestra, Netl' erland Plaza. 2:15— Village Rhymester. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 2 : 15— E d 11 a Wallace Hopper (NBC). ;j : ll0— Home Decorations (NBC). 3:15— Afternoon Revelers. 3:30— U. S. Army Band (NBC). Thuriday, June 4 4:00— Jim and Walt. 4:15— Gems of Melody iNHO 4:30— Live Stock Reports, 1:40— The Crosley Singers. 5:00— Salt and Peanuts. 5:15 — The Ramblers. 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 3:45— Lowell Thomas I MU 1 0:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:13— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC) 6:30 — Glenn Adams. Dog Talk:,. 1; .15- Gruen Watch Makers (e. l.|. (j : jj0 — Baseball Scores 6:55— Seger Ellis. 7:00— WLW Highlights. 7:15— Rin-Tin-Tin Thriller (NBC), 7:30— Ted Weems' Orchestra, N'dli- erland Plaza. 8:00— Barbasol Barbers (e. t.). g:15 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona, 8:30 — Phoenix Hosiery (e. t.). 8:45— Murray Morton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. 9 : 00— Crimelights. 9:30— Clara, Lou and Em (NBC). 9 -45 — Chesapeake & Ohio Program (CWJR). 10:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 10:30— Variet\. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices, 11:00— Old Masters' Chime Reveries. Midnight— Village Rhymester, A. M.— 12:15_Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 1 :00— Ted Weems' Orchestra. Neth- erland Plaza. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8-15— Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45 — Records. 9 :00— Ccresota Program (NBC). !):15 — Records. 9:45— Organ Program. 10 :00— Records. 10' 15— Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10 :30— McCormick's Old-Time Fid- dlers. 10:46— Sign off. P. M.— 12:00— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— Sign off. 1:48— Dr. Scholl Reveller (NBC). 2 :00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 4:00— Mona Motor Organ Recital. 4:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4 :45 — Records. 5:00— Travel Talk, Joseph Ries. 5:16— Seger Ellis, popular sune... 5:30— The Gossipers (e. t.). fj-45 — Black and Gold Room Orches- tra (NBC). 6 :II0— Records. 6:25 — Better Business Bureau. G :30— Records. 6:45 — Vocal Solos. 7 :00— Fleischinann Hour (NBC), 8:00— Arco Birthday Party (NBC). 8 : :t0— Jack Frost's Melodv Moments (NBC). 9:00— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC). 10 :00— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. 10:30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. SANDERSON— CRUMMIT Julia Sanderson and Frank Crommit, former musical comedy stars, now devote their entire time to radio. They are heard in the Blackstone Plantation program over WSAI every Tuesday, at 7 p.m. Julia and Frank are Mr. and Mrs. Crummit, outside the profession. JUN 10 1951. WEEKLY . Volume i, No. 3 ^ ^™__ FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1931 Dance Orchestras, Famous Humorist, Boxing Match and Plays are Booked for Your Entertainment this Week Lee Morse will Sing Blues During Vitality Program Lee Morse, "blue" singer, lias returned from an extended vaca- tion with her people in Allen, Okla.. in time to appear as guest artist for Vitality Personalities through WKRC and the Colum- bia network on Wednesday (June lot. at i) p. m. She will sing two numbers, "It Must Be True", and "I Wanna Sing About You." Freddie Rich will direct his 30 musicians in a medley of "rose" select inns, including "Rose of Washington Square," "Lonesome Rom." and the ever-familiar "Roses of Picardy," as the or- chestral feature of the broadcast. The Round T owners Quartet will be heard in the vocal choruses. Grosley Theatre Repeats "Me Flix 'Em" Saturday "Me Flix 'em," a side-split- ting comedy by Don Becker re- lating the further adventures of Bradley Haines and his Chinese servant Wong, will be played in the Crosley Theatre at WLW on Saturday night (June fi) at 7 o'clock. Walter Maher as young Haines and Charles Egleston as Wong, did fine work in the presentations of the play on last Sunday and Wednesday. So did other members of the cast : Gertrude Dooley as Tillie Mc- Dermott, Jack Zoller as Herbie, Betty Baxter as Aunt Agatha, and George Lloyd as a police- man. The story is the second Becker has written about Haines and Wong, the first, "The Chi- nese Peril," having met with great success several weeks ago. WCKY Basso Will Go to California In Prize Contest Ellis Frakes. WCKY basso, for the fifth time has won a vocal contest. This time he came off with honors in the Kentucky state contest at Louisville, Ky., sponsored by the National Fed- eration of Music Clubs. He will go to San Francisco in June to sing for the grand prize in the contest. In 1927 and 1938 Frakes won the Ken- tucky division of the Atwater Kent contest. In 192S he also won the Kentucky high school contest, and sang in the quartet that won the state high school singing championship. Beginning Wednesday night (June 10) Erno Rapee, conduc- tor of the Roxy Symphony, will direct a 35-piece concert orches- tra during the Palmolive Hour at 8:30, through station WSAI. Helen Nugent of Cincinnati gets New Radio Break Helen Nugent, popular radio contralto, who left Cincinnati to win national fame in network broadcasts from New York, has just been announced as featured entertainer on the Paramount- Publix program broadcast every Tuesday at 9:30 p. m. by station WKRC in connection with the Continued on page -i) WFBE Broadcasts Shea vs. Miller Fight on June 11 When Eddie Shea meets Freddy Miller at Redland Field on Thursday night, June 11, WFBE listeners will have ringside seats at their radio receivers with Harry Hart- man giving them a blow by blow description of the tight Sport t'an.s say llu- limit is the most important fistic event of Cincinnati's sport calendar this year. WFBE will begin its broad- cast at 9 o'clock and will con- tinue it until the end of the bout. Three Bakers to Jump from Africa to Gay White Way Jumping from Africa to Broadway, "The Three Bakers" will find adventures on the Gay White Way as hazardous those in the jungle in their broadcast over WKRC and the Columbia network on Monday night (June 8) at 8 o'clock. Guided by Brad Browne, "Boss Baker," the intrepid young men continue the pursuit of the villain who continually harasses Charmaine Winterbot- tom, lovely heroine. Already this chase has taken them from America to the North Pole, thence to Africa, and now the brave lads are back on Broad- way, prepared to aid the fair lady in distress. Their former sketches have been entitled "A Bicycle Built for Two" and "The Three Bak- ers in Africa," and were remi- niscent i ) f the type of humor that made Browne's "Nit Wits" favorites with radio listeners. Lively dance tunes, under the direction of Billy Artzt, will mark the shifting scenes in this series of episodes. Is Irvin S. Cobb to be New Rival of Rudy Vallee? Irvin S. Cobb m ay be the next radio crooner. The noted humorist will discuss "\V h y We Love the Old Songs Best" as guest artist on the Enna Jettick Melodies pro- Irvin S. Cobb S™ 111 t0 b e heard on WCKY and WLW on Sunday night, June 14, at 7 o'clock. The writer, who has gained great favor with radio audiences for his dissertations on such sub- jects as fishing, golf, eating, operations, and what not, refuses to state whether or not he will sing the old songs to illustrate his comments. Never in the history of radio has his drawling voice been raised in melody but it is hoped that Cobb will give music- al proof of bis familiarity with bis subject. VVestinghouse to Honor Virginia City on Sunday Stirring events in the history of Richmond, Va., will be re- 'ated by the Narrator in the \\ estinghouse Salute through station WCKY at 8:46 Sunday night (June 7). The Westing- house chorus will sing such ap- propriate Southern songs as "The Glory of Jamestown," "Shenan- doah," "The World's Turned Upside Down," "Confederate Snugs," "Annabelle Lee," "At the Fair," and "Carry Me Back to Old Virginia." Complete Radio Programs Begin on Page 4 RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY. JUNE Weekly RADIO DIAL Publi.hcd every Thursday hy the Radio Dial Publishing Co.. 22 Ea.l 12lh St.. Cincinnati. Ohio. Contents copyrighted. VOL. I JUNE 5. 1931 No. 3 Intelligent Listening How much i- youi cciver worth to I- it simply a musical instni- mcnl i hours a day . din tlial is : bai ■ for y< iur dailj ac- leisure mo- ments? Oi ci arpet that i n i ii ma filiation to the far places of the earth, that bri tertainmen ol the kind you have neither the linn noi the moncj to g< I elsi v. hen . and the information that ■ di ■ - * 1 1 universities would nol ou in .. ■ iii.mi\ yi ari I f your radio set is the kind of an instrument thai serves you with jusl the kind of music, en- tertainment, and information that you want to hear, you will welcome U toio 1 1 distant. Take this issue of Radio Dial. Read the stories about programs i hen go through the of the Cincinnati radio and check the programs you will want to hear during the week. Keep Radio Dial con- tinual!) at hand and consult it as a traveling man does his rail- road time table. Don't b< a nil or miss listener. I lon't sit through 15 minutes of jazz if you hate it, jusi so you will hear the symphony concert that comes nexl on thi program Turn your dial to another station where you find a program listed that appeals to you. Remember that selection oi radio program- i- what makes you an intelligent radio listener. Nomads Will Play Russian Program The Nomads I NBi i heard over W( K N Sunda) morning ;ii 10 :00 feature a Russian or- chestra under the direction of Alexander KirolofF, and a sopra- no, * ii in. i Fonai io\ .i. The pro- gram for Sunda) . June "< , fol- low ■ I'., i. >il,, WaVi I ■ ■ mi- hi i ',, I,, ■ r,., i \ Sopri Solo i 'ii Ittn" ■ I, On i" ■ 'i.i i ,' \i. ■■ i- iii \ [olln md eu I till rtuci ■.i ii on, v , ■ . Soprano »lo H) i,.|,-y \-,n,i., ,On hi t,. French Cafe is Background for Evening in Paris With an atmosphere of a I' i 'in Ii ca fe predominating as it- theme, iln Evening in Paris presentation on Monday night ( fune 8) at 8:30 through IV l\ R( '. again will bt ing to the air the voices of Piern Brug non, tenoi . rayloi Buckley, Iku itone, and a male quartet as- sisted l<\ the Max Smollcn oi i .i \ xylophone special!) by Edw ard Rubson . an m i meiit of the winner of the Bour- i' 'i Ward to ilu' Woman of tin- Wei k, and reading "i" the latest Fashion news as radioed from Paris, form additional features of this bi ■ iad< i I Wife Beaters, Take Tip from Salt on System Men who want to beat their wives and i m'l gi I away with tip from Salt ■ ,:,ni- of W1AV, and :.- a radio act. In number of [i m . - thai In will swal Peanuts with a ukulele on the p uses for sitting purposes, dur- ing their week .ii the Albee which begins June 6. Sail has laid in a supply of I" uku- leles. The swatting is pari of the corned) in their stage act, so Peanuts can't objeel to il The breakage of ukuleles is incidental, bul Salt can't ob- ject to that either, ( iven though he '1' ies have to buy at least one new ukulele every day he and Peanuts are on the stage. WFBE Has Seven New Musicians Added to Staff \\ FBI officials are beaming with pride over the addition of several new staff entertainers who are being received with ap- plause by the Cincinnati radio audience. Don ( ialloway, tenor, is a stu- dent at the Conservatory of Music, Me is singing many re- quest programs for the Parkview station. Galvano & Cortez play Hawaii an music with novelty touches, M ildred Eichler sings negro spirituals ; and the Payne 1 1 roth crs with" Herman Chitison at the piano appear in programs of har mony with piano interludes, HARRY C. BROWNE Harry C. Browne is the cre- ator and star of Hank Simmons Showboat, heard at 9 p. m., every Saturday over WKRC and Other Columbia stations. Browne takes the role of the genial "Hank." Before entering the held of radio dramatics he was leading man for Lillian Russell, Mary Pick ford, Irene Bordoni, and other well-known actresses. Domra . r Biljo, whose " Vround 5 u ■ tr" i- .i popular WKRC Columbia feature on Sunday nights, reveals that the domra, one of the oldest musical instruments in the world, is very much in use today, and is a vital i the Balalaika orchestra, primitive instrument of tret- was introduce Europe in the eleventh Century when the Tartars invaded Russia, and from it have sprung the man- dolin, banjo, guitar, violin, and even the ukulele. The balalaika, Russia's national instrument is the dotura's direct offspring, fn Russian orchestras, such as Mil- jo's the domras carry the i the bablaikj provide the ac- iniment. Italian Swede t Overhearing a strange woman in an Italian restaurant in Mew York City advising her friend to tune in on tin.- I • rei N BC and \\Vk\ every Monday. Thurs- daj and Saturday at G I Wamp Carleson, of the trio. turned and asked in his Ik-si lialect, "How'd you like to conn- up to the Studio and hear us!" The woman almost choked on her spaghetti, but finally caught her breath and accepted Henry Busse Plays New NBC Network Program lenry Busse's Orchestra is back on the NBC network on Fridays at 11:30 p. m., playing at Castle Farm. WLW sends the program to the chain the same as it does Henry Thies and his orchestra on Sunday nights at 11:30. Willard Robinson Willard Robinson fans who lamented the fact that his music went off the air when tin * ami I I leasure I four contract left NBC, can hear him with his Deep River orchestra on \\ S M Sunday night i June 7) at 9:15 Robinson also is heard at 6:15 on Wednesday nights at \\ l.W in [he I hi Pont Speed Blenders program, an electrical transcrip- tion. Little Red Riding Hood of WCKY Surprises Fans With Remarkable Talent This picture of Little Red Rid- ing Hood is submitted by Jerry A! ers, manager of WCklY, to I ii himself of the accusation th't he is perpetrating a nOBX in presenting the little pirl on the air. "Listeners who never have seen the little girl in person : WCKY to ask f if she really I iibbons, after a tem- porary absence has now been restored to WCKY's each Sunday night at to the demand of many listeners who telr their Sunda;. complete without his "World Advetitur Italy's Leading Radio Announcer is Woman man i- the chief radio announcer in Italy, Her name is Maria Luisa Boncompagni. All radio announcers in Italy are women, and Signorina Boncompagni ranks first. Womi amy bet- ter than men's, Signorina Boncompagni claims. Women don't get tired • ■!' talking so easily, either, she says. The strain of reading for long periods of time doesn't affect them as quickly as their male competitors in other countries. have called me i me confidential isn't some grown-up imitating a hild," Akers says. "They can t believe a child only five year* old is possible of showing the development in her voice that Little Red Riding Hood does. Although Little Red Riding Hood had practically no profes- sional experience before appear- ing at WCKY, her expression, phrasing, and production would do credit to a veteran trouper with years of experience. In spite of her obvious talent and the praise that is continually given her by friends and listen- ers. Little Red Riding Hood re- mains a sweet smiling baby. „.■'--'■■ | E RED RIDING HOOD Medal for Radio Service is Given to Celebrities \ distinguished service medal for radio has been struck by the Columbia Broadcasting System to be given to celebrated speak- ers or musicians who appear be- fore the microphone, and to those who conspicuously fur- ther radio broadcasting. Designed by Gaetano Cecere, a former winner of the Prix de Rome, the medal hears on the obverse side the figure of a muse superimposed upon the winged horse Pegasus, symbolic of inspiration or achievement, On the reverse, a circular panel bears a microphone, the wings of Mercury, and various devices suggesting the s< ' >pe < >i radio. The medal is inscribed "For dis- tinguished contribution to the radio art," Sir John I W. Reith, direc- tor general of the British Broad- casting Company, is tin first recipient of the medal. Locating Trouble. Probably the most valuable in- strument in the tool kit of the radio service man is a dentist's mirror. The metal handle of the mirror had better be wrapped with a layer of tape to prevent it from shorting wires when the mirror is used in a close place inside of a radio set, The mir- ror often proves invaluable for work on a radio set that cannot be taken to the shop for repairs. ible places on the inside of the set can be examined easily by aid of the mirror. It a flash- light is at hand the mirror can be used for deflecting a beam of light into dark comers in the set, Mac and A I "Scrappy" Lambert and Dick Robertson, will present a special vocal arrangement of "Under Your Window TojijghJt" in Llji; Mc \Kii broadcast through WKR( on Wednesdaj (Junt 10) at 9 :30 p. m. I ,ambert and Robertson are the Mac and \l ni the program, Sam I .anin's on hestra will play "June Time is I .ove Time", "To the Future" and "Sunny Side Up", in addi- tii hi in accompanying the voi al ists. Falling in line with New York University, the ' leorgia School of Technology, at Atlanta, I ia,, has included a course of broad- cast advertising on its curriculum for the current term. N. Y, U is the first university to have rei ognized the need for such a Si Woman Wants Network Piano Accompaniment A novel reason for buying time on the air brought a tele- phone call to NB< an Francisco studios a day or ■ ■ ■ . "My daughter is being mar ried, and we want music for the ceremony," a feminine voici taid ' I ha i aged a violini-t and a 'cellist, but I find I cannot gel a piano into d I should like ti i buy half an hour'- the air, and have a pianist in your -tudio play the wedding The violin and 'cello could follow the piano a- the : our radio Network program! Ily informed, would interfere with her plan. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1931. Pictorial Review Home Editor to Speak from WFBE Nell Howard Eiiloc. editor of tlie Home Bureau -of Pic- lorial Review, will talk about "Color, Com- fort and Charm in (lie Living K o o m" at WFBE at 1 :45 Wednesday afternoon (June 10) in the first of a series of Home Harmony programs designed to help wom- en make their homes more liva- ble and pleasant. Each week, the 15-minute pro- gram will present a nationally known authority on home mak- ing subjects. The Home Har- monizers, directed by Robert Hood Bowers, will furnish music for .the feature. This week, the selections are "Blue Heaven" and "The Love Nest." WFBE will broadcast the feature by 'elec- trical transcription. Beauty Culture Helps Children to Develop Charm Beauty culture as an assistance in the development of a child's personality will be stressed by Florence Frey. expert beautician, in her talk at station WLW on Wednesday morning (June 10) at 9:20. "Many a little girl at the strag- gley, leggy age of 11 could be transformed info an attractive child with confidence in herself and the nerve to be charming even at the awkward age," Miss Frey says, advocating permanent waves even for the very young. "One mother recently brought me a two-year-old child for a permanent wave because her hair was so straight that the child was positively homely. Now she is a little beauty." Bright Child Annette Hanshaw memorizes every song she sings on the Van Heusen program (WRKC and CBS, Friday at 9 p. m.) Her mother is authority for the claim that at the age of 16 months, Annette knew the words of 35 songs and could sing them all. HELEN NUGENT (Continued from page 1) entire Columbia network. Her first appearance on the program will be this Tuesday (June 9). She has chosen to pay her respects to a fellow-ar- list by singing Kate Smith's or- iginal theme song, "When the Moon Comes Over the Moun- tain." Her other solo will be "Beautiful Love." Accompanying her in her sungs will be Domeuico Savino's orchestra which also will play a medley of selection from Mau- rice Chevalier's latest picture, "The Smiling Lieutenant," a pot- pourri of tunes from "The Third Little Show," and excerpts from the "American Rhapsodic Jesse Crawford, organist., and Jerry "Close-up" Madison, who gossips "i Stage and screen, will com- plete the program. Our Dialy Dozen By DON BECKER 1 know I'll never be a success because I haven't any idiosyn- cracies. An operation when I was very young took care of that. If a $35.00 a week radio enter- tainer wears white flannels in the studio during the winter — he's "crazy." If a $200.00 a week entertainer does identically the same thing, that's just one of his idiosyncra- cies. I was reading that Guy Lom- bardo carries a $12 fiddle under his arm, but never plays it. I've got him beat a mile. I carry a $2.50 ukulele under my arm and you can't shut me up. * * * In the first issue of Radio Dial, an article on "Writing a Radio Fan Letter" left out one thing. When writing a fan letter make up your mind to whom you want to write. The other day I received a letter addressed: "Mr. Don Becker, c/o Radio Station "WLW, Cin- cinnati, Ohio. — Dear Mr. Bur- dette:" That was bad enough, but the contents of the letter were really intended for Bradley Kincaid. Radio Dial, please note. * * * In as much as I am closely coil nected with the Crosley Buddy Boys, I respectfully call your at- tention to this Wednesday's broadcast — the time is 8 :00 p. m. The lavender network is coming out with "Ten Nights In A Bar- room." * * * The terrible pun-of-the-week is about Continuity writers. Tt seems they all live off their families, due to the fact that they obtain money from their poor old "grammer." Inci dentally, a continuity writer is one who writes continuity- and so on. * * * Ever DX for funny stations? How's this :" KICK— Red Oak, la. KID— Idaho Falls, Idaho KIDO— Boise, Idaho KIT — Yakima, Washington KOI N— Portland, Ore. KOMO— Seattle, Wash. KROW— Oakland, Calif. KVOO— Tulsa, Okla. WAAT— Jersey City, N. J. WEAN— Providence, R. I. WHAM— Rochester, N. Y. WHAP— New York, N. Y. WHAT— Philadelphia, Pa. WHO — Des Moines, la. WHOM— Jersey City, N. J. WOOD— Grand Rapids, Mich. WASH— Grand Rapids, Mich. And then there's XED, in Mexico. Yeh. "Nuf xed" . . . * * * After listening to Paul White- man's arrangement of "Memorial Day and Army Tunes" last Tues- day night at 7 :00, this depart- ment is writing Washington to have more "Memorial Days." * * * We are just wondering, that when the River Reports are letter-perfect, if you'd call it 'Dam Right!" Dialaughingly yours, DON BECKER. Young Musiciaus will Play WCKY Concert Sunday Night fLFAt^Of? SpaNdt \//o//NIST CJ&cfoz: Eleanor Brandt, violinist, and Herschel Linstaedt, pianist, will share the program the College of Music of Cincinnati will broad- cast from station WCKY on Sunday night (June 7) at 7:15. Ben Bernie Will Spend Week at Cincinnati Hotel BEN BERNIE Ben Bernies pungent wit and the music of his orchestra ana his violin will be heard daily through WLW and WSAI the week of June 5 when he plays at the Netherland Plaza. Its easy to believe the story that an aversion to silence re- sulted m his professional debut, for his wise-cracking is inces- sant and as much a part of his programs as his distinctive or- chestra. At the age of 17, Bernie was hived as a violin salesman in a New York department etore. From 9:00 to 5:00 he played melodies of one kind or another on the $4.98 instruments "marked down from $7.50." While fiddling his time away, the loquacious young man explained to the prospective customers that if his playing annoyed them, he, in turn was much more both- ered. He sold many a violin by telling the purchaser the disad- vantages of violin-owning and the high up-keep cost of a musical instrument. In due time he used rhe same Rochester Orchestra The Rochester Civic Orchestra under the direction of Guy Fra- ser Harrison will again be heard from WCKY Monday night at 9 o'clock. The complete program follows : Overture to "Tlie Barber of Seville". .Rossini Mnlaguenn from "Boabdil" Moszkowski The Bee Schubert Tlie Flight of the Humble Bee — Rimsky-Korsakoff Sfcond Hungarian Rhapsody 7.iazt Coffee Flood Louis Dean, Columbia an- nouncer, says a cup of coffee is not always a cup of coffee. At times it is more like Niagara Falls ! Dean was announcing from a table microphone in a hotel grill room when a waiter, not versed in the subtleties of sound effects, arrived with the coffee and pro- ceeded to fill Dean's empty cup. Considering that only a small flow of liquid near a microphone gives the effect of a torrent, it is easily understood why control room engineers were worried as to whether Dean had been able to escape the flood in the grill room. sales talk on a vaudeville book- ing agent who happened along, The agent promptly put Bernie's signature on a vaudeville con- tract and "the old maestro's" career was well begun. !^ow his oft-repeated phrase, I hope you like it," given with true Ber- nie inflection is a by-word in radio circles as it is in the vaude- ville world. Bernie also is scheduled to begin a new series of Blue Rib- bon Malt programs over the Co- lumbia network and WKRC at 9 o'clock Tuesday night (June 9). The broadcast will go on the network either from the hotel or the radio station. Believe It or Not, Ripley Does Queer Stunt for Radio "Believe It or Not" Ripley left the SS I .eviathan 50 miles from New York City and rowed in a lift- boat to a wail- ing amphibian plane that carried him back (o the main land after bis initial broadcast of the Ksso program. Wl.W carries it at 6 :45 on Wednes- day night. New Gibson Band Numbers Seven Radio Musicians Although it was not advertised prim- to the opening of the new Greater Hotel Gibson Orchestra In the Roof Garden of the Gib- mi that the orchestra would fea- ture the former Club Soluo trio, known favorably to Wl.W au- diences, listeners already have begun to write that they have recognized these favorites. Jack Watson , leader of the new Gibson orchestra, S a m Adams and Eddie Davis com- prise the trio. In addition to their work as the Sohio Trio they won radio fame as the Court festers in the King Edward hour at WLW on Saturday night. Other radio musicians are among the fifteen musicians in this new dance orchestra, includ- ing Bob Motzer, who was first trumpet in WLW's staff orches- tra conducted by William C. Stoess; Ross Pearce, former first saxaphone in the staff or- chestra of WSPD, Toledo; (.me Molton, pianist for the or- chestra, who has been featured at WTR, Detroit. Jimmy Van ( tsdell, first trumpet, finds it no new experience to play *ox WLW audiences, as he has done so often when with Henry Busse's orchestra. He also played with Goldkette's orches- tra" broadcasting over WJR. Unmarried The Merry Men, WLW's new male quartet, get stacks of ( let- ters referring to them as "The Married Men." That is particu- larly inappropriate, they say. since of the five— pianist included — only one is married. They all are handsome, too. Chevalier Still Draws Maurice Chevalier, who ap- pears on the Chase and Sanborn hour, heard over WSAI and an NBC network at 7 p. m. Sun- day, began his interesting career as a child painter. The ultra- amiable Maurice is still drawing —at the rate of $3,8-16 for each of those fifteen-minute broad- casts, so they say. Unwritten Songs "Harmonica Mac" McCormick (WLW) says that his old-time fiddlers play music that never has been written down. They have learned it from other old fiddlers. Bradley Kincaid's song hook is made up of mountain ballads and old-time songs that never were written until he compiled his " iook. RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY. JU«c a. You will find complete radio program FRIDAY June 5 WCKY (202m.— 1490 kc.) A. Al- ii ; 00— Kentucky "Good Morning" C, : 30— God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship 7:30— Cheerio (NBC) 6 :00— Bob White 8:15 — Early Morning Dance !> :00 — Theronoid 0:15 — My New Kentucky Home, Jetta Crane 9 45- Josephine B. Gibson's Food Talks (NBC) I I IJance Melodies Hi :3it — Classic Hour 11:00— Musical Novelties 11 :30— Mountain Melodies Noon— Popular Dance Tunes 12 ;30— Norris Brock Live Stock Reports 12 :35— Luncheon Concert P. M.- 5:45— Hill Billy Kid 5 :55 — Avers News Sport Flash 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC) C> ;15 — Eilennan's M a r i m b a Ser- enades 6:45— Bill & Bob 7:00— Hugh Cross 7 :15— Augusta Litzendorff, C o n- tralto 7:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House 8:00— Interwoven Pair (NBC) 8:30— Francis Mclmean & Mildred Myers 8:45— W'allv the Radio Clown 9:00— Armstrong Quakers (NBC) 0:30— Skillet Lickers WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — Voices at Dawn 7 :15 — Radio Circus 7:30— Classified Directorv 8:00— 8th & Walnut Garage 8 :15 — Mountain Valley Greetings 8:30— Bacca Coal & Iron Program 8:45 — Magnccoil Program D:00— The Islanders 0:15— Radio Circus !1 :30— Serenade 9 :45 — Kieeman Furniture Program 10:00— Tid-Bits, Corinna C. Curran 10:05 — League of Independents 10:20 — Princess Garment Program 10:35— Radio Circus 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement II :00 — Sherwin-Williams Program II :15 — Jake Tennenbaum Furniture Program 1 1 :3li— Friendly Wall Paper Pro- gram 1 1 ;45 — Paul Electric Program Noon — Doll Time Announcement P. M.— 12:01— Otto Grau Piano Recital 12:15 — Radio Circus 12:30— Fuller, Inc. 12 :-l 5— Bel Ion by Melodies 1 :00 — Zolvo Program 1 :15 — Vaudeville 1 :30— Radio Circus 1 :45 — Popular Concert 2:00— Afternoon Melodies 8:15 — The Home Finder 2:30— Radio Circus 2 :[.-,— R c ds vs. Philadelphia at Red- . land Field •1:45— Fuller Garden Parly "i :00 — Lyric Hour 5:30 — Bell Furniture Program ."> :45— Dinner Music 6:00 — Murphy &■ Goebel Furniture Special 6:15 — Berning Ford G:80— Milner Musicalc 7:'in— Fart Fuller's Orchestra 7 :^ :00— Dr. Klein's News Reels (CBS ) . 6:15 — Studio. 6:20— Eureka Baseball Scores. :25 — Sports Review. 0:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:45 — Studio. 7:00 — Devils, Drugs and Doctors (CBS). 7:15— Kate Smith, Swanee Music CBS). 7:30 — Kaltenborn Edits the News (CBS). 7:45 — Boathouse Coffee Program. 8 :00 — Grand Opera Miniatures (CBS). 8:30— Graham Paige (CBS). 9 :00 — Tacoma Park Orchestra. 9:30— Fortune Builders (CBS). 9:45— Star Reveries (CBS). 10:00— Coney Island Orchestra. 10:30— Around the Samovar (CBS). II ;00— Sports Review. Sunday, June 7 11:07— Quiet Harmonics (CBS). 11:30— Artist Invitation Program. Midnight — Newton Announcement. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. Al.— 8 :5!) — Bulova Time. 9 :00 — Chureh Forum — Rev. Frank R. Elder, Presbyterian Church of tile Covenant. 9 :30— Witherspoon Chorus (NBC). 10:00— Bulova Time. 10:05— Organ. Arthur Chandler, Jr. 10:26— River Reports. 10:29— Bulova Time. 10:30 — Rochester Concert Orchestra (NBC). 11:30— Troika Bells (NBC). Noon — Midday Jewels. P. Al.— 12:29— Bulova Time. 12:30— Music of the Ages (NBC). 1:30— Yeast Foamers (NBC). 2 :00— Croslev Theater. 2:30— Henry Thies' Orchestra. 3:00— Apollo Club of Newcastle, Indiana. 3:30-Over Jordan (NBC). 3 :45 — John Barclay, Dagmar Rvb- ner (NBC).' 4:00 — Rhymes with Reason. 4 :30— Plantation Days. 5 :00 — The Roamios. 5 :30 — Hymn Time. 0:00 — WLW Highlights. 6 :30 — Conservatory of Music. 6:55 — Baseball Scores. 7:00— Enna Jettick Melodies(NBC). 7:15 — Collier's Radio Hour, Blow the Man Down (NBC). 7 :30— Harbor Lights (NBC). 8 :00 — Heel Hugger Harmonies (NBC). 8:15— Bayuk Stag Party (NBC). 8:45 — Ben Bernie's Orchestra, Neth- erland Plaza. 9:15— Variety. 9 :30— KelloggSlumber Music ( NBC ) . Sunday, June 7 10:02 — Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens, 10:15 — Crosley Concert. 1 1 :00— Henry Busse's Orchestra. Castle Farm. 11:15 — Village Rhymester. 11:30 — Henry Thies Orchestra. Midnight— Ben Bernie's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. Al.— 10 :35 — Concordia Lutheran Church. Noon — Sign off. P. Al.— 2:00 — Sermonette and Hymn Time. 2:30 — Manhattan Guardsmen (NBC). 3:00— Dr. S. Parkes Cadman (NBC). 4 :00— Pop Concerts (NBC). 5:00— Catholic Services (NBC). 6 :00 — Old Stogie Memories. 6 :27— Madame LolitaCabrcrc Gainsbourg (NBC). 0:30— RCA Victor (NBC). 7:00— Chase and Sanborn (NBC). 8 :00 — "Our Government," David Lawrence (NBC). 8:15— Atwater Kent (NBC). 8:45— Iodent Big Brother (NBC). 9:15— Willard Robinson Deep River Orchestra (NBC). MONDAY June 8 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.; A, Al.— 6 :00 — Kentucky Good Morning. 6:30— God's Bible School. 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Bob White. new RADIO TUBE SHOP Inaugurates an Exclusive Service for RADIO OWNERS ACREMETER Shows what's wrong with your Radio Tubes at a glance. WE WILL TEST, analyze and match your Tubes while you look on, FREE. Let us X-ray your Radio Tubes on the Acremeter. Ask for the Tube Container which we are trivin^ to al! callers ore- senting this ad. BUY£BEST BY TEST Ken- Rad Cunningham M aj estic Sparton and R. C. A. Tubes We Repair All Makes of Radios 6 07 WALNUfST. OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK 6 RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUNE o. 1981. Monday, June I id) Morning Dance. 9:00— Theronoid. Kentucky Hot Jelta Crane. G i D.mcc Records. In ■■;.. i tassii Hour. [ujical Novelties. M in Mountain Melodies. Noon— Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— ] | BO -Norris Brock. I ■-.:.. -Luncheon Concert. I ;00 Si K ii off. 5 ia Hill Billy Kid. S 55 -Ayera Sport Flash. \mn. 'n' Andy (NBC). i . [, tycasl Testers (NBC). Kill and Boh. 6:45— Little Red Riding H I 7 00- Bob White. 7:15— Kentucky Belle. 7 in- Skillet Lickers. B 00— Steve Bates. B:1G — The Voodoo Charm. 8:45— Anna Powers. 9:00— Stromberg Carlson (NBC). 9:30— U. of C. Quartet, 0:45— Wally, the Radio Clown. WFBR (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn. 7:15— Radio Circus. 7 :S0— Classified Directory. 8:00— Eighth and Walnut Street Garage Program. 8:15— Mountain Valley Greetings. 8 :30— Bacca Coal and Iron Program. 8 :45— Magnccoil Program. 9:00— Hyde Park Community Pro- gram. 9:15— Broering Musicalc. 9:45_Kleeman Furniture Program, 10:00— Tid-Bits, Corinna C. Curran. 10 :05— Vaudeville. 10 :20— Musical Brevities. 10 :35 — Kelvinator Program. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:69 — Simper Time. I I : 0i> — -Victor Herbert Melodies. II :15— Jake Tennenbaum Furniture Program. 11:30— Friendly Wall Paper Program. 11:15— Paul Electric Program. Noon— Otto Gran Piano Recital, P. M.— 12:15— Radio Circus. 13 :80— Fuller, Inc. 12:45— Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00— Zolvo Program. 1 :15 — Matinee. 1 :30— Link's Radio Tube Shop. - 2 :00 — Union Mutual Life Insurance 2:15— The Home Finder. 2:30— Fuller Garden Party. & :46— -B'a s e b a 1 1 Game: Reds vs. Boston, 4 :30 — Radio Circus. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:80— Crown Furniture Program. 5:45 — Donald Galloway, tenor. :00 — Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special. 0:15— Berning Ford. G 30 Mihu-r Musicale. 7:00 -Xavier University C am pus Rambles. 7 :30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re view. 7:45 — Payne Brothers and Hermai Glntison. 8:00— Luckey Boys. S ; |."i llrv Kid^e S|irini: Program. B:30— Camel Cigars. s I-. -Radio Circus. lewtsh Commercial Hour. I I Shopper's Hour. 10:15 — Radio Circus. lo ::t0— Mountain Valley Varieties. 10 :45— Evening Chimes. 11 :00— Radio t ircus. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A.M.- 6:45 — God's Bible Si hool — Suurisi Worship. 7:45 -Ray and Boh. i " Gruen Time. 8:00— The Commuters [< BS) 8 30— Tony's Scrap Book (Home Furniture Co.) (CBS). 9:00 Con! lateti \1. rchants Pro- gram. 9 10 Mi Fixil ■ 9:45 — Classified News Program. 10 :13— Steinharter's Live Stock Quo- tation;;, 10:15— The Madison Singers (CBS) 10:30— Uneeda Bakers (* 10:45— Burke time am! weather. 10:48 — Woman'- Hour — TremlettC Tally. l ! 1 5— Homcmaker's Talk by 1 ulia Hayes. 1 1 i". -Drink-Mor Program, Kings- bury Ann. Fresh Air Taxicab Company Has Vacation as Amos 'n' Andy Fish at Maryland Camp Monday, June 8 7:30-Gold Medal Express (NBC) ■00— Maytag Orchestra (NBC) ; 30_ Real Folks (NBC). 00— Vision-Airs. „*-. 30— Empire Builders (NBC). HO— Great Composers. 30— Variety; 43— Bob Ncwhall, Sport Slices. Till— Estate Weather Man. <>« -Willys Memory Hour. dnight— Henry Busses Orchestra, Castle Farm. - 12:30— Ben Bernie's Orchestra, Netli- erland Plaza. 1 :00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. Andy's "big business" line is as big a failure at landing fish as it is in landing business for the Fresh Air Taxicab Company. Amos (left), as usual is bringing home the bacon (this time it's trout) at the Catoctin, Md., fishing camp of Lawrence Richey, secretary to President Hoover. Amos is Freeman F. Gosden to you, and Andy is Charles J. Correll. Monday, June 8 Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M 12 :30 Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram. 1 :00— A, L. Fink Program. 1 :30— Madame Flor-enz Beauty Program. 1 :45— Studio. 2:00— Louis A. Noclcke Salon Or- chestra (CBS). 2:30— Three Doctors (CBS). 2 :45— Starr-Freeze Melodies. 3:00 — Pilaris Tire Program. 3:15— Queen City Rug Makers. 3:30— Reaume Studio. 3 :45— Hotel Roosevelt Orchestra (CBS). 4:00— God's Bihlc School. 4:15 — Full Measure Gas Program. 4 :30— Aurora Merchants— T ramp Starr. 1:15 — La Gerardine Program (CBS). 5:00— Kampf Artists. ■ r i :15 — Meyer Paint Program. 5 :30— Stearns' & Foster's Magic Mattress Man. 5:45 — Citl'ti Trade School Musicale, 5:59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00— Current Events (CBS). 0:15— Stocks; Cohle & Tyree. 6 :20 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 6:25 — Sports Review. 6 :S0— Evangeline Adams. "Astrolo- ger" (CBS). 0:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS). 7 :0D— Prvor's Cremo Military Band CCBS). 7:1-".— The Barhasol Program (CBS). 7 :30— Your N t i gfa b o r s (Chuhb- Steinberg I 7:45 — Old Wurzburg Malt Program. - 00 rhe Three Bakers (CBS). 8:30— An Evening in Paris (CBS). <1 ;00— Robt. Burns Panatella Pro- cram (CBS). ■ Itzhoover Bright Lights. 9:45— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. in ;00— Pavillion Royal Orchestra (CBS). 10;15— Studio. 10:20— Gruen Answer Man (e. t.) 10:25— Happy Feet 10:30- Studio. in-.^.i— Pelham Heath Orchestra (CBS) Monday, June 8 11:08— George Olsen and his Music (CBS). 11:30— Nocturne (CBS). Midnight— Newton Announcement. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— :00— International Fiddlers. 6:29— Bulova Time. 0:30 — Gvm Classes. 7:45— A". & P. Food News (NBC). 8:00— McCormick's Fiddlers. 8:15 — Organ Program, Arthur Chand- ler. Jr. 8:30 — Morning Devotions. 8:44 — Bulova Time. 8 :45— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC). 0:00 — Housekeeper Chats. 0:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). :30 — Musical Joumev. 9 ■ 15— Winifred S. Carter (NBC) 10:00— Syncopatcrs (NBC). 10:30— Live Stock Reports. [0:40— Jim and Walt. I I :00- Vocal Ensemble. II [5 Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals. Noon — Salt and Peanuts. P. M.— 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :0tl— N at iona 1 Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Seger Ellis. 1 in- Market Reports. 1:45— Ben Bernie's Orchestra, Neth- erlaud Plaza. 2:15— Village Rhymester. 2:30— Chicago Serenade [NBC). 3:00— Mattnee Players. 4:00— Chats with Peggv Winthrop (NBC). 4:15 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona. 4:10— Live Stock Reports. 4 :40 — Afternoon Revelers. 5:00— Music Treasure Box CNBC). 5:15 — Mormon Tabernacle Choir (NBC). 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— WLW Highlights. 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC 6:45 — Baseball Scores. 6:50— Roxy's Gang (NBC). WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC).. 8 -15— Campbell Soup O r c h e s I r ? (NBC). 8:45— Records. 9:00— McCormick's Old Time bid lers. 9:30— Jean Carroll (NBC 1. 0:45— Jerry Foy. 10:00— Blue Streaks (NBC). 10-15— Radio Household I n s ti t u t < (NBC). 10:30— Seger Ellis. 11:00— Sign off. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 : 00— Sign off. P. M.— 2 ;00— Woman's R a d i o R e v i c w (NBC). 3:00— Records. 4:00— Crosley Singers. 4 :30— Records. 4:45 — Sam Wilson, vocal solos. 5 :00— Records, 5:15 — Cecy Gordon; Gene Pcrazzo. 5:30— The' Gossipcrs (e. t.) 5 -.45— Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC). 6 :00— Records. 6:15— "The World Today," James G. McDonald (NBC). :30 — Mrs. Lee Ach, poems. 0:45— Vocal Solos. 7 :00— "How's Business ?", Merle Thorpe (NBC.) 7:15— Webster Program (NBC). 7:30— A. & P- Orchestra (NBC). 8 : 30 — General Motors Program (NBC), 9 :00 — Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (NBC). 9:30— Chcramv Knights (e.t.) 10:00— Ben Bernie's Orchestra ai Netherland Plaza. 10:30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. Tuesday, June 9 8 :00— Shoppers' Hour. 8:15— Mountain Vallej Gn 8:30— Bacca Coal and Iron Program. 8:45— Magnccoil Program, 9:00— The Islanders. 9:15 — Broering Musii ill 9:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program 10:00— Tid Bits Corinna C, Curran L0 :05— Morning Musicale, 10 :20— Musical Brevities in :35 — Kelvinator Program, 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10 :59 -Simper Time. 11:00— Vaudeville. 11 :1B — Jake Teniieubauui [-"urnilun Program. I! :30— Morning Musical* 11:45— Paul Electric Program, Noon — Otto Gran Piano Recital. P. M.— 12:15— Clean Up and Paint 1 : |>. 12:30— Fuller, Inc. 12:45 — Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00 — Zolvo Program 1 :I5 — Matinee. 1 :30— Link's Radio Tube Shop, 2 (in -Payne Brothers 8 Herman Chitison, 2:15 — The Home Finder. '2:30— Fuller Garden Party. 2:45— Reds vs. Boston at Rcdland Field. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30— Crown Furniture Program, 5:45 — Race Auto and Radio Supply. 6:00— Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special, 6:15— Berning Ford. (i :30— Milnet Musical Company. 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra, 7 :30— Harry Hartman's Sporl Re- view. 7 :45 — Barker News. 8:0^— Luckey Boys. 8:15— Dry Ridge Springs Program. 8:30— Camel Cigars. 8:45— Musical Ncwsrcel. 9:15— Radio Circus. 9 -45— Shoppers' Hour. 10:00— Mountain Valley Varieties. 10:15 — Licking River Fiddlers. 10:30— Radio Circus. 10:45— Fuller's Orchestra. II :15— Slumber Music. TUESDAY June 9 WCKY(202m.— 1490kc.; 6 :00— Kentucky Good Morning. 0:30 — Sunrise Worship. :30— Cheerio (NBC). 00— Bob White. 15— Early Morning Dance. 15 — My New Kentucky Hoini Jetta Crane. 9 :45 — Josephine Gibson's Food Talks (NBC). 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:30— Classic Hour. II :00 — Musical Novelties, 11 :30— Mountain Melodies. P. M.— 12:30— Live Stock Quotations. 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45— Hill Billy Kid. 5:55 — Avers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 0:15— Gus Van (NBC). 6:30— Odas Mattox. guitar. 6:45— Dr. Scholl's Ramblers (NBC) 7 :00 — Glenyce Chambers, blues. 7 :15 — Tri-Statc Entertainers. 7:45 — Crinoline Girl, Alma Ashcraff 8:00— Earl Arnold's Orchestra Lookout House. 8:30— Death Valley Days (NBC). 9:00— Happv-Go-Luckv Girls. 9:15— Bob White. 9:30— Arabellc Chambers. 9:45— Skillet Lickers. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn 7:15 — Radio Circus. 7:30— Classified Directory. II 00- Time; Weather; Sports. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 0:45— God's Bible School, Sluu'm Worship. 7:45 — Ray and Bob. 7:50 — Gruen Time. 8 :00— Starr-Freeze Melodies. 8:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (Home Furniture Co.) (CBS). 8:45— Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- gram. 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS). : 1 5— C o I u m b i a M ixed Quartet (Kingsbury Ann) (CBS). 9 :30— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram, 10:00— Queen City Jazz Makers. 10 :15— Steinhartcr Live Stock Quota- tions. 10:17— Classified News Program, 10:45— Time and Weather. 10 :48— Woman's Hour, Tremlette Ttilly. 11:15— Don Bigelow's Orchestra (CBS). 1 1 :30— Homemaker's Talk by Julia Hayes. Noon— Wurlitzer Musi. Box Revue P. M.— 12 :30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00— Pabst-ctt Varieties (CBS). 1:15— Art Dry Cleaning Program. I :30 Studio feature. 2:00— Louis A. Noclcke Melotonc Program. 2:15— Dream Hume, Jimmy and Joan. 2:30— A, L. Fink Program. 3:00— Italian Idyll (CBS) 3:30 — Home Furniture Studio. 3:45— Luna Park Orchescra (CBS). I -Drink-Mor Program. 1:15— Full Measure Gas Program. 4:30— Tramp Starr i Aurora Met chants. 1 :45 — Sweethearts of Ihi \" (CBS). 5:oo— Pilaris Tire Program, 5:15 — Meyer Paint Program. 5:30— Stearns & Fosters' Magic Mai- tress Man. Don't Fool Around with a Good Radio Cone Bad M. W. FANTLE CO. MAin 4648 326 E. 4th RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY. JUNE 5, 1931. Tuesday, June 9 p:4"i — Cincinnati Trade School Mu- sicalc. '■•> Burke Weather. :00— God's Bible School. :15— Cohl & Tyrce Stocks. :10— Stocks; Time; Weather. :2fl I 'irelta Baseball Scores. :2~>— Sports Review. :30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). :45— Camel Quartet hour (CBS). :00— Pryor's Cremn Militarv Rami (CBS). :15— Tommie and Willie. :30— Kaltcnborn Rdiis the News (CBS). :45— Old Wurzburg Malt Program. :'"»■ ■Henrv-Georjre (CBS). :30— Philco Symphony (CBS). :00— Blue Ribbon Malt Jesters CCBS). :1S — Boatbouse Coffee Program, :30— Paramount Publix Radio Plav house (CBS). 00 — Coney Island Orchestra. 15— Studio. 20 — Sports Review. 23 — Happy Feet. 30— Bridge Lessons by Tom Col lins jr. 45— Coney Island Orchestra. 00 — Mr. Good Time, Weather. 32— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 47— Tacoma Dance Orchestra. Julia Hayes Midnight— Newton Announcement. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— G :00 — International Fiddlers. :29— Bulova Time. 0:30 — Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 7:59— Bulova Time. 8:00— Seger Ellis. 8:15— Mouth Health (NBC). 8 :30 — Morning Devotions. 8:45 — Popular Gems. .0:00— Morning Ballads. 9:15— Frances Ingram (NBC). i) :30— Fasbiimctte. 0:45 — Premium Man. 10:00— Murray Horton's Orchestra. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Organ and Vocal Solos, 11:00 — Island Serenaders. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. ' 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals Noon— Tuxedo Trio. P. M— 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:16 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 ;00— National Farm and Home (NBC), I i30 — Salt and Peanuts. 1 : HI— Market Reports. 1:45— Ben Bernie's Orchestra, Neth- erland Plaza. 3:15 — Village Rhymester, 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 2:45— Ed ua Wallace Hopper (NBC), :00— U. S. Navy Band. ;45— Eumer Refik, Pianist. :00— Beauty Secrets by Rigaud, : 15— Organ and Vocal Solos. :30— Live Stock Reports, :10— Glenn Sisters and Ramoua. :00— Murray Horton's Orchestra. :30— Old Man Sunshine. :45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). :00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). .■15-WLW Highlights. :30 — Berry Brothers (e. t.). :45— Gruen Watchmakers u i ,). :")()— Baseball Scores. :55— Seger Ellis. :00— Paul Whiteman's Painters (NBC). :30— Ben Bernie's Orchestra, Neth- erkind Plaza. :45— Sterling Jack. :00— Ben Bernie's Orchestra, \Yth- erlaud Plaza. :15— Sing in' Sam. :30— Werk Bubble Blowers. :0Q— Barbasol Barbers (e. t). :I5— Tastycast Candvkids. :30— Chevrolet Chronicles (e. t.). '"ii— Cotton Queen Minstrels. :30— \'arietv. BRIDGE 9 HE§SOI\S" L tVHIV l lit si ii . |o=iO P.M. STATION WKRC iSO H t«fi> JULIA HAYES Mrs. Blanche Willis-Thomp- son, well-known Cincinnati reader, is giving a series of naif-hour programs known as "Jul'Et Hayes' Helpful Hints To Housewives" as a daily feature at station WKRC. Mrs. Willis- Thompson has been broadcast- ing' these features for more than a year at WKRC. "Julia Hayes" is the syndicated name af the manufacturer sponsoring the program. During this week, the Julia Hayes talks will be on the air at 11:15 on Monday and Wednesday mornings, at 11:30 on Tuesday and Saturday morn- ings, and at 3 o'clock on Thurs- day and Friday afternoons. Tuesday, June 9 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sports Slices 10:58— Estate Weather. 1 1 :00— Los Aniigos. 11:30— Vox Humana. Midnight— Village Rhymester. A. M.— 12:10— Ben Bernie's Orchestra. Neth erland Plaza. 12:30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 1 :0ll— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. WSAI (225 m.-1330 kc.) A. M,— 00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 15— Campbell Soup Orchestra 4-1— Records. 00— "Your Child," Grace Abbott (NBC). 10:15— :R ad i o Household Institute (NBC). 10:30— U. S. Army Band (NBC). 11:00— Sign off. P. M— 12:50— Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop. Comm. Assn. I :UU-Sign off. 2 :00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). :t:00— Records. 4:00— The Lady Next Door (NBC). 4:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4:45 — Records. 5:15 — Vocal Solos. 5:30 — The Gossipers (e. t.l. 5:45— Ryder Cup Team Talk. (>. 00— Organ Program. 6:30— Seger Ellis. 0:45— Larry Grueter, Accordion. 7:00— Blackstone Plantation (NBC). 7:30 — National Dairv Program (NBC). 8 k00— McKesson Musical Magazine (NBC). Tuesday, June 9 y:30— Fuller Brush Man (NBC). 0:00— Luckv Strike Dance (NBC). 10:00— Henry Busse\s Orchestra. Cas- tle Farm. 10 ;;■»— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. WEDNESDAY June 10 -1490 kc.) WCKY(202m, A. M.— ti :00 — Kentucky Good Morning. 0:30— God's Bible School. 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Bob White. 8:15 — Early Morning Dance. 9 :00— Theronoid. 9:15 — My New Kentucky Home Jetta Crane. 9:45— Dance Tunes. l --Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:30— Classic Hour. 11 :00— Musical Novelties. 11:30 — Mountain Melodies. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— 12:30— Live Stock Reports. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45 — Queen Brothers. 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos V Andy (NRC). 6:15 — Italian Serenaders. :30— Bill and Bob. 0:45— Steve Bates. 7:00— Tommy Oil, Pianist. 7:15 — Kentucky Belle, Crooner. 7:30— Christian Glee Club (NBC). 8:00— Skillet Lickers. 8:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. 9:00— Classic Recital: Molly Moore, Ellis Frakes, Harvey Harding. 0:30— Wally, the Radio Clown. 0:45— Little Red Riding Hood. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — Voices at Dawn. 7:15 — Radio Circus. 7 :30 — Classified Directory. 8 :00— Shoppers' Hour. 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30 — Bacca Coal and Iron Program 8 :45— Magnecoil Program. 9 :00— Union Mutual Life Program, 9:15— Broering Musicale. 0:45 — Klecman Furniture Program. 10:00— Tid-Bits. Corinna C. Curran. 10:05 — Morning Musicale. 10:35 — Kelvinator Program. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10 :59— Simper Time. 11:00— Vaudeville. 11 :15 — Jake Tennenbaum Furniture Program. 11 :30 — Musical Brevities. 11:45— Paul Electric Program. Noon— Doll Time. P. M.— 12:01— Otto Grau Piano Recital. 12:15— Radio Circus. 12:30— Fuller. Inc. 12:45 — Bellonby Melodies. 1:00— Zolva Program. I :15 — Donald Galloway, tenor. I :30 — Link's Radio Tube Shop. I :45 — Home Harmonizers. 2:00— Galvano & Cortez. 2:15 — The Home Finder. 2:30 — Radio Circus. •2 :45— Reds vs. Brooklyn at Redland Field. 4 :45 — Radio Circus. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30— Crown Furniture Program. 5:15 — Dinner Music. 6:00 — Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special. 6:15 — Berning Ford. 6:30— Milner Musicale. FLORENCE FREY BEAUTY TALK Every Wednesday, 9:15 A. M. — WLW Permanent Waves Eugene Frederic or — Realistic FLORENCE FREY STUDIO 631 WALNUT STREET CHerrv 610c Wednesday, June 10 :00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. :3i»— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. : 15— Payne Brothers & Herman Chitison. :00— Luckey Boys. :15 — Dry Ridge Spring Program. :30 — Camel Cigars. :45 — Musical Newsreel. :00 — The Islanders. :15 — Radio Circus. :45 — Shoppers' Hour. ;00 — Cincinnati Messianic rest! uiony. Dr. Reed. :30 — Radio Circus. :45— Farl Fuller's Orchestra. :15 — Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m,— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6 :45— Sunrise Worship. 7 : 15 — Raj' and Bob. 7 :59 — Gruen Time. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). S:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). S:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9:00— Mirrors of Beauty (CBS). 9:1.5 — Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- gram. 9 :30— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:00— Fashion Facts (CBS). 10:13— Steinharter's Live Stock. 10:17— Burke time and weather. 10:20— Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tulley. 10:45— Classified News, Program. 11:15— Homemakers' Talk by Julia Hayes. 11:45 — Dn'nk-Mor Program. Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12 :30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1:00— God's Bible School. 1:15— Farm Program (CBS). 2:00— Louis A. Noelcke Salon Or- chestra (CBS). 2:30— Queen City Rug Makers. 2 :45— Syncopated Silhouettes (CBS). 3:15 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 3 :30 — Reaume Studio. 3 :45— Artists' Recital (CBS). 4:00— Pharis Tire Program. 4 :15— Full Measure Gas Program. Wednesday, June 10 1:30 — A. L. Fink— Ben and Helen (CBS). 4:45— A. L. Fink— Bert Lowu Or- chestra (CBS). 5:00 — Kampf Artists. 5:15 — Meyer Paint Program. 5:30 — Steams' & Foster's Magic- Mattress Man. 5:45 — Cincinnati Trade School Mu- sicale. 5:59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6 :00 — Kate Smith Swanee Music (CBS). 6:15— Coble & Tyree — Stocks; time; weather. 6:20 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 0:25 — Sports Review. 6 : 30— Evangeline Adams "Astrol- oger" (CBS). 0:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS). 7 :00— Pryor's Cremo Military Baud (CBS). 7 :15 — The Barbasol Program (CBS). 7 :30— Rbvthin Chorusters (CBS). 7:45— Old Wurzburg Malt Program. N:iH)— Cold Medal Fast Freight (CBS). 8:30— Boatbouse Coffee Program. 8:45 — Vincent Lopez and His Val- voliners (e. t.). 9:00— Vitality Personalities (CBS). 9:15— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 9:30— McAleer Polishers (CBS). 0:45 — Johnson Sea Horse Orchestra (e. t.l. 00 — 1 acoma Dance Orchestra. 15— Studio. 20 — Gruen Answer Man (e. t.). 25— Happy Feet. 30 — Coney Island Orchestra. 00— Time ; Weather ; Sports Re- 11:08 — Tacoma Dance Orchestra. 11 :30— Nocturne; Ann Leaf, Ben Alley (CBS). Midnight — Newton Announcement. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— ti:00 — International Fiddlers, old- time music. 6:29— Bulova Time. 6 :30 — Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 8:00— Seger Ellis. *50 FOR YOUR OLD RADIO or PHONOGRAPH! ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS We also feature NORGE and MAJESTIC electric refriger- ators ... at the most reasonable prices in town. A small down payment, and . . . 2 Years to Pay! To readers of RADIO DIAL, we offer a special allowance of $50 on your old radio or pho- nograph, to apply on the purchase of a new radio. Come in . . . and mention this ad! NINE TUBE 1931 PHILCO The famous PHILCO bala iced-unit radio . . . with PHILCO tone control. 9 tubes. Razor edge selectivity. Volume, distance and power without distortion. Easy terms. $2 a week pays for this marvelous 9-tube set. Tune in Eddie Shea vs. Freddy Miller Fight June 11th. Station WFBE. FRANK'S MUSIC and RADIO SHOP "Cincinnati's Personal Interest Store" 1207 VINE STREET Just Above Twelfth RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1931. Wednesday, June 10 8:15— Organ Program. 8:30— Morning Devotions. 8:45— Bulova Time. 8:46— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC). 9:00— Mary Hale Martin (NBC). 9:15— Florence Frey's Workshop. 9:30— Dance Miniatures (NBC). 10:00— McCornn'ck's Fiddlers. 10:15— Jim and Walt. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Organ Program. Arthur Chandler Jr. 11:00— Glenn Sisters and Ramona. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45— River Reports; Time Signals. Noon — Salt and Peanuts. P. M.— 12:15 — Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Seger Ellis. 1 :40— Market Reports. 1 :45 — Ben Bernie's Orchestra, Neth- erland Plaza. 2:15 — Village Rhymester. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 3 :00— Weather Forecast. 3j01— The Matinee Players. 4 :00— Chats with Peggv Winthrop (NBC). 4:15 — Organ with Instrumentalist. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4 :40 — Jane Froman, Don Becker. 5:00 — Afternoon Revelers. 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15 — DuPont Speed Blenders (e. t). 0:30— Phil Cook (NBC). 6:45 — "Believe It or Not, " Ripley (NBC). 7 : 00— Baseball Scores. 7 :05— WLW Highlights. 7:15— John Ruskin Orchcslra (e. t.). 7 :30— R. F. D. Hour. 8:00— The Buddy Bovs. 8 :30— Sinfonetta. 9:00 — Phil Napoleon's Grenadiers (NBC). 9 :30 — Canova Coffee Hour. 10:00 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas tie Farm. 10:30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. ll:00~Night Songs. 11:30— Crosley Theater. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. A. M.— 12:30— Ben Bernie's Orchestra, Neth- erland~Plaza. 1 :00 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas tie Farm. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. m.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45— Records. 9:15— Stero Program (NBC). 9 :30— National Home Hour (NBC). 10:00— Records. 10:15— Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10:45— Records. 11:00— Sign off. P. M.— [2:50— Live Stock Reports. 1:00— Sign off. 2 :00— Woman's Radio Rcvi (NBC). :l :00— E d n a Wallace Hopper (NBC). 8:16— Records. 4 :00 — Don Becker, ukulele. 4:15 — Minabclle and Jerry. 4 :30 — Poems by Harry Holcombe 4 :45 — Records. 5:00 — Old Man Sunshine. 5:25— Civil Service Talk. 5:30— The Gossipers (e. t.). 5 :45— Little Jack Little ( N BC 1 . B .00— Records. 11:15 — Boscul Moments, with Madame Alda (NBC). li :30— Records. (i :30 — Moments with Madame Alda (NBC). 0:45— Back of the News in Wash ington (NBC). 7 :00— Listerine Program (NBC). 7:15— Mae Questel (NBC). T :30— Mobiloil Concert (NBC). 8:00— National Electric Light Ass'n Program (NBC). 8 :30— Palmolivc Hour (NBC). 9:30— Coca Cola Program (NBC). 10:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 10:30— Ben Bernie's Orchestra, Netlv erland Plaza. 1 1 :00— Sign off. THURSDAY June 11 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 6:00— Kentucky Good Morning. 0:30— Sunrise Worship. 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Bob White. 8:15— Earlv Morning Dance. 9 : 1 5 — My New Kentucky Home, Jetta Crane. 9 :45 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:30— Northam- Warren (NBC). 10:45— Classic Hour. 11:00— Musical Novelties. 11 :30— Mountain Melodies. Noon— Popular Dance Tunes. P. M.— 12:30— Live Stock Quotations. 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert. 12:45— Rev. Chas. A. Vandermuelen. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45— Red Riding Hood. 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 6 :30~Tri-State Entertainers, with Lim and Ham. 00— Dixie Spiritual Singers. 15 — Arabelle Chambers, blues. 30— Blu-Green Blues. 45 — Hugh Cross. 00— Btackstone Plantation (NBC). 30— Betty May, contralto. 45— Ukelele Travelogue. 9:00— Earl Arnold's Orchestra. 9:30— Skillet Lickers. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00— Voices at Dawn. 7:15 — Radio Circus. 7 :30 — Classified Directory. 8:00 — Shoppers' Hour. 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30 — Bacca Coal and Iron Program. 8:45 — Magnecoil Program. 9:00— Dance Frolic. 9:15 — Broering Musicale. 9 :45— Kleeman Furniture Prugram. 10 :00— Tid-Bits, Corinna C. Curran. 10:05— Organ Recital. 10:20— Zolvo Program, 10:35— Kelvinator. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement. 11:00— Variety. 1 1 :15 — Jake Tennenbaum Furniture Program. 11 :30 — Dance tunes. 11:45 — Paul Electric Program. Noon— Otto Gran Piano Recital. P. M.— 12:15 — Clean Up and Paint Up Cam- paign-. 12:30— Fuller, Inc. 12 :45— Bcllonbv Melodies. 1 :00— Radio Circus. 1 :15 — Serenade. I :30— Link's Radio Tube Shop. 1 :45 — Dance Frolic. 2 :00 — Payne Brothers & Herman Chitisou. 2:15 — The Home Finder. 2:30— Radio Circus. 2:45 — Reds vs. Brooklvn at Redland Field. 4:4,5 — Radio Circus. 5 :00— Lyric Hour. 5 :30 — Crown Furniture Program. 5:45 — Race Auto and Radio Supply. 6 :00 — Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special. 0:15— Berning Ford. 6 :30 — Milner Musical Company. 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra" 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7:45 — Barker News. K:00— Luckey Boys. 8 :15 — Dry Ridge Springs Program. 8:30— Camel Cigars. 8:45 — Merchants' Review. 9:00— Freddv Miller vs. Eddie Shea at Redland Field. 10:45 — Musical News Reel. 11:00— Fuller's Orchestra. 11:30— Radio Circus. 11:45 — Shoppers' Hour. 12:00— Sign off. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6:45— Sunrise Worship. 7:45 — Ray and Bob. 7:59 — Gruen Time Signal. 8:00— Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- gram. 8:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8 :45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 9:00— Drink-Mor Program. Jim and Walt Jim (left) and Walt have joined the staff of WLW. They sing harmony, do radio impersonations, and have a clever line of chatter. Jim and Walt, a harmony team that bases its three years of radio success on original songs and chatter that really is funny, have moved to station WLW from station WFBM, Indianapolis, Ind., where they will broadcast daily and will make theatrical appearances for the Crosley Ar- tist Bureau. The boys are brothers, sur- named Bullock. Walt celebrated his 24th birthday the day they arrived at WLW— May 5. Jim is 22. Like so many other har- mony teams made up of relatives their voices are much alike and blend perfectly. Both boys play piano. Jim plays all accompaniments on the air, but on the stage they do two- piano numbers. Jim at the age of five was billed in Chautauquas as an infant prodigy. He was too small to reach the pedals so he learned a pedal-less technique which in radio is greatly to be desired. Although Walt did not start his career as soon as his younger brother, he was singing on the stage when he was seven. They started their radio act as soon as Walt graduated from DePauw University. They write many of their songs. Thirty of their own com- positions have made big hits with their radio audiences and appear on their radio programs. Walt wrote the book, lyrics and music for a musical comedy staged by DePauw while he was a student there. Now when they don't like the words of a popular song, they use the music and write their own lyrics. They also specialize in parodies of currently favored ditties. Their radio act is varied by the introduction of such guest artists as "Tiny Jack Tiny," "Lee Horse," "Morris Chevror let," and the "Drunken Sisters." Listeners recognize them as clever impersonations of famous radio stars. Thursday, June 11 9:15— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. fl :45— Barbara Gould Beauty Talk (CBS). 10:00— Steinharier's Live Stock Quo- tations. 10 :02— Classified News Program. 10:30— Uneeda Bakers (CBS). 10:45— Time and weather (Burke). 10:48— Woman's Hour, Tremlettc Tully. 11:15 — Dream Home, Jimmy and Joan. 11:30— Queen City Rug Makers. 11 :45— Streit Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12 :30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00— To be announced. ] :15— God's Bible School. 1 :30— Studio Feature. 2 :00— Melotone (Louis A. Noelcke). 2:30— A. L. Fink— The Three Doc- tors (CBS). 2:45— A. L. Fink — Rhvthm Ram- blers (CBS). 3 :00— Homcmakcrs Talk by Julia Hayes. 3:30 — Home Furnishing Studio. 3:45— Luna Park Orchestra (CBS). 4 :00 — Asbury Park Casino Orches- tra ; Sports Flashes (CBS). 4:15 — Full Measure Gas Program. ! :30 — Tramp Starr (Aurora Mer- chants), Kingsbury Ann. 4:45— Meet the Artist (CBS). 5:00 — Pharis Program; Sports Flash. 5:15 — Meyer Paint Program. 5:30— Stearns & Foster's Magic Mat- tress Man. 5:45 — Cincinnati Trade School Mu- sicale. 5 :59— Burke— Weather. 6 :00 — Kate Smith and her Swauee Music (CBS). 6:15— Stocks; Cohle & Tyree. 0:18 — Time and weather. Thursday, June 11 :19— Studio. :21 — Eureka Baseball Scores ; Sports. :25— Sports Review. :30— Daddv and Rollo (CBS). :45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS). :00 — Prvor's Cremo Militarv Band (CBS). :15 — Red Top Malt Program. :30— Kaltcnborn Edits the News (CBS). :45— Hamilton Watchman (CBS) :00— The Premier Salad Dressers (CBS). .15 — Tommie and Willie (John Scherz). :30 — Detective Story Program (CBS). :00— The Lutheran Hour (CBS). :30— Fortune Builders (CBS). :45— Peter's Parade (CBS). :00— Big Yank Workshirt Progran (c. t). :15— Studio. 20— Sports Review. 25 — Happy Feet. 30 — Coney Island Orchestra. 00 — Gruen Witching Hour. :30 — Time and weather; Mr. Good :32— Pyol— Blackberry Dudes. ■ :47 — Tacoma Dance Orchestra. :17 — Newton Announcement. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6 :00 — International Fiddlers. ii:29— Bulova Time. 6:30 — Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 7:59 — Bulova Time. 8:00— Seger Ellis. 8:15 — Organ Program. 8:30 — Morning Devotions. 8 :44 — Bulova Time. 8:45 — Popular Gems. 9:00— Ray Perkins (NBC). 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9 :30— Communitv Health, Dr. Carl Wilzbach. Thursday, June 11 9:45 — Housekeeper Chats. 10:00— Murray Horton Orc!u>q r a 10:30— Live Stock Rcpnrls. 10:40— lim and Walt. 1 1 :00— The Venetian Tbrcc. 11 :30— WLW Stars. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals. Noon— Salt and Peanuts. P. M.— 12:15 — Bulova Time. 12:16 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12 :45 — American Cvnamid Program (E. T.). 12 :50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). 1:30 — George, Lava Soap Man (NBC). 1 :45 — Market Reports. 1 :50— Ben Bernie's Orchestra. Neth- erland Plaza. 2:15 — Village Rhymester. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 2:45— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 3:00— Home Decorations (NBC). 3 :15- — Weather Forecast. 3:16 — Afternoon Revelers. 3:30— Maza of Melody (NBC). 4:00— Jim and Walt. 4:15— Gems of Melody (NBC). 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4 :40 — The Crosley Singers. 5:00— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 5:15 — The Ramblers. 5 :29 — Bulova Time. 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'iV Andy (NBC). 0:15— Tastveast Jesters (NBC). 6:30— Glenn Adams, Dog Talks. 6 :45— Gruen Watch Makers (e. t.). 6:50 — Baseball Scores. 6:55 — Seger Ellis. 7 :00— WLW Highlights. 7:15— Rin-Tin-Tin Thriller (NBC). 7 :30— Ben Bernie's Orchestra, Neth- erland Plaza. :00— Barbasol Barbers (e. t.). 15— Glenn Sisters and Ramona. 30— Phoenix Hosiery (e. t.). 45 — Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. 9:00— Crimelights. 9:30— Clara. Lou and Em (NBC). 9:45— -To be announced. 10:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 10:30— Varietv. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 10:58— Estate Weather Man. 11 :00 — Old Masters' Chime Reveries. Midnight— Village Rhymester. A. M.— 12:10— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12 :30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 1 :00 — Ben Bernie's Orchestra, Neth- erland Plaza. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15— Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45— Records. 0:00— McCormick's Old Time Fiddlers. 9 :15— Records. 9:45 — Organ Program. 10:00— Records. 10 :15— R a d i o Household Institute (NBC). 10:30— McCormick's Old-Time Fid- dlers. 10:45— Sign off. P. M.— 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— Sign off. 1:45— Dr. Scholl Reveller (NBC). 2 :00— Woman's Radio R e v i e w (NBC). 00— Records. 00— Mona Motor Organ Recital. 30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 45 — Records. 00— Travel Talk, Joseph Ries. 16 — Seger Ellis, popular songs. 30 — The Gossipers (e. t.). 45— Black and Gold Room Orches- tra (NBC). 00— Records. 25 — Better Business Bureau Talk. 30— Records. 45 — Vocal Solos. 00— Fleischmaun Hour (NBC). :00 — National Electric Association Program. 8:30— Jack Frost's Melody Moments (NBC). 9 :00— Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra (NBC). 10:00— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. 10:30— Henry Busse's Orchestra. Cas- tle Farm. 11 : on — Sign off. ©cib lie" 9 JUN 12 1931 WEEKLY Volume I, No. 4 FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1931 Price 5c President Hoover, Coolidge Will Broadcast This Week Ruth Roland Sings Wednesday on WKRC - Columbia Network Rutn Roland, now a vaudeville headliner, will be guest artist on the Vitality Personalities program to be broadcast at 9 o'clock Wednesday night (June 17) through WKRC. Miss Roland will long be remembered by movie fans for the thrilling stunts she staged in a long series of hair-raising adventure pictures, prior to the advent of the talkies. BELMONT STAKES The Belmont Slakes, turf classic, will be broadcast by WLW and the NBC network at 3 o'clock Saturday after- noon (June 13). Maurice Maurice Chevalier will sing a French comedy song, "Si J'Avats Su" in his Chase and Sanborn appearance Sunday night (WSAI at ? o'clock). WCKY Basso May Sing Thursday From California Ellis Frakes, WCKY basso, probably wifl be heard in the Grand Prize contest of the Na- tional Federation of Music Clubs when WLW broadcasts from the N. F. M. C. convention in San Francisco at 4 o'clock Tuesday afternoon (June 18). Frakes won the Kentucky division of the concert and was sent to Cali- fornia for the convention. It is possible that his solo will be in- cluded in the portion of the con- test to be broadcast. Dennis King Will Appear Nightly As Linit Soloist Jane Froman Will Leave WLW Staff for Chicago Job Jane Froman, pretty "blue" singer, has resigned fromWLW's staff to join the entertainment forces of WBBM and the Co- lumbia networks' Chicago office. She recently refused an offer to make talking picture "shorts" al- though she may accept the proposition this winter. She also is reported to have refused offers from Paul Whiteman when he was in Cincinnati last summer. Green Pastures Actors from "Green Pastures" are doing selections from Roark Bradford's "01' King David and the Philistine Boys" in the Over Jordan series WLW carries at 3 :30 Sunday afternoon. The book is the one on which "Green Pastures" is based. It gives a negro's conception of the Old Testament. Count von Luckner Is Coca Cola's Guest Speaker Count Felix Von Luckner, German naval hero of the World War, will be inter- viewed by Grantland Rice in the Coca Cola program through WSAI at 0:30 Wed- nesday night (June 17). Chief Executive to Speak June 16 from Marion, O. Calvin Coolidge Will Pre- side al Dedication of Harding Memorial Dennis King, romantic star of The Vagabond King" a n d Zieglield's version of "The Three Musketeers," will be heard the Linit program through WKRC and the Columbia net- work at (j :15 every night in the week except Saturday and Sun- day beginning Monday (June The 30-year-old English actor was a leading figure on the legitimate stage long before Ar- thur Hammerstein, convinced that he possessed a fine singing voice, cast him as the leading man in "Rose Marie." I lis first \merican success was as Mer- cutio in "Romeo and Juliet" with Jane Cowl. His run as Francois Villon in the New York and Chicago pro- ductions of FrimTs "Vagabond King" was phenomenal. Last year a talking picture version of the musical play was made in technicolor. Cincinnatians saw (Continued on page 3) President Hoover's dedicatory address Tuesday ( June 1 (i ) at the unveiling of the memorial to the late Warren G. Harding at Marion, O., will be broadcast over a nation-wide networks of both NBC and CBS. WLW and WSAI will carry NBC's account of the services beginning at 2 p. m. WKRC has not yet decided whether or not it will take the CBS broadcast. Former President Calvin Cool- idge as presiding officer will pre- sent the white-columned tomb to the state of Ohio. Governor George White will respond. Preceding President Hoover's address, former Senator Joseph Frelinghuysen, New Jersey, will speak. The Columbus Glee Club will sing. Dr. Jesse Swank, pas- tor of the Harding home church. will pronounce the benediction. Murder Mystery "The Bells" or "The Polish Jew," a three-act murder mystery from the old classics, will be en- acted aboard "Hank Simmons' Show Boat Saturday (June 13) from 9 to 10 p. m., and broad- cast through WKRC and the Columbia Broadcasting System. Renew your subscription to RADIO DIAL See Page 7 Complete Radio Programs Begin on Page 4 RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY. JUNE 12, 1931. Weekly RADIO DIAL Published every Thursday by the Radio Dial Publishing Co., 22 East 12th St., Cincinnati, Ohio. Contents copyrighted. NATALIE GIDDINGS. Editor VOL. I JUNE 12, 1931 Maybe He's Right After All Sir John Keith is visiting America. Incredibly enough, he is not another English lecturer. Instead, lie is the big boss of the British Broadcasting Co. And what a boss! Says Sir John, explaining the principle on which his company operates, "We give the British listener what is good for him; not just what he wants." It almost goes without saving that this makes him the rarest of rare birds alongside his American radio hosts. On this side of the pond the broadcasting bosses trample one another in the mad rush to give us what we want, whether it's good for us or not. But what do we want anyway? There's a real poser. For the answer, check over a list of the popular features that were riots two or three years ago, and see bow many are going concerns today. Then do the same thing with a list (it won't be long) of features that are good for us. The difference in the propor- tion of survivors will startle you. Yes, we instinctly resent Sir John's benevolent despotism. Il smacks too much of Mussolini. This is a land where majorities, not dictators, rule. Just the same, there is a chance that mixing a little more of the Keith ingredient into the American radio pre- scription might be a good thing. At any rate, it could cut the terrific turnover in the studios and save a lot of restless wrist motion at the dial. For, hasn't radio shown that we're pretty much like children after all? We speedily tire of our cute program toys and demand new ones. Yet, after a little cautious nibbling, we come to enjoy the broadcast spinach more and more. Sherlock Holmes It Pays to Listen Joseph W. Wittwer, 3463 Ruther Ave., Clifton, is con- vinced that it pays to listen to radio- programs. He won a Chevrolet coach in the contest announced night- ly at 7 o'clock during Arthur Pryor's Crenio Band program on WKRC. Wittwer wrote 20 words about Crenio cigars to win the car. His name was announced during the Cremo program last Saturday. Little Red Riding Hood Has Double Birthday Party There are birthday parties and birthday parties. Little Red Riding Hood, tiny star of station WCKY lays claim to the biggest birthday party ever staged in this part of the country. When she casually remarked a couple of weeks ago that she soon would be live years old, L. B. Wilson, president, and Jerry Akers, general manager of the station, decided to give her a bi rthday party she would re- member the rest of her life. On each of her programs on the air they issued invitations to all children under 12 to a birth- day party to be held June 6 at the Broadway theatre in Coving- ton, Ky. To their consternation, they found the morning of the party that Little Red Riding Hood had issued far more invitations than the theatre could hold . They solved the problem by opening the Liberty Theatre also and having two birthday parties in- stead of one. More than 4,000 children in the two theatres helped celebrate the birthday, entertained by a special movie and acts from WCKY. Little Red Riding Hood received so many birth- day presents that she still is un- wrapping packages. Cathedral Hour Includes Famous Church Choruses Church choruses most often requested will be represented in the Cathedral Hour on Sunday afternoon (June 14) from 3 to 4 o'clock, over WKRC and the Columbia network, the Mendels- sohn cantata "Hear My Prayer" being rendered in full. The Mendelssohn cantata is unusually dramatic for a work of its kind, and includes the famous "Oh, for the Wings of a Dove." Other favorite pieces selected for the hour are '"How Lovely is Thy Dwelling Place," from Brahms' "German Requiem," and Liddle's "Abide with Me." Commuter Arthur Ainsworth, WLW an- nouncer, is building a home in Mt. Washington, 20 miles from the station's studios. It is re- ported that he fills in short radio programs now by reading ex- cerpts from seed catalogues. Rhapsody in Blue Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue," the first "symphonic jazz" work ever to be accepted by the world's greatest orchestras for performance side by side with the compositions of the great mas- ters, will be presented by the Philco Symphony orchestra at 8:30 Tuesday night (June 16) over WKRC and the Columbia network. The piano solo parts will be played by Alexander Semler. Renew your subscription to RADIO DIAL See Page 7 Richard Gordon, Broadway actor, in the role of Sherlock Holmes which he has been play- ing for the last six months every Monday night (9 p. m.) through WSAI and an NBC network. Next Monday (June 15) , "The Adventure of Abbey Grange" will conclude the series o f Adventures o f Sherlock Holmes for the summer. The plays will be resumed in the Fall with "The Adventure of the Speckled Band." According to the sponsors (G. Washington Coffee) Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson need a vacation. Light Classics to be Played in Sunday Concert As a special feature of Pasto- rale, a half hour of classical music, Andre Kostelanetz's or- chestra will play the "Danse des Mirlitons" from Tschajkowsky's "Nutcracker Suite," Sunday af- ternoon (June 14) at 4:30, over WKRC and the Columbia net- work. In addition, there will be spe- cal solo presentations by Cathe- rine Field, soprano; Crane Cal- der bass ; Charles Carlisle, teiior, and Mildred Johnson, contralto. The complete program follows : Orchestra: Contra Dance Beethoven Quartet: SolveiVs Song Grieg Tenor: The Little LiU Garden. .. .Osgood Orchestra: Irish Silhouette Hadlcy Quartet: Orpheus with His Lute Barratt Orchestra: Danse des Mirlitons (Nutcracker Suite) Tschaikovsky Soprano, bass duo: Trot Here and There fVcronique) Mcssagcr 'Cello: To a Wild Rose McDowell Suartet: The Kerry Dance Molloy rchestra: The Woodland Fairy Grieg True Story Hour With their setting in the heart of Hollywood, Calif., center of the motion picture industry, Mary and Bob, True. Story ad- venturers, will take part in the prologue to the dramatization, "Not Made for Love," on WKRC and the Columbia chain, Friday (June 12) at 8 p. m. The True Story Hour is to go off the air soon to return in the Fall on an NBC hook-up. A program for Liberty Magazine probably will take its place on Columbia. Twisting the Dial By THE DIAL TWISTER . So the Graybar people yearn to know whether the great invisi- ble audience wants "Joe and Vi" back on the air in the fall. Well, if they haven't found out by this time it's only because there's a nation-wide epidemic of pen paralysis "or sometliin'." In fact, if they succeed in keeping the Green family off the air till fall, they have mighty sturdy sales resistance. * * * Those Dixie Spiritual Singers are drawing plenty of dials to WCKY every Thursday night (7 o'clock) for a quarter-hour of harmonizing that can't be dupli- cated. * * * WLW is saving its switch- board girls a lot of work by add- ing "short -wave" to the WXAL announcement. Listeners were getting all excited about another Crosley station. Yes, it's a snappy new 10,000-watt trans- mitter. But it's not a new station. There's been a W8XAL for sev- eral years, using 250 watts. The frequency is 60G0 k. c. So don't waste time trying for it unless you have a short-wave set. * * * That Coca Cola show turns up a refreshing earful at WSAI Wednesday night, especially when the interviewee takes the bit in his teeth and runs away from Grantland Rice ; for in- stance, James Montgomery Flagg last Wednesday. He may have committed sacrilege, but he was interesting, as most of the sport headliners in the act are. * * * H. B. Kaltenborn is going great guns in his three-a-eew turn over WKRC (Sunday, Tuesday Thursday at 7:30 p. m ,i. His news notes are different from most of the others because he is what you might call the editorial writer of the air. and a corking good one. * * * Waller Damrosch celebrated his fiftieth musical anniversary with a delightful program over WLW last Wednesday night. Deems Taylor hit the nail when he said the genial doctor is the most beloved musician since Franz Liszt. Anyway, radio with- out Damrosch would be like a pipe without tobacco. * * * When better broadcasting laughs are built. Brad Browne and Al Llewllyn (otherwise the Premiere Salad Dressers) will build them. If you suspect your funnybone of going haywire, try it out on these nimble nuts, at WKRC Thursday at 8 p. m. * "* * Drat Bob Newhall's sun- burned hide! He simply makes you stay up till 11 o'clock with the' dial parked on WLW, when you ought to be in the hay. Yes, and has anybody scored more than 50 on those sports ques- tions ? Ye Old Dial Twister hasn't broken 30 so far, but he's still in there trying. That likeable chap. Alexander McQueen, is packing them in on WKRC's channel when he does his daily 5 :30 act as the Sterns and Foster Mattress Man. His supply of interesting facts seems inexhaustible. FRITZI SCHEFF Fritzi Scheff, who immor- talized Victor Herbert's "Kiss Me Again," will be presented in a program of Viennese music over WSAI and an NBC network Sunday (June 14), from G:00 to G :30 p.m. Last Night The last Evening in Paris presentation until fall will be carried by WKRC and the Co- lumbia network Monday night (June 15) at 8:30. The program will be a review of the most popular features including Pierre Brugnon, tenor and master of ceremonies; the Bourjois male quartet, and Max Smollen's or- chestra. Mid-Day Jewels Mile. Alys Michot, French opera soprano, will sing at WLW every Sunday noon in the new Mid-Day Jewels program. She will be supported by an in- strumental trio. Pinch-Hitter Alma Ashcraft is conducting "My New Kentucky Home," WCKY's Woman's hour every morning at 9 :15 while Jetta Crane takes a vacation trip. Musical Comedy Song Hits Appear in Star Reveries Song hits from musical come- dies of yesterday will be sung by Helen Gilligan, soprano, and Mil- ton Watson, tenor, "during the broadcast of Star Reveries over the Columbia network and WKRC Sunday (Tune 14) at 9 :45 p. m. Miss Gilligan was starred on Broadway in "Hold Everytbng," from which she will sing "To Know You is to Love You." The complete program follows : Medley of Romberg Tunes Orchestra Duet: "Babe* i„ i[,e Wo.*]." from "Very Good Eddie". .Gillian and Watson Mulhy. from "Leave It lo jane". -Orchestra Aiif Wicdcrsehn, Gilligan, Watson and ensemble To Know You is to Love You, Gilligan, Watson and "ensemble Playwright Robert Brilmayer has written 56 radio plays for WLW in the past nine months. He writes the Crimelight plays (WLW, Thurs- day at 9 p. m. and many of the Crosley Theatre dramas. Collier's Hour Off Colliers' Hour is off the air for the summer. In its place (Sunday. 7:15 to 8:15 p. in.) WLW has three NBC programs: Blow the Man Down, Harbor Lights, and Heel Hugger Har- monies. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1931. Orchestra Would Rob Pet Seal of Canned Sardines Even the live stock at WLW receive fan mail, Rupert, the trained seal mascot on the morning Gym classes has received a can of sardines from one of hi* admirers. Robert Burdette, Strong Man who conducts the Gym classes, declares it is only by brute strength that lie protects Ru- pert's sardines from the on- slaughts of Murray Morton's hungry musicians who oft-times miss their ham and eggs in get- ting to the studios promptly at 6 :30 a. m. for this early pro- gram. Seger Ellis, baritone singer, has left WLW to return to New York to make Brunswick records. Irvin S. Cobb Irvin S. Cobb, author and humorist, will be heard as guest artist on the Enna Jet- tick program to be heard through both WCKY and WLW Sunday night ( June 14) at 7 o'clock. The "Sage of Paducah" will tell radio listeners "Why We Love The Old Songs Best." A mixed quartet will sing two or three of the songs to which Cobb refers in his talk. r -^jf^ Natalie Towers is the first girl ever engaged by a national net- work exclusively for television purposes. Although the problems to be encountered m television ex- perimentation cannot be forseen. Miss Towers was selected from a field of several hundred ap- plicants after tests of her photo- graphic values, and of her speak- ing and singing voice before the microphone under a variety of conditions. She will be used in the ex- perimental television tests which the Columbia network plans to inaugurate with a daily six-hour schedule on June 15. Work is now being rushed on the installation of the station, which will operate on a channel of from 2750 to 2850 kilocycles with 500 watts power. Our Dialy Dozen By DON BECKER Many people think because Sidney Ten Eyck and I write humor for radio, we're ene- mies. That's ail wrong. We're very good friends. So good, in fact, we steal lines from each other, without the other one knowing it. * * * Wed like to see a Slaughter House go on the air. We've picked out a theme song for them, all right — "You Slay Me." And then we'd like to see and hear Edna Wallace Hopper run for office. Listen to her beauty talk some afternoon and feel as if you've been run over by a truck. * * * I doff the Beret to Ben Ber- nie, "The Old Maestro." His wit goes a long way — his music farther. At present he is expounding the merits of Blue Ribbon Malt over WKRC on Tuesday. We met Ben the other day — he's a great golfer. Says he always shoots a 75. Shoots until he gets a 75, then quits. * * * Henry Thies claims the quick- est way to tell how many listen- ers a station has is to say "Damn" over its microphone. Charlie Dameron says try offer- ing a ten-dollar gold, piece. * * * After listening to the Sports Announcers in England on the Epson Derby, let us all kneel down tonight and whisper a prayer of thanks to Graham McNamee and Ted Husing. * * * Murray Horton, who plays for the Gym classes at WL^^ is suffering from a house-repair bill. He had his exercise chart upside down one morning and pushed himself through the floor. Dialaughingly yours, DON BECKER. WCKY Trio Chooses Music by Chopin for Next Concert Chopin has been selected by the WCKY Trio as composer of their program at 9 o'clock Wed- nesday night (June 17). Molly Moore, soprano, and Maurice Thompson, baritone, will sing three duets set to music by Chopin: "All the World is Asleep," "Dancing by Moon- light." and "Chopiniana." Tommy Ott. pianist, will ac- company (he vocalists and will play several solos. Every week the three musicians devote the 30-minute period to the works of some master composer. New Charlene and Katherine, both Cincinnati girls, have crossed the Ohio river to join the staff of WCKY. Charlene sings "blues," Kalbcrine plays "novelty piano." Kate Smith Kate Smith, whose Swanee Music is heard four nights a week through station WKRC and Columbia, never has been accused of being anemic. Even at her birth in Wash- ington, D. C, 22 years ago, Kate Smith was plump. Successive years never have found her diet- ing. She is happiest, she says, when eating rich desserts, and she likes to be happy. Her professional career is only six years old. She sang in 1925 at a benefit in Washington. Eddie Dowling m the audience heard her croon and immedi- ately engaged her for "Honey- moon Lane." When the show- closed she promptly was cast in "Hit the Deck." Her latest stage appearance was in a riot- ous singing and dancing act in George White's "Flying High." This success led her to a radio contract. Kate Smith is blonde, blue- eyes, wears no make-up on the street, and sings to her maid while putting on her stage make- up. She wears solid colors — blue, white, black, hut never red. Her speaking voice is as hearty as any of her songs. She has ambition to earn an airplane pilot's license, but her sense of humor tells her not to bother. Her sense of humor is lustier than her ambition. Columbia did her the honor of giving her the toughest spot on the air: 6 p m. as competition to Amos V Andy. WKRC has the program Wednesday, Thurs- day, Friday and Saturday. Old Time Musicale The Dutch Masters will take radio listeners down memory lane Friday night (June 12) at 7:30 through WKRC when they re- vive song hits of 1891, 1905, 1907. 1915, and 1916 with the accompaniment of the orchestra directed by Eugene Ormandy. Nightly The Skillet Lickers will be on the air at WCKY at 11 :30 every morning this week as well as every night. EARN VACATION MONEY! Extra Money lor your spare time — SELL RADIO DIAL! Every home needs the DIAL. Easy to sell 30 to 40 a day in your spare time. Ask lor Mr. Kelly, 22 E. 12th Street, Cincinnati. Original M. C. is Vallee Guest Thursday Night Julius Tannen, well-known humorist of the American stage, will be guest artist on the Fleischmann Hour when it is broadcast over WSAI and on the NBC network Thurs- day night (June 18) from 7 lo 8 o'clock. Tannen was the originator of the master of ceremonies idea. Rudy Vallee and his Connecticut Yankees will hold down the lion's share of the hour. WCKY Concert Presents Violin, Piano Students Jewel Litz, violinist, and Viola Huber, pianist, will share the College of Music of Cincinnati student program at station WCKY on Sunday (June 14) at 7 :15 p. m. The program follows : Connni? Ill le pays (Mignon) . . A. Thomas Chanson de Florian Godard Miss Huber Romance, Op. SO Beethoven Miss Litz Wake Up Philip The Sleep that Flits on Baby's Eyes Carpenter Miss Huber Sonata in D major Corelli Romance Cyril Scott Miss Lit?. Miss Litz is a pupil of Ernest Pack. Miss Huber is a pupil of Lino Mattioli. Anna Gay from the class of Hans Rischard will accompany Miss Litz. Miss Huber's accompanist will be Wil- fred Marone from the class of Howard Wentworth Hess. Milk Man's Pal Hugh Cross, the boy from Smoky Mountains, says he knows every milk wagon driver in Cov- ington, Ky. Cross conducts the f> a. m. period at WCKY known as "Kentucky Bids the World Good Morning." Brooks and Ross Have Three Spots Weekly on CBS lack Brooks and Don Ross, lat'e of WLW, and WKRC's R. B. program are now heard from the Chicago studios of the Co- lumbia network each Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 5:30 to 5:45 p. m. Dennis King (Continued from page 1 ) him in the picture and as D'Ar- tagnan in "The Three Muske- teers." In his radio programs, King will sing two songs each night and will read either a poem or lines from some famous play. Monday night he will sing Zuc- ca's stirring "Nichivo," and Moya's f a m i liar "Song of Songs." The poem will be Ernest Dowson's "Cynara." A 20-piece orchestra under the direction of Maximilian Pil- zer, former concertmeister of the New York Philharmonic, will ac- company King and will play two concert selections on c ;i c h broadcast. Delineator Home Expert to Talk on Dining Rooms Joseph B. Piatt of New York, one of the leading de- signers of home furnish- ings and acces- sories in the country, and a widely known writer will be the speaker in the second of the Home Harmony programs to be given by electrical transcription over WFBE on Wednesday af- ternoon (June 17) at 1:45. Mr. Piatt is director of the Institute of Interiors of The De- lineator. His writings in that magazine have been read and studied by thousands of house- wives. How to Make the Dining Room in the Home Express the Utmost in Charm and Hospital- ity will be the subject of the talk. Before and after the talk, the Home Harmonizers directed by Robert Hood Bowers will play appropriate music, including "Tuck Me to Sleep in My Old 'Tucky Home" and "The End of a Perfect Day." Luckey Boys The Luckey Boys at WFBE (Al Luckey and Charlie Kohler to you) have a style of harmony that isn't "crooning," "senti- mental," or "blue," that they use every night at 8 o'clock. Their theme song is "Will You Love Me Till My Used Car is a Wreck?" Name Wanted The Queen Brothers, aged 15. 17. and 19, of Ingalls, N. Caro- lina, want their WCKY listeners to coin a theatrical name for them. The boys are from the heart of the Blue Ridge moun- tains. They sing tvpical hill-billy music. Cross Paul Whiteman rarely smiles when he is directing his orchestra. One tiny little error, and he frowns. A marked error, and the rehearsal the next day is much longer. Win Five Dollars For the three best jingles re- ceived every week for the Blue Green Blues program at WCKY (Thursday at 7:30 p.m.) three five-dollar books of Blue Green High Sea gas coupons arc given. The jingles are added to "the longest song in the world." Gen. Smedley D. Butler General Smedley D. Butler, of "hell" and Mussolini fame, will deliver an address from Charlestown, Mass., over WSAI and an NBC network Tuesday (June 16) at 9 p.m. General Butler speaks on the eve of the anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1931. Here Are Only Complete Programs FRI DAY June 12 WCKY (202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— G :00— Kentucky Good Morning (i :05 — Hugh Cross 6:30 — God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship 7:30— Cheerio (NBC) 8:00— Bob White 8:15 — Early Morning Dance 9 :00— Theronoid :15 — My New Kentucky Home, 9 :45— Josephine B. Gibson's Food Talks (NBC) 10:00— Dance Melodies 10:30— Classic Hour 11:00— Musical Novelties 11 :30 — Mountain Melodies Noon— Popular Dance Tunes 12 :30— Norris Brock Live Stock Reports 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert P. M.— 1 :00— Sign off 5 :45 — Queen Bros. 5 :55 — Ayers News Sport Flash 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC) 6:15 — Eilermau's Marimba Ser- enades 6:45— Bill & Bob 7:00— Hugh Cross 7 :15— Augusta Litzendorff, C o n- tralto 7:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House 00— Interwoven Pair (NBC) 30 — Union College Quartette 00— Armstrong Quakers (NBC) 30— Skillet Lickers WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00 — Voices at Dawn 7:15 — Radio Circus 7:30 — Classified Directory 8 :00 — Shopper's Hour 8 :15— Mountain Valley Greetings 8:30 — Starr Freeze Morning Musicale 8 :45 — Magnecoil Program 9:00— The Islanders 9 :15 — Radio Circus 9 :30— Serenade 9:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program 10 :05 — Serenade 10:20— Zolvo Program 10:35 — Kelvinator Program 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk 10 :59 — Simper Time Announcement 11:00— Organ Recital 11:15 — Travel Bureau 11:30— Variety 11 :45— St n d eba kc r Champions (E. T.) P. M.— 12:01— Otto Grau Piano Recital 12:15— Radio Circus 12:30— Fuller. Inc. 12:45— Bcllonby Melodies 1 :00— S tarr Freeze Program (E. T.) 1 :15— Vaudeville 1:30— Radio Circus 1 :45 — Don Galloway, tenor 2:15 — The Home Finder 2:30 — Radio Circus 2:45— Reds vs. Brooklyn at Redland Field 4:45— Fuller Garden Party 5:00— Lyric Hour 5:30 — Crown Furniture Program 5 :45 — Dinner Music 6:00— Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special 6:15 — Berning Ford 6:30 — Milner Musicale Company 7:00 — Earl Fuller's Orchestra 7:30— Harry H a r t m a n's Sport Review 7:45— Payne Brother:, & Herman Chitison 8:00— Luckey Boys 8:15— Dry Ridge Spring's Program 8 :30— Colonial Stages Program 8 :45— Champion Sparkers (E, T) 9:00— Camel Cigars 9:15— Radio Circus 9:45 — Evening Chimes 10:00— Shopper's Hour 10:15— Mountain Valley Varieties in : 30-Fuller's Orchestra 11:00— Slumber Music Director of British Broadcasting Receives Distinguished Service Medal Sir John C. Reith, director-general of the British Broadcasting Corporation, is shown here th the medal presented him by the Columbia Broadcasting System in recognition of his con- tributions to the development of international radio relations. Friday, June 12 WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) a. m.— 6:45— God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship 7:45— Traxel Galleries 7:59— Gruen Time Signal 8 :00 — Starr-Freeze Melodies S:15— Pilaris Program 8 :30 — S w e e t h e a r t s of the Air (CBS) 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS) 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS 9:15 — Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram 9:45— Don and Betty (CBS) 10:00— Emily Post (CBS) 10:15 — Crisco Cooking Travelogues (CBS) 10:30 — Commonsense For Mothers (CBS) 10:45— Helen Home (CBS) 11:03 — Woman's Hour — Tremlette Tully 11 :30— Classified News Program Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue p. m.— 12 :30 — Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- grain 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS) 1 :15— Art Dry Cleaning Program 1 :30 — Chicago Market Program 1 :45 — Madame Flor-enz Beauty Program 2:00— Salon Orchestra (NBC) 2:30— Queen City Rug Makers 2 :45 — Columbia Educational Fea- ture (CBS) 3:00— Home-maker's Talk bv Julia Hayes 3 :30 — Fred Gear Program 3 :45— Edna Thomas, Lady from Louisiana (CBS) 4:00— Luna Park Orchestra (CBS) 4:30— A. L. Fink: John Kelvin, tenor (NBC) 5 :00— Drink-Mor Program 5 :15 — Meyer Paint Program 5:30 — Stearns and Foster's Magic Mattress Man 5 :45 — Cincinnati Trade School Musicale 5:59 — Bnrke Weather Forecast '1 :00 — Home Furniture Company — Kate Smith and Her Swanee Music (CBS) (i :15— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree 11:20— Eureka Baseball Scores II :25 — Sports Review 6 : 15- 7:00- 7:30- 8:00- 9:00- 9:30- 10:00- 10:15- 10:25- 10:30- 11:00- 1 1 :08- 11:15- 11:30- Friday, June 12 -Red Goose Adventures (CBS) -Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) -Prvor's Cremo Military Band (CBS) -Barbasol Program (CBS) -Dutch Masters (CBS) -True Storv Hour (CBS) -Van Heusen Program (CBS) -The March of Time (CBS) -Confessions of a Racketeer (E. T.) -Gruen Answer Man (E. T.) -Happy Feet -Coney Island Orchestra -Time ; Weather ; Sports -Studio -Pyol Blackberry Dudes -Nocturne — Ann Leaf, Ben Alley (CBS) WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. AL- II :00— International Fiddlers G:30— Gym Classes 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 8:00— Bradley Kincaid 8:15— Organ Program, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 8 :30 — Morning Devotions 8 :45— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC) 9:00— Ray Perkins (NBC) 9:15— "The Hostess," Mrs. Lutye Sohngen 9:30— Your Garden 9 :45 — Premium Man 10:00 — Island Serenaders 10:30— Live Stock Reports 10:40— Vocal Ensemble 11:00— Organ with Instrumentalist 11 :15— Swift Program (NBC) 11:30— WLW Stars 11:45 — River Reports: Time Signals Noon— Tuxedo Fiddlers p. M.— 12:15— Bulova Time 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:50— Live Stock Reports 1 :00— National Farm and Home (NBC) 1 :30— Salt and Peanuts 1 :40— Market Reports 1 :45 — Netherland Plaza Orchestra 2:15 — Village Rhymester 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC) 3:00— Jim and Walt 3:15— Radio Guild (NBC) I :15 — Ramona Friday, June 12 4 :30— Raymond Mitchem ; Mills Brothers 5 :00 — Words and Music 5:30— Old Man Sunshine 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) 6:15— Madame Alda'(NBC) 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC) 6:45— WLW Highlights 7 :00— Baseball Scores 7:05— Elliott Brock Military Band 7:30— Boswell Sisters (NBC) 7 :45 — Sterling Jack 8:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 8:30 — Hoosier Editor 8:45 — Armour Program (NBC) 9:00— Armstrong Quakers (NBC) 9:30— Clara, Lu and Em (NBC) 9 :45 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona 10:00 — Kingtaste Sonneteers 10 :30— Variety 10:45— Bob Newhall Sport Slices 11 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra 11 :15— Jim and Walt 11 :30— Henry Bussc's Orchestra, Castle Farm (NBC-Blue) Alidnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra A. M.— 12 :30— Henry Bnsse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 1 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8 :00 — Gene and Glenn, the Quaker Early Bird (NBC) 8:15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC) 8 :45— Records 9:00— Organ Program 9:15— Records 9 :30— National Home Hour (NBC) 10:00— Hawaiian Serenaders (NBC) 10:30— Records 11 :00— Sign Off P. M.— 12 :50 — Livestock Reports 1:00— Sign Off 2 :00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC) 3:00— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC) 3 :15 — Records 3 :45— Jim and Walt 4 :00— Records 4 :30 — Moore Paint Program (NBC) Friday, June 12 4 :45 — Records 5:00— Poems by Harry Holcombc 5:15— Don Becker, Ukelele 5:30— The Gossipcrs (E. T) 5:45— Little Jack Little (NBC) 6 :00— Records 6:30— Alice Richards 6 :45 — Records 7:00— Cities Service Concert (NBC) 8:00— Clicquot Club (NBC) 8 :30— Pond's Afternoon Tea (NBC) 9:00— Kodak Week End (NBC) 9:30— RKO Theater of the Air (NBC) 10 :00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 10:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra SATURDAY June 13 -1490 kc.) Home, Club WCKY (202m A. M._ 6 :00 — Kentucky Good Morning 6:30— God's Bible School— Sui Worship 7:30— Cheerio (NBC) 8:00— Bob White 8:15 — Early Morning Dance 9 :15 — My New Kentucky 9:45— Kentuck Belle's Kiddii 10:30— Classic Hour 11 :00— Musical Novelties 11 :30 — Mountain Melodies 12 :00— Popular Dance Melodies 12 :30 — Norris Brock live stock quo- tations 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert 1 P. M.— SIGN OFF p. m.— 5 :45 — Queen Bros. 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC) 6 :30 — Hilo Serenaders 6:45 — Queen Bros. 7 :00— Medley Five 7:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House 8:00— "Skillet Lickers" 8:30— Little Red Riding Hood 8 :45 — Hugh Cross 9:00— Cuckoo Club (NBC) 9:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. A\.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn 7:15 — Radio Circus 7:30 — Classified Directory 8:00 — Shopper's Hour 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings 8 :30 — S tarr Freeze Morning Musicale 8:45 — Magnecoil Program 9:00— Dance Melodies 9:15 — Broering Musicale 9 :30— Serenade 9 :45 — Kleeman Furniture Program 10:00— Brevities 10 :05 — Zolvo Program 10:20— "The Home Finder" 10:35 — Kelvinator Program 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement 11 :00— Vaudeville 11:15 — Travel Bureau 11:30— Fifteen Minutes of Light Opera 11:45 — Studebaker Champions (E. T.) FREE to Radio Owners ■ing your Tubes to us, wc will test, lalyze and match them while you look i FREE. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUNE IS, 1931, of Greater Cincinnati Radio Stations Saturday, June 13 P. M.— 12:01— Radio Circus 12:30— Fuller, Inc. 12:45 — Bellonby Melodies 1:00 — Starr Freeze Proeratn (E. T.) 1:15 — Moment Musicale - 1 :30 — Radio Circus I :45 — Dance Frolic "2:15 — Organ Recital 2:30— Radio Circus 3:00— Fuller Garden Party 3 :30 — National Protective Associa- tion 3 :4b— Catholic Telegraph 4 :00— Novelty Notes 4:15— Tea Time Tunes 4 :4b — Vaudeville 5:00— Lyric Hour 5:30— Crown Furniture Program 5:45— Race Auto & Radio Supply 6:00— Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special 0:15 — Berning Ford 6:30 — Milncr Musicale Company 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view 7 :45 — Barker News 8:00— Luckey Boys S:15 — Dry Ridge Springs Program 8:30 — Evening Chimes 8 :45 — Radio Circus 0:00— Camel Cigars 9:15— Adam F. Meyer Coal Co. 9:30 — Mountain Valley Varieties 9:45 — Fuller's Orchestra 10:15 — Slumber Music Saturday, June 13 7 :15 — Studio 7 :2o— Happy Feet 7 :30 — Junior Chamber of Commerce 7:58— Joseph Harris Co. Period 8:00— Pyol Blackberry Dudes 8:15— Chicago Variety (CBS) 8:30— Art Hicks' Tacoma Park Orchestra 9:00-C. A. C.-Hank Simmon's Show Boat (CBS) 9:45— K. O. Hawaiians 10:00— Coney Island Orchestra 10:30— To Be Announced 10:45— Will Osborne and His Or- chestra (CBS) 1 :00— Time; Weather; Sports 1 1 :08— Jack Denny's Orchestra (CBS) II :30— Nocturne — Ann Leaf, Ben Alley (CBS) Midnight— Barge Dance Orchestra 12:30— Newton Furniture Announce- ment Saturday, June 13 1 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra 1 :30 — H e n r y Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.- WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) a. m.— 6:45— God's Bible School— Sunrise Worship 7:45 — Ray and Bob 7:59 — Gruen Time Signal 8:00 — Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- grain 8:15— The Commuters (CBS) 8 :30 — Home Furniture Company- Tony's Scrap Book (CBS) 8 :45— Traxel Galleries 9 :00— Classified News Program 9 :30 — Consolidated Merchants Pro- gam 10:00— Drink-Mor Program 10:15— Time; Weather 10:20— Woman's Hour 10:45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies 11:00— Don Bigelow's Orchestra (CBS) 11:15— Queen City Rug Makers 11:30 — Homemakcr's Talk by Julia Hayes Noon— Wurlitzcr Music Box Revue P. M.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram 1 :00 — To Be Announced 1 :30— God's Bible School 2:00— Four Clubmen (CBS) 2:30— A. L. Fink Song Recital, Louie Johnson, tenor 3:00— Ann Leaf, organ (CBS) 3 :30 — Rcaume Studio 3:45— Spanish Serenade (CBS) 4:00— Pharis Program 4:15— Wincgar Barn Orchestra (CBS) 5:45— Artists Recital (CBS) 5:00— Kampf Artists 5 :15 — Meyer Paint Program 5 :30— Steam's & Foster's Magic Mattress Man 5 : 15 — Cincinnati Trade School Musicale 5:59 — Burke Weather Forecast :00 — Home Furniture Company — Kate Smith (CBS) 0:15 — Studio 0:20— Eureka Baseball Scores 6:25 — Sports Review 6 :30— Studio :40— Stocks ; Cohle & Tyrcc ; Time ; Weather 6:45— Camel Quarter Hour (CBS) 7:00— Prvor's Cremo Military Band (CBS) International Fiddlers Gvm Classes A. & P. Food News (NBC) 00— Jerry Foy 15— Organ Program 30 — Morning Devotions 45 — Kashmiri Trio 00— Dance Miniatures (NBC) 30— Art Talks, Cherry Greve 45— Postscript 00— Organ Program, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 10:15— Elliot Brock, violin 10:30— Live Stock Reports 10:40 — Murray Horton's Orchestra 11:00— McCormick's Fiddlers 11:15— Swift Program (NBC) 11 :30 — Live Stock Reports 11:45— River Reports: Time Signals ■Governmental Glimpses, At- torney General Gilbert Bettman Noon— P. M.— 12:10 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12 :45— National Farm and Home (NBC) 1 :30— Salt and Peanuts 1:45— Sisters of the Skillet (NBC) 2 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra 2:15— Jim and Walt 3:00— Belmont Stakes (NBC) 4 :00 — Merry Men Quartet 4:30— Crosley Dealers' Hour 5 :00— Seckatarv Hawkins 5:30— Doctors of Melody 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC) 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC) 6:30— WLW Highlights 6:45— Gruen Watch Makers (E. T.) 6 :50— Baseball Scores 7:00— Crosley Theater 7:30— Pop Concerts (NBC) 8:00— Crosley Saturday Knights 8:30— Domino Orchestra (NBC) 9 :00— Evening Moods, string trio and two vocalists 9:30— Clara, Lu and Em (NBC) 9 :45— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 10 :00— Club Sohio 10:30— Variety 10 :45— Bob N'cwhall Sport Slices 11 :00— King Edward Cigar Band Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:30— Village Rhymester 12:15— The Doodlesockers WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC) 8 :15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC) 8:45— Records 9:15 — Procter and Gamble Program (NBC) 10:15 — Radio Household Institute (NBC) 10:30— Keys to Happiness (NBC) 11 :00— Records 11 :30— Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop. Comm. Assn. 11 :45 — Records Noon— Sign off P. M.— 3:00— Classic Gems (NBC) 4 :00— Records 5:30— The Gossipers (E. T.) 5:45— Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC) 6 :00— Records 6:30— Club Valspar 7 :00— Records 7:15— Radiotron Varieties (NBC) 7:30— The Silver Flute (NBC) 8 :00 — G eneral Electric Hour . (NBC) 8:30— Over the Heather (NBC) 9:00— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC) 10 :00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 10 :30 — Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 11:00— Sign off Sunday, June 14 8 :45— Westinghouse Salute (NBC). 9:15— Floyd Gibbons (NBC). 9 :30 — Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. SUNDAY June 14 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. M-— 6:00 — Kentucky Good Morning. 6:30— God's Bible School. 7 :30— Organ Music. 8 :00— E arly Morning Dance Program. 9:00— God's Bible School. 10:00— Nomads (NBC). 10:30— Hugh Cross. 10:45 — Hilo Sercnaders. 11 :00— Bob White. 11 :15— Echoes of the Orient (NBC). 1 1 :30— Earl B it r t n e t t's Orchestra (E. T.). 11 :45— Charlene and Katherine, La- dies of Melody. Noon — Jack Moore. p. m.— 12:15— Skillet Lickcrs. 12 :45 — Lena Pope, soprano. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45— Sacred Quartette. 6:00 — Superior Studios, music. 6:15 — Italian Serenaders. :30— Kentucky Belle, contralto. 6:45— Bob White. 7:00— Enna Jettick Melodies (NBC). 7 -15 — College of Music, classics. 7:45— Hugh Cross. 8:00— Skillet Lickcrs. 8:30 — Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. Renew your subscription to RADIO DIAL See Page 7 DO YOU NEED MONEY? Cash for June taxes, household bills, etc., can be obtained promptly through our helpful Personal Loan Plan. Borrow up to your needs and repay it in small monthly amounts arranged conveniently for you. Open 8:30 to 5:00 The Central Acceptance Corporation 26 East Sixth St., between Vine and Walnut Cincinnati, Ohio. PArkway 6280. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc. A. M.— 8:00— Voices at Dawn. il :00 — Morning Concert. 9:15— Radio Circus. 9 :30— Invitation to the Waltz. 9:45 — Travel Bureau. 10 :00— Kelvinator Program. 10:15 — Dry Ridge Springs. 10:30 — German Program. 10:45— Berning Ford. 11:00— The Home Finder. 11 :30— Take Time to Be Beautiful. 11:45 — Mountain Vallev Greetings. Noon— Radio Circus. P. M.— 12:15 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 12:30— Galvano & Cortez. 12:45— Fuller House Party. ■ 1 :00— Every Friday Jewish Hour. 2:00 — Starr Freeze Program 2:15— Afternoon Melodies. 2:30 — Sundown Serenader. 2:45— Dance Frolic. 3:00— Mildred Eichler, soprano. 3:15 — Hawaiian Bluebirds. 3 :30 — Donald Galloway. 3 :45 — Variety. 4 :00— Cincinnati Trade School 4:10— Fuller, Inc. 4 :30 — Travel Bureau. 4 :45— Parkview Symphony Hour. 5:15 — Radio Circus. 6:00— Payne Brothers and Herman Chitison. 0:15— Travelogue, Joe Sweeney. 6:30 — Church Federation Hour. 7 :00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7 :30— Harry Hartman's Sport Review. 8:00— Mountain Valley Varieties. 8:15 — Radio Circus. 8 :30 — Evening Chimes. 9:30— Radio Circus. 9:45— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 10:15 — Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) a. m.— 6 :45-7 :45— God's Bible School- Sunrise Worship. 9 :00— God's Bible School. 10 :00— Watchtower Proeram (e. t.) 10 :15— Jim Lightfield— Veteran's Civic Hour. 11:00— Jewish Art Program (CBS). 11:30 — International Broadcast (CBS). 11:45— French Trio (CBS). P. JVL— 12:15—0x01 Feature (CBS). 12:30 — American Legion Program 1:30— Ballad Hour (CBS). 2:00— Gruen Old-Fashioned Garden 3 :00— Cathedral Hour. 4:00 — Rev. Donald Grcv Bamhouse (CBS). 4 :30— Pastorale (CBS). 5:00— Chicago Knights (CBS). 5:30 — Twilight Reveries. 5 :58— Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00— Dr. Klein's News Reels(CBS) 6:15 — Studio. 6:20— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6 :25 — Sports Review. 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:45— Theo. Karle (CBS). 6 :58 — Time and weather. 7 :00 — Devils, Drugs and Doctors (CBS). 7:1.5 — Kate Smith. Swance Music CBS). 7 :30— Kaltenborn Edits the News (CBS). 7 :45 — B o a t h o u s e Liquid Coffee Program. 8 :00 — Grand Opera Miniatures (CBS). 8:30— Graham Paige (CBS). 9:00— Tacoma Park Orchestra. 9:30— Fortune Builders (CBS). 9:45— Star Reveries (CBS). 10:00— Coney Island Orchestra. 10:30— Around the Samovar (CBS). 11 :00— Sports Review. 11:07— Quiet Harmonies (CBS). 11:30 — Artist Invitation Program. Sunday, June 14 9 :30— Withcrspoon Chorus (NBC). 10:00— Bulova Time. 10:05— Organ, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 10 :25 — River Reports. 10:29— Bulova Time. 10:30 — Rochester Concert Orchestra (NBC). 11:30— Troika Bells (NBC). Noon — Midday Jewels. P. M.— 12:29— Bulova Time. 12:30— Music of the Ages (NBC). 1:30— Yeast Foamcrs (NBC). 2 :00— Crosley Theater. 2:30— Henry Thies' Orchestra. 3:00— Parisian Echoes (NBC). 3 :30— Over Jordan (NBC). 3 :45— John Barclay, Dagmar Ryh- ner (NBC). 4:00 — Rhymes with Reason. 4 :30— Plantation Days. 5 :00 — The Roamios. 5 :30— Hymn Time. 6:00— WLW Highlights. 6:30 — Conservatory of Music. :05— Baseball Scores. 7:00— Enna Jettick Melodies(NBC). 7:15— Blow the Man Down (NBC). 7 :30— Harbor Lights (NBC). 8 :00 — Heel Hugger Harmonies (NBC). 8:15— Bayuk Stag Party (NBC). 8:45 — Eddie Niehauer's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 9:15— Varietv. 9:30— KelloggSlumbcrMusic( NBC). 10:02 — Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. 10:15 — Crosley Concert. 1 1 :00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. 11 :15 — Village Rhymester. 11 :30— Henry Thies Orchestra. Midnight— Eddie Niehauer's Or- chestra, Netherland Plaza. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. nl- lO^— Concordia Lutheran Church. Noon — Sign off. P. M.— 2 :00— Sermonette and Hymn Time. 2:30— Manhattan Guardsmen (NBC). 3 :00— National Sunday Forum (NBC). 4:00— Pop Concerts (NBC). 4:30— Tribute to the Flag (NBC). 5:00— Catholic Services (NBC). 6:00— Fritzi Scheff (NBC). 6 :27 — Madame Lolita Cabrera Gainsbourg (NBC). 30— RCA Victor (NBC). 00— Chase and Sanborn (NBC). 00 — "Our Government," David Lawrence (NBC). 8:15— Atwater Kent (NBC). 8:45— Iodent Big Brother (NBC). 9 :15— G old man Band Concert (NBC). MONDAY June 15 WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. «.— 8:59— Bulova Time. 9:00— Church Forum — Rev. Kay Jarman, Evanston Christian Church. WCKY(202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 6:00 — Kentucky Good Morning. 6:15— Bob White. 6:30— God's Bible School. 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). — from the studios of CHARLES W. REAUME in the Building Industries Bldg. This message comes to you each morning and at 3:30 each afternoon through WKRC with other interest- ing information regarding Cincinnati merchants. A COMPLETE ADVERTISING SERVICE CHARLES W. REAUME Broadcast Advertising 622 Broadway, CHerry 2440 RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY. Monday, June 15 8:00— Early Morning Dance. 9 :00— Theronoid. H:\rt— My New Kentucky Home, Jet'ta Crane. 9 :45— Dance Records. 10:30— Classic Hour. II im_ Musical Novelties. 11:80— Mountain Melodies. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— 12:80— Norris Brock. 12 :35— Luncheon Concert. 1:00— Sign off. 5:45— Hill Billy Kid. 5:55— Avers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 6 :15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 6:30— Bill and Bob. Bj45 — Hilo Serenadcrs. 7 ; n0— Bob White. 7:15— Kentucky Belle. 7:80— Skillet Lickers. 8:00— Steve Bates. 8 :15— Connubial Bliss, a one-act comedy. 8:45— Anna Powers. 9 : 00— Stromberg Carlson (NBC). 9:30— U. of C. Quartet. 9:45— Wally, the Radio Clown. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn. 7:15— Radio Circus. 7 :80— Classified Directory. 8:00— Eighth and Walnut Street Garage Program. 8:15— Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30— Starr Freeze Program. 8:45 — Magnecoil Program. 9:00— Hyde Park Community Pro- gram. 9 : 15_Broering Musicale. 9:45— Klccman Furniture Program. 10 :00— Brevities. 10:05— Vaudeville. 10:20— Zolvo Program, 10 :35— Kelvinator Program. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10 ;59— Simper Time. 11 :0O— Victor Herbert Melodies. 11 :15— Travel Bureau. 11:30— Organ Recital. 11:45— Stud ebake r ChanTpions (E. T-). Noon — Radio Circus. P. AV- IS ;30— Fuller, Inc. 12:45— Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00— S tarr Freeze Program (E. T.). I :15 — Matinee. 1 :30— adio Circus. 2:00— Union Mutual Life Insurance 2:15— The Home Finder. 2:30— Fuller Garden Party. 2 ;.).t — B a s e b a 1 1 Game : Reds vs. New York at Redland Field. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5 :30 — Bell Furniture Program, a :45 — Donald Galloway, tenor. 6:00— Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special. 6:15 — Berning Ford. 6:30 — Milner Musicale. 7 :00 — Xavier University Campus Rambles. 7 ;80— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7:45 — Pavnc Brothers and Herman Chitison. 8:00— Luckey Boys. B:1S— Dry Ridge Spring Program. 8 SO— Radio Circus, 8 15- Camel Cigars. g ;iH)— | .wish Commercial Hour. (0 ;00— Shopper's Hour. 10:15— Radio Circus. Ill :80 — Mountain Valley Varieties. 10:45 — Evening Chimes. II :00— Radio Circus. 1931. Monday, June 15 1 : 40— Market Reports. 1-45—Eddie Niehauer's Orchestra, Netlierland Plaza. fl :15-Village K h > ,nies ' er -, wnr , 9 : 30 — Chicago Serenade (NtH-J- 3:00— Matinee Players. 4-00-Chats with Peggy Winthrop (NBC). 4:15— Jim and Walt. 4-30— Live Stock Reports. 4 :40— Afternoon Revelers. 5 00— Music Treasure Box (NBt-J. 5-15— Mormon Tabernacle Choir (NBC). 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 5 :45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos *n* Andy (NBC). 6:15— WLW Highlights. 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC), 6 : 45 — Baseball Scores. G:50— Roxy's Gang (NBC). 730— Gold Medal Express (NBC). 8:00— Maytag Orchestra (NBC). 8:30— Real Folks (NBC). 9 .00— Musical Dreams. 9:30— Empire Builders (NBC). 10:00 — Great Composers. 10:30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall. Sport Slices. 10:50— Estate Weather Man. 11:00— Willvs Memory Hour. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. 1:00— Eddie Niehauer's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) TUESDAY June 16 nd Graha RUDY— GRAHAM No introductions are necessary when Rudy Vallee am McNamee stand before the mike. Their distinctive voices en- hance the Fleischmann hour, heard over WSAI and an NBC network each Tuesday at 7 p. m. Rudy has been adding imper- sonations to his crooning. McNamee is announcer de luxe of this and other well-known programs. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A.M.— t; ; |."> — God's Bible Sehoo! — Sunrise Worship. T :45— Ray and Bob. 7 :59 — Grucn Time. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tonv's Scrap Book (Home Furniture Co.) (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). ' I Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 3*80 Mr. Fixit (CBS). 9:45 — Charles W. Reaunie, studio. 10:15— The Madison Sinccrs (CBS). L0 80 I'necda Bakers (CBS). rime and weather. 10 !■ Woman's Hour — Tremletie Tully. 11 :1-t — Homemakcr's Talk by Julia Hayes. 11 :45— : Drink-Mor Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Rc\ uc. Monday, June 15 P. M.— 12 :30 — Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram. 1 :00— A. L. Fink Program. 1 :30 — Chicago Market Program. 1 :45 — Madame Flor-enz Beauty Program. 2.00— Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2:30— Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 3:00— Pharis Tire Program. 3:15 — Queen City Rug Makers. 3 :30 — Reaume Studio. 3 :45 — Studio Feature. 4:00— Gypsy Music Makers (CBS). 4:15 — Full Measure Gas Program. 4 :30— Aurora Merchants — T ramp Starr. 4:15 — La Gerardine Program (CBS). 5:00— Kampf Artists. 5 :15 — Mever Paint Program. 5:30— Stearns" & Foster's Magic Mattress Man. 5:45 — Stocks: Cohle & Tyree. 5 :48 — Time and weather. 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5:55 — Sports Review. 0:00— Current Events (CBS). G:15— Linit Program (CBS). 6:30 — Evangeline Adams, "Astrolo- ger" (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS). 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15— The Barbasol Program (CBS). 7 : 30— Your Neighbors — Popular Gems. .'J :00— Morning Ballads. 9:15 — Frances Ingram (NBC). .0:30— Fashionetle. :45 — Premium Man. 10 :00 — Murray Horton's Orchestra. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40 — Organ and Vocal Solos. 11:00 — Island Serenaders. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals. Noon — Tuxedo Trio. P. Al.— 12:15 — Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30 — McCormick's Fiddlers. 1 :40— Market Reports. 1 :45 — Nctherland Plaza Orchestra. 2:00 — Dedication of Harding Me- morial (NBC). 3:15 — Merry Men Quartet. 4:00 — Beauty Secrets by Rigaud. 4:15 — Organ and Vocal Solos. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4:40— Jim and Walt. 5:00 — Murray Horton's Orchestra. 5 :30— Old Man Sunshine. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 0:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 0:15— WLW Highlights. 6:30— Berry Brothers (e. t.j. 6 :45 — Baseball Scores. 6:50 — Bradley Kincaid. 7 :00 — Paul Whiteman's Painters (NBC). 7:30— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 7 :45 — Sterling Jack. 8 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 8:15 — Singin' Sam. 8:30— Wcrk Bubble Blowers. 9 :00— Barbasol Barbers (e. t.). !) :15 — Tastyeast Candyktds. S :30— Chevrolet Chronicles (e. t.). 10:00 — Cotton Queen Minstrels. 10:30— Variety. 10:45 — Bob Newhall, Sports Slices. 10 :58— Estate Weather. 11:00— Los Amigos. 1 1 :30 — Vox Humana. Midnight — Village Rhymester. A. M.— 12:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12 :30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 1 :00— Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra 8 :45— Records. 10:00— "Your Child," Grace Abbott (NBC). 10:15 — Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10:30— U. S. Armv Band (NBC). 11:00— Sign off. P. M.— 12:50 — Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop. Comm. Assn. 1 :00— Sign off. 2 :00— Dedication of Harding Me- morial (NBC). 3 :00— Records. liA BRIDGE EA^IESSOIV I tvEKY i it -si>» • 10:30 p.m. wu ins Wkl{C;-,o units fomCtrltinAf Tuesday, June 16 :00— The Lady Next Door (NBC). :30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). : 45 — Records. :15 — Vocal Solos. :30 — The Gossipcrs (e. I.). :45 — Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC). :0O— Records. :30 — To be announced. :45 — Larry Grueter, Accordion. :00— Blackstone Plantation (NBC). :30 — National Dairv Program (NBC). :00— McKesson Musical Magazim- (NBC). :30— Fuller Brush Man (NBC). :00— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC). :00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. :30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. WEDNESDAY June 17 WCRY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A.M.— (i:00 — Kentucky Good Morning. 6:15— Bob White. 6:30— God's Bible School. 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00 — Early Morning Dance. 9 :00— Theronotd. 9 :1S — My New Kentucky Home, 9 :<15 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:30— Classic Hour. 11:00 — Musical Novelties. 11:30 — Mountain Melodies. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— 12:30 — Live Stock Reports. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45— Queen Brothers. 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 0:00 — Amos V Andy (NBC). 6:15— Italian Serenaders. 6:30— Bill and Bob. (i :45 — Steve Bates. 7:00— Tommy Ott, Pianist. 7:15 — Kentucky Belle, Crooner. 7 :30— Christian Glee Club (NBC). 8:00— Skillet Lickers. 8:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra Lookout House. 9:00— Classic Recital: Molly Moore Ellis Frakes, Tommy Ott. 9:30— Wally, the Radio Clown. 9 :45— Bob White. Eddie Neibaur Band Follows Bernie at Plaza EDDIE NEIBAUR Eddie Neibaur and his Seattle Harmony Kings, a dance orches tra new to Cincinnati, will be heard in daily programs through WLW and WSAI beginning Saturday (June 13), when they open a week's engagement at the Netherland Plaza. Ben Bernie, who will be at the Netherland Plaza through June 12, was originally scheduled to remain until June 20 when Guy Lombardo opens. A last-minute change in bookings resulted in bringing to Neibaur for the sec ond week. Neibaur himself is a trombone player. He learned to toot dur- ing the World War while he was a member of the A. E. F. His tooting got him transferred from the field artillery to the entertain- ment corps. At the end of the war, he kept on playing. Before organizing his own band, he played in a number of orchestras popular at that time, including Ray Miller's. Wednesday, June 17 WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 : 00 — Voices al Dawn. 7:15 — Radio Circus. 7:30— Classified Directory, 8 :00— Shoppers' Hour. 8:15— Mountain Valley Greetings, 8:30— Starr Freeze Program, 8:45 — Magnecoil Program. 9:00— Radio Circus. 9:15 — Broering Musicale. 9:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program 10 ;0M— Brevities. 10 :05— Radio Circus. 10:20— Zolvo Program. 10:35— Kelvinator Program. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk, 10:59 — Simper Time. 11 :00— Vaudeville. 11:15 — Travel Bureau. 11 :30— Organ Recital. II :-!5— S t ud e ha ke r Champions (E. T.). Noon — Radio Circus. P. M.— 12:30— Fuller, Inc. 12:45 — Bcllonby Melodies. 1:00 — Starr Freeze Program (E. T.). 1 :15 — Donald Galloway, tenor. 1:30 — Afternoon Melodies. 1 :45 — Home Harmonizcrs (E. T.). 2:00— Galvano & Cortez. 2:15 — The Home Finder. 2:30— Radio Circus. 3 :00— Dance Frolic. 3 :30— Variety. 3:45 — Union Mutual Life Insurance Company. 4 :00— Serenade. 4 :15— Tea Time Tunes. 4 :45 — Radio Circus. 5:00 — Lyric Hour. 5:30 — Bell Furniture Program. 5:45 — Dinner Music. 6:00 — Murphy & Goehi'l Furniture Special. 6:15 — Berning Ford. 6:30— Milner Musicale. 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7 :30 — Harry Hartmau's Sport Re- view. 7:45— Payne Brothers & Herman Chitison. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8 :15 — Dry Ridge Spring Program. 8 :30— Colonial Stages. 8:45— The Islanders. 9 :00 — Camel Cigars. 9:15 — Radio Circus. 9:45 — Shoppers' Hour. 10:00 — Cincinnati Messianic Testi- mony, Dr. Reed. 10:30— Radio Circus. 10:45 — Earl Fuller's Orchestra, II :I5 — Slumber Music. RADIO DIAL 26 newsy issues! 6 Months for $1.00 1 official complete accurate RADIO DIAL becomes of age. Interesting — Official — Accurate. The only complete schedule of all radio programs in Greater Cincinnati. The "open sesame" to real radio entertainment. Less than 4c a week. Subscribe to Radio Dial TODAY! ! Mail this Coupon — » enclose $1 RADIO DIAL 22 E. 12th Street Cincinnati, Ohio Gentlemen: Enclosed find One Dollar (SI). Send RADIO DIAL for 6 months. Ne Subscriber I ) Renewal Name Address City State . RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1931. Wednesday, June 17 WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 0:45— Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Ray and Bob. 7 :59— Gruen Time. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9:00— Mirrors of Beauty (CBS). 9:15— Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- gram. 9:30— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:00— Melody Parade (CBS). 10:15 — Time and weather. 10:18— Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tullev. 10:45— Charfes W. Reaume Studio. 11:15— Homcmakers' Talk by Julia Hayes. 11:45— Drink-Mor Program. Noon— Wtirlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1:00— Farm Program (CBS). 1 :30— Chicago Market Program. 1 :45 — Studio-Feature. 2:00— Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2:30— Queen City Rug Makers. 2 :45 — Syncopated Silhouettes (CBS). 3 :15 — Starr -Freeze Melodies. 3 :30 — Reaume Studio. 3:45— Talk by Dr. Richard Kovacs (CBS). 4:00 — Pharis Tire Program. 4:15 — Full Measure Gas Program. 4:30— A. L, Fink Program. 5:00— Kampf Artists. 5 :15— Meyer Paint Program. 5 :30 — Stearns' & Foster's Magic Mattress Man. 5 :45— Stocks : Cohle & Tyree. 5 :48 — Time and weather. 5:50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review, fi :00— Kate Smith Swanee Music (CBS). 6:15— Linit Program (CBS). 6 :30 — Evangeline Adams "Astrol oger" (CBS). 0:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7:00 — Pryor's Creino Military Band (CBS). 7 :15 — The B a r b a s o 1 Program (CBS). 7:30— Rhythm Choiristers (CBS). 7:45— Old Wurzburg Malt Progra: 8 :00— Gold Medal Fast Freight (CBS). 8:30 — Boathouse Liquid Coffee Program. 8 :45 — Vincent Lopez and His Val- voliners (e. t.). 9:00— Vitality Personalities (CBS). 9:15— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 9:30— McAleer Polishers (CBS). 9:45 — Johnson Sea Horse Orchestra (e. t). 10:00— Don Bigclow & His Orches- tra (CBS). 10:15 — Gruen Answer Man. 10:20 — Gruen Answer Man (e. t.). 10:25— Happy Feet. 10:30— Coney Island Orchestra. 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports Re- view. 11:08 — Hollywood Garden Orchestra (CBS). 1 1 :30 — Nocturne ; Ann Leaf, Ben Alley (CBS). Midnight — Sign off. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6 :00 — International Fiddlers, old- time music. 6:29— Bulova Time. 6:30 — Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 8:00— Bradley Kiucaid. 8:15— Organ Program. 8:30 — Morning Devotions. 8 AS — Bulova Time. 8 : 46— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC). 9:00— Mary Hale Martin (NBC). 9 :15 — Florence Frey's Workshop. 9:30— Dance Miniatures (NBC). 10:00— McCormick's Fiddlers. 10:15— Tim and Walt. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Organ Program, Arthur Chandler Jr. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45— River Reports; Time Signals. Noon — Crosley Singers. P. M.— 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:16 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12^50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— National Farm and Home (NBC). 1:30— Singin' Sam. Wednesday, June 17 1 : .|0— Market Reports. 1 :45— Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 2:15— Village Rhymester. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 3 :Q0— Weather Forecast. 3^01— The Matinee Players. 4:00— Chats with Peggy Winthrop (NBC). 4:15— Organ with Instrumentalist. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4:40— Jane Froman, Don Becker. 5:00 — Afternoon Revelers. 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— DuPont Speed Blenders (e. t). 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC). 6:45— "Believe It or Not, " Ripley (NBC). 7 :00— Baseball Scores. 7:05— WLW Highlights. 7:15_j hn Ruskin Orchestra (e. t.) 7 :30— R. F. D. Hour. 8:00— The Buddy Bovs. 8 :30— Sinfonietta (NBC). 9:00— Phil Napoleon's Grenadiers (NBC). 9 :30— Canova Coffee Hour. 10:00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 10:30— Variety. 10 :45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 11:00— Night Songs. 11:30— Crosley Theater. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. A. M.— 12 :30— H e n r y Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. 1 :00— Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc. A. JH.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15— Campbel 1 Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45 — Records. 8:15— Stero Program (NBC). 9 :30— National Home Hour (NBC). 10:00— Records. 10:15— Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10 :45— Records. 11:00— Sign off. P. M.— 12 :50 — Live Stock Reports. 1:00— Sign off. '2 :00— Woman's Radio Revi (NBC). 3 :00— E dna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 3:15— Records. 4:00 — Don Becker, ukulele. 4 :15 — Sam Wilson, baritone. 4 :30 — Poems by Harry Holcombe 4 :45 — Records. 5:00— Old Man Sunshine. 5:25— Civil Service Talk. 5:30— The Gossipers (e. t.). 5:45— Little Jack Little (NBC). 6 :00— Records. (! :15 — Boscul Moments, with Madame Alda (NBC). 6:30 — Moments with Madame Alda (NBC). 6:45 — Back of the News in Wash- ington (NBC). 7 :00— Listcrine Program (NBC). 7:15— Mac Questel (NBC). 7 :30— Mobiloi! Concert (NBC). 8.00— Halsey Stuart (NBC). 8 :30— Palmolive Hour (NBC). 9:30— Coca Cola Program (NBC). 10:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 10:30— Orchestra, Netherland Plaza, 11 :00— Sign off. THURSDAY June 18 WCKY(202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 6:00 — Kentucky Good Morning. 6:15— Bob White. 6 :30 — Sunrise Worship. 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). S:00 — Early Morning Dance. 9:15— My New Kentucky Home, 9:45 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:30— Nor tham- Warren (NBC). 10:45 — Classic Hour. 11:00— Musical Novelties. IIj30 — Mountain Melodies. Noon — Popular Dance Tunes. P. M.— :30 — Live Stock Quotations. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. 12:45 — Rev. Chas. A. Vandermuelen. 1 :00— Sipn off. 5 :45— Red Riding Hood. FREDDIE RICH Versatile Freddie Rich directs the Vitality Personalities chestra heard over WKRC and other Columbia stations at 9 p. m., every Wednesday. He also directs everything from a ten-piece dance band to a forty- five-piece symphony orchestra weekly on various Columbi programs. He never uses a baton, but marks time with hi foot so emphatically that the conductor s stand he uses has been covered with felt to pre' vent the sound from being car ried over the air. Thursday, June 1 :55 — Ayers Sport Flash. :00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). :15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). :30— Tri-State Entertainers, with Lim and Ham. :00 — D ixie Spiritual Singers (NBC). :15— Bob White. :30— Blu-Green Blues. :45 — Crooning Guitarist. :00— Blackstone Plantation (NBC). :30— Betty May, contralto. :45 — Ukelele Travelogue. :00— Earl Arnold's Orchestra. :30— Skillet Lickers. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00— Voices at Dawn. 7:15 — Radio Circus. 7 :30— Classified Directory. 8 :00 — Shoppers' Hour. 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8 :30 — Starr Freeze Program. 8 :4a — Magnecoil Program, 9:00— Dance Frolic. 9:15 — Broering Musicale. 9:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00— Brevities. 10:05— Organ Recital. 10:20— Zolvo Program, 10:35— Kelvinator. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement. 11 :00— Variety. 11:15 — Travel Bureau. 11 :30— Program of Waltzes. 11:45 — Studebaker Champions (E. T.). Noon — Radio Circus. P. M.— 12:15— Clean Up and Paint Up Cam- paign. 12:30— Fuller, Inc. 12 :45 — Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00— S tarr Freeze Program (E. T.). 1 :15 — Serenade. 1 :30— Link's Radio Tube Shop. 1 :45 — Dance Frolic, 2:00— Payne Brothers & Herman Chitison. 2:15 — The Home Finder. 2:30— Radio Circus. 2:45— Reds vs. Philadelphia at Philadelphia. 4 :45 — Radio Circus. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30 — Crown Furniture Program. 5:45 — Race Auto and Radio Supply. 6:00 — Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special. 6:15 — Berning Ford. 0:30 — Milner Musical Company. Thursday, June 18 :00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. :30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. ": 15— Barker News. 1:00— Luckey Boys. !:I5— Dry Ridge Springs Program. J :30— Evening Chimes. {-.45— Merchants' Review. 1:00— Camel Cigars. ):15— Adam F. Meyer Coal Co. ) :30— Shopper's Hour. ) :45— Radio Circus. ) :15— Fuller's Orchestra. ) :45— Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6 :45 — Sunrise Worship. 7:45 — Ray and Bob. 7:59— Gruen Time Signal. 8:00— Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- gram. S:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8 :45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 9:00— Drink-Mor Program. 9:15— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 9:45— Barbara Gould Beauty Talk (CBS) ;00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 10:30— Uneeda Bakers (CBS). 10 :45— Time and weather. 10:48— Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tully. 11:15 — Dream Home, Jimmy and Joan. 11:30— Queen City Rug Makers. 11 :45 — Streit Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue P. M.— 12 :30 — Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1:00 — Columbia Farm Program (CBS). 1 :30— Studio Feature. 2 :00— Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2:30— A. L. Fink— The Three Doc- tors (CBS). 2:45— A. L. Fink — Rhythm Ram biers (CBS). 3:00 — Homemakers Talk by Julia Hayes. 3 :30 — Home Furnishing Studio. 3:45— Rhythm Kings (CBS). 4 :00 — Asbury Park Casino Orches tra; Sports Flashes (CBS). 4:15 — Full Measure Gas Program. I :30 — Tramp Starr (Aurora Mer chants), Kingsbury Ann. 4:45— Meet the Artist (CBS). 5 :00 — Pharis Program; Sports Flash. 5 :15 — Meyer Paint Program. 5:30— Stearns & Foster's Magic Mat tress Man. 5:45 — Stocks: Cohle & Tyree. 5 :48 — Time and weather. 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55— Sports Review. 6 :00 — Kate Smith and her Swanee Music (CBS). 6:15— Linit Program (CBS). :19— Studio. 6:21— Eureka Baseball Scores Sports. 6:25 — Sports Review. 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15 — Red Top Malt Program. 7 :30— Kaltenbom Edits the News (CBS). 7 :45— Hamilton Watchman (CBS) 8:00— The Premier Salad Dressers (CBS). 8:15— Big Yank Workshirt (E. T.). 8 :30 — Detective Story Program (CBS). 9:00— The Lutheran Hour (CBS). 9:30— Fortune Builders (CBS). 9:45— Peter's Parade (CBS). 10 :00— Jack Denny & His Orchestra (CBS). 10:15— Studio. 10:20— Sports Review. 10:25— Happy Feet. 10:30 — Coney Island Orchestra. 11:00 — Gruen Witching Hour. 11:30 — Time and weather. 11:32— Pyol— Blackberry Dudes. 11:47 — Tacoma Dance Orchestra. 12:17— Sign off. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6 :00 — International Fiddlers. :29— Bulova Time. 0:30 — Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 7:59— Bulova Time. 8:00— Bradley Kincaid. 8:15 — Organ Program. 8:30— Morning Devotions. 8:44— Bulova Time. Thursday, J une i 8 S:45 — Popular Gems, 9:00— Ray Perkins (NBC) 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NliCt 9 : 30— Com mu nit v Health, Or Pari Wilzbach. 9:45 — Housekeeper Chats. 10:00— Murrav Horton Orchestra 10:30— Live Stock Reports 10:40— Jim and Walt. 11:00— The Venetian Three, 11:15— Swift Program (NBC) 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45— River Reports; Time Signals. Noon— Organ, Arthur Chandler, J r P. M.— 12:15 — Bulova Time. 12:16 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12 :45— American Cynamid Program 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— George, Lava Soap Man (NBC). 1 :45 — Market Reports. 1 :50— Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 2:15 — Village Rhymester. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 2 :45— E dna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 3:00— Home Decorations (NBC). 3:15 — Weather Forecast. 3:16 — Afternoon Revelers. 3:30— Maze of Melody (NBC). 4:00 — National Federation Muric Clubs (NBC). 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4 :40 — The Crosley Singers. 5:00— Bradley Kincaid. 5:15 — The Ramblers. 5 :29— Bulova Time. 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC), 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 6:30— Glenn Adams, Dog Talks. 6:50 — Baseball Scores. 6:55 — Bradley Kincaid. 7 :00— WLW Highlights. 7:15— Riu-Tin-Tin Thriller (NBC). 7 :30 — Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 8 :00— Barbasol Barbers (e. t.). 8:15 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona. 8:30 — Phoenix Hosiery (e. t.). 8:45 — Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. 9 :00— Crimelights. 9:30— Clara. Lou and Em (NBC). 9:45— C. & O. Program (WJR). 10:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 10:30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 10 :58— Estate Weather Man. 11:00— Old Masters' Chime Reveries, Midnight— Village Rhymester. A. M.— 12:10— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 1 :00— Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. erland Plaza. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15— Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45— Records. 9 :00— M cCormick's Old Time Fiddlers. 9:15— Records. 9:45 — Organ Program. 10:00— Records. 10:15 — Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10:30— McCormick's Old-Time Fid- dlers. 10:13— Sign off. P. A!.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1:00— Sign off. 1:45— Dr. Scholl Reveller (NBC). 2 :00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 4:00 — Mona Motor Organ Recital. 4:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4 :45 — Records, 5:00— Travel Talk, Joseph Rles. 5 :15 — To be announced. 5:30 — The Gossipers (e. t. ). 5 :45 — Black and Gold Room Orches- tra (NBC). 6 :00— Records. 0:25— Better Business Bureau Talk. G :30— Records. 0:45— Vocal Solos. 7 :00— Fleischmann Hour (NBC). 8:00— Arco Birthday Party (NBC). 8:30— Jack Frost's Melody Moments (NBC). 9:00— Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra (NBC). 10:00— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. 10:30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 1 1 :00— Sign off. JUN 19 Volume I, No. 5 FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1931 Price 5c Guest Stars from Stage, Sporting Events, New Features Appear on Local Radio Stations This Week WFBE Baseball Games This Week Friday, June 19 — 2:45 p. m. Reds vs. Philadelphia at Phil- adelphia (by wire). Saturday, June 20 — 1 p. m. Reds vs. Philadelphia at Phil- adelphia. Double Header (by wire). Monday, June 21, 2:15 p. m. Reds w Bostflh al Boston (by win- ). Tuesday, June 22 — 2:15 p. m. Reds vs. Boston at Boston (by wire). Wednesday, June 23, 2:15 p. m. Reds v-.. Boston at Boston (by wire). Thursday, June 24. No game. Reiner Will Appear in Radio Concerts Beginning July 8 Frit/. Reiner, Willem Van Hoogstraten, and Albert Cuates will conduct the New York Phil- harmonic orchestra in its concerts at the Lewisohn Stadium this summer beginning July S. The Columbia Broadcasting System will broadcast several of the-^on- certs each week with WKRC as its Cincinnati outlet. Van Hoog- straten will'conducl the first three weeks, to be followed for two weeks by Reiner. Paul Whiteman Will Broadcast On Friday Night Paul Whiteman 's Paintmen and the Armstrong Quakers, both NBC programs, have traded places on the network schedules. Whiteman hereafter will broad- cast through WLW on Friday nights at Vi o'clock. The Arm- strong Quakers will be heard on WLW and WCKV at the former Whiteman time. Tuesday nights at 7 o'clock. DX Fans Can Dial These Programs FRIDAY, JUNE 19 10 p m— WENR REVUE — WENR (870 kc — 344.6 m). Dance music from 10:30 to I a m. 10:30 p m — WAYNE KING'S OR- CHESTRA. Dance mu'ic contin- ues to 1:30 a m — WGN (720 kc — 116.4 m). 11 p m — HOTEL WILLIAM PENIv ORCHESTRA— KDKA (980 kc— 305.9 m) T 2 Midnight — MIDNIGHT MELO- DIES — W T A M ( 1 070 kc — 280.2 m» SATURDAY, JUNE 20 I0:lfi p m — MESSAGES 10 EX- PLORERS — KDKA (980 kc — 305.9 m) 10:30 p m— NATIONAL BARN DANCE — WLS (870 k c — 344.6 m> 10:4-- p m— LITTLE JACK LITTLE WGY (790 kc — 379.5 m) 12 Midnight — LOUISVILLE LOONS — WHAS (820 kc — 356.6 m) 12:30 a m — S A T UR D A V NIGHT FROLIC — WTAM (1070 kc — 280.2 m) (Continued on page 2) Frances Williams Sings Saturday in Club Valspar Mae Questel is a cheerful little ear-full who imitates Helen (Boop-oop-a-doop) Kane, Maurice Chevalier, and other radio great who give you something to remember them fay. NBC has her on its staff now. You heard her early this year on the Camel Pleasure Hour and a repeat performance for the same sponsors. When Mae was eight, Mischa Elman would play expensive violin obhgatos to her ultra-dramatic readings to amuse smart New Yorkers. Mae's booy-oops now command a salary almost as high as Mischa's bowing. Elks' Night The RKO Theater of the Air ill celebrate "Elks' Night" through WSAJ Friday (June 19) at 9:30 p. m. The broadcast will originate at Elks Lodge No. 1. New York City. Lawrence H. Rupp. grand exalted ruler, will speak. Boston" Pop" Concerts So that the full hour of the Boston "Pop" concerts may be broadcast from 7:30 to 8:30 on Saturday nights. WLW has moved the Crosley Saturday Knights from 8 o'clock to 9 o'clock. NBC Will Award Native Composers for Best Works Awards of -.(.-vera! thousand dollars for the best orchestral works written by American com- posers will he made in the near future by the National Broad- casting Company. Definite announcement of the conditions of the awards will be made October 4, it. is announced by Merlin Hall Aylesworth, president. Native American citi- zens and foreign-born musicians who have taken out their first citizenship papers are eligible to compete. The orchestral numbers must be not more than twelve minutes in length. Don Becker expects to enter his "Indigo Moon," a rhapsody for ukulele, which he recently played on the NBC network from WEAF with Hugo Maria- ni's Symphonic Rhythm Makers. [ . &J\ \ Courtesy of Hold Oilis. Frances Williams Frances Williams, beautiful ilond star of "The New York- and George White's "Scan- Fritzi Scheff will be on W'SAI again Sunday evening (June 21) at 6 o'clock in the Gay Vienna program (not commercial). "The Old Stager" will ineroduce her. dais." with the Countess Olga Albaui and Gene Austin will broadcast through W'SAI and the NBC network al 8:30 Satur- day nighl (June 30) in the firs! of a new series of Valspar pro- grams that replace those played at 6:30 by Ted Lewis and hi-. band. Charlie King, star of "Broad- way Melody." and various stage plays will be master of ceremo- nies. William Wirges will con- duct the orchestra every week. Stage and screen stars will ap- pear on future programs, includ- ing Evelyn Herbert, Johnny Marvin, Lillian Roth, Helen Kane. George Jessel, and Baby Rose Marie. The Countess Albani is a real Spanish noblewoman- Her pic- ture appeared in the first issue of Radio Dial. Gene Austin is the Texas crooner who first made a recording of "Blue Heaven" of which four million discs were sold. Complete Radio Programs Begin on Page 4 RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUNE IS. 1931. Weekly RADIO DIAL „ ti.._.j„. k.. »k- Rarlin Dial Publishing Co.. Published every Thursday by 22 East 12th St., Cincinnati, Ohio. NATALIE GIDDINGS, Editor Radio Dial Publishii Contents copyrighted. VOL. I JUNE 19, 1931 No. It's the Tobacco Cycle Radio engineers chatter blithely about kilocycles, and Roger Babson discourses learnedly about business cycles. But around the studios they're talking— and enthusiastically— these days about the '° WhiriTk'to say that the nicotine people are giving radio a mighty big play just now. You must have noticed it while you twist your dial. „. . , , .u„. „~ Getting down to statistics, an unofficial canvass shows that no less than 14 tobacco concerns are buying time on local stations— directly or through the two chains— to break down sales resistance for as many brands of cigars, cigarettes, pipe ammunition, and the edible form of the best known weed. (Apparently, snuff is out). That's an impressive air representation for any one industry. In fact, it puts the tobacco business out in front by quite a handsome margin as far as using radio is concerned. What's more, the sponsoring of programs by one industry oi another does seem to go by cycles. If you rate enough dial service stripes you've listened through several of them. First there was the tire cycle, then the oil and gasoline cycle, next the shoe cycle, then the coffee cycle, and now it's the tobacco cycle. Of course, tires, oil and gas, shoes, and coffee still are on the air But tobacco is getting the breaks at the moment. Why these bewildering humps and hollows in the sponsor curves of the various industries? We pass the buck to Mr. Babson. Or maybe it's a golden opportunity for some aspiring grad student taking his Ph. D. in economics. For instance, how about a dis- sertation on "The Causes, Effects, And Significance Of Sponsor Cycles In Radio Broadcasting?" We're more concerned about good programs than who sponsors them. Still, it would be interesting to get the lowdown on the why of these cycles. Around the Dial By THE DIAL TWISTER As a sport's announcer, Harry Hartman has been coming with a rush since WFBE began airing the Reds' games. Of course, the boy has always been good. But the acid test of the daily clinches it. grind Local Station Puts Lombardo On CBS Network DX Fans Can Dial These Programs Mollv Moore, staff soprano at WCKY, sings every Wednesday at 9 o'clock as a member of the Classic Art Trio which, presents selections from master compos- ers, Friday nights at 6:15 find her appearing as the Eilerman Song- stress with Eilerman's Marimba Serenaders. Miss Moore's radio history lists appearances with WOR, (Newark) WGN, (Chi- cago) WFAA, (Dallas) WFEL, (Denver) and WLW. She also has been prima donna of Danc- ing Feet," a Publix stage pro- duction, soloist for three years with the Denver Municipal band, and soloist for six weeks with Jesse Crawford, organist, at the Paramount Theatre in New York. (Co ltd frc : 1> Those Skillet-Lickers, who do their stuff over WCKY, are a rip-snorting fiddle band, in case you lean to the old- time tunes. The afore-men- tioned tunes seem to be WCKY's specialty these days; not a bad idea, either, since they've come back so strong. * * * Milton Moore, who does the Boathouse program at WKRC, is a good Irish tenor ; not crooner, marvelous to relate. What's more, he doesn't sing hot tunes ; in- stead, the songs that are familiar because they are worth hearing over and over. * * * That Over Jordan feature (WLW Sunday at 3:30 p.m.) is a sort of radio "Green Pas- tures," dramatizing the negro interpretation of Bible stories, from Roarke Bradford's work It's refreshing. have distin- guished guests Monday night (June 22) when Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians play the Robert Burns Panatela pro- gram at 9 o'clock for broadcast over the Columbia network just as Ben Bernie last week used the Hilltop studios for the Blue Ribbon Malt program. Lombardo's band will be in Cincinnati to appear on the RKO Albee stage all week b< ginning Saturday and to play at the Netherland Plaza. WLW and WSAI will have them on the air at most of the time usu- ally reserved for the hotel's or- chestras. Some of the periods probably will have to be filled from the station, however, due to the demands the stage shows will make on the orchestra's time. The week will give Cincinnati SUNDAY, JUNE 21 6 p m— GENE AND GLENN— WTAM (1070 kc — 2B0.2 ml 6-30 p m— SOCONYLAND SKETCH INBO-WGY (7 90 kt- 10 p ? m -^SAXOPHONE OCTETTE (NBC)- WENR (870 kc— 344.6 m) and KDKA (980 kc — 10-30°p' nT— WAYNE KING'S OR- CHESTRA (donee music to 12:30) — WGN (7 20 kc — 416.4 m) MONDAY, JUNE 22 10:40 P m to 1:30 a m — DANCE MUSIC — WGN 1720 kc — 11 p*m— COTTON CLUB ORCHES- TRA (NBC>— WENR (870 kc— 344.6 m>. Dance music to 1 a m. Also from WGN (720 kc— 416.4 m) 11:15 p m— PAUL WHITEMAN (N BO— WTAM (1070 kc— 280.2 m) TUESDAY, JUNE 23 9:30 p m— CLARA, LOU & EM (NBC) — KDKA (980 kc — 30S.9 m) ond WGN (720 k 10:30 p in " — 344.6 m) 11:15 p m — RUDY VALLEE'S CON- NECTICUT YANKEES (NBC)— WTAM (1070 kc — 280.2 m) 11:30 p m— WTAM PLAYERS WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24 7:15 p m— MAE QUESTEL i, Hoi foi your spare time —SELL RADIO DIAL! Every borne needs the DIAL. Easy to sell 30 to 40 a day in your spare time. Ask (or Mr. Kelly, 22 E. 12th Street, Cincinnati. Harry's pretty proud of WFBE's sport record. Well he may be, too, because WFBE is the only small station — only one with power under 1000 watts — to attempt to broadcast baseball games. And WFBE doesn't confine its efforts to home games either. It leases tele- graph wires at all the National League fields and brings its play-by-play accounts in when the Reds are out of Cincinnati. Harry puts these games on as if they were eye-witness accounts. He knows every player in the National League so well that he can give a word picture of them even when he's in the Cincinnati studio and they're hundreds of miles away. To make his broad- casts even more life-like, he uses sound-effects, and all kinds of crowd noises, WFBE holds another record in being the only station of any size to broadcast every boxing and wrestling match in its city, he says. The station with Hart' man at its microphone hasn't missed one in two years. Hartman was a fight promoter and a basketball team manager when Earl Fuller, director of WFBE, gave him a chance to announce a fight at Music Hall one night when the regular an- nouncer was ill. That one broadcast cinched the job for Hartman and he's been at it ever since. He went to tbe southern training camp with the Reds this Spring and sent back The Yale-Harvard crew race reports of all their practice on the Thomas River near New games. He's played baseball London, Conn., will be broadcast himself, but his principal contact over an NBC-WLW network with sports has been as a pro- Friday (June \'J ) at 7 p. 111. moter and manager, and as an ardent fan. Besides h l s almost daily broadcasts of National League baseball games, and his ac- counts of Music Hall fights, Hartman at 7:30 p. m. every day gives a half hour review of local sporting news in all lines of sport. Sunday nights find him presenting celebrated athletes as guest speakers. Jack Demp- sey and Joe Savoldi of Notre Dame have been his guests on the air. Do listeners like his sport broadcasts? Harry wondered about that himself, so he asked the question on the air one day not long ago. Now he has 2800 letters post marked within the next three days from fans all over the territory within 100 miles or Cincinnati. And every- one is a real "fan" letter. The only thing that bothers Harry is that he can't answer all his mail although he reads every line of it. He thinks that the broadcast- ing of sporting events is a great thing for the sports as well as for a radio station where it gives pleasant variety to programs of musical entertainment. "There never was a fan or a fanette who will stay away from a sporting event he or she likes with the alternative chance of hearing it broadcast," he says. How does he look? Twenty- eight years old, he's five feet six, heavy-set, and has coal black hair and eyes, and skin a sbrown as an Indian. He's a Cincinnati boy and can't be lured out of town by any other radio station. Radio Dial will welcome suggestions from its readers as to what Greater Cincinnati entertainers and announcers should be interviewed for its "You Should Know — " col- umn. — Editor. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1931. Here Are Only Complete Programs FRIDAY June 19 WCKY (202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 6 :00— Kentucky Good Morning 6:05— Hugh Cross 6:10— Bob White 6:30— God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship 7:30— Cheerio (NBC) 8:00— Early Morning Dance 9 :00— Theronoid 9 : i5_My New Kentucky Home, :45— Dance Melodies 10:30 — Classic Hour 11:00— Musical Novelties 11:30 — Mountain Melodies Noon — Popular Dance Tunes 12 :30— Norris Brock Live Stock Reports 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert P. M.— 1 :00— Sign off 5 :45 — Queen Bros. 5 :55— Ayers News Sport Flash 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC) 6:15 — Eilennan's Marimba Ser- enades 6:45— Little Red Riding Hood— Latonia Race Track Program. 7:00— Bill and Bob. 7 :15 — Augusta Litzendorff, Con- tralto 7:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House 8 :00— Interwoven Pair (NBC) 8 :30 — Frances Bclmear, Mildred Myers 8:45— Wallic, the Radio Clown 9:00— Earl Arnold's Orchestra 9:30— Skillet Lickers WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 00— Voices at Dawn 7 -.15 — Radio Circus 7 :30— Classified Directory 00 — Shopper's Hour 15 — Mountain Valley Greetings 30— S tarr Freeze Morning Musicale 8:45— Radio Circus 9:15 — Broering Musicale 9:30— Serenade 9:45 — Klecman Furniture Program 10:05 — Serenade 10:20— Radio Circus 10:35— Kelvinator Program 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk 10 :59 — Simper Time Announcement 11:00— Radio Circus 11:15— Travel Bureau 11 :30— Variety 11 :45— St udebaker Champions (E. T.) P. M.— 12:01— Organ Recital 12:15— Radio Circus 12 :30— Fuller, Inc. 12 :45— Bcllonby Melodies 1 :00 — S tarr Freeze Program (E. T.) 1:15— Vaudeville 1 :30 — Magnecoil Program 1 :45 — Afternoon Melodies 2:15— The Home Finder 2 :30 — Kenton Fishing Grounds Program 2:45— Reds vs. Philadelphia at Philadelphia 4 :45 — Fuller Garden Party 5:00— Lyric Hour 5:30— Crown Furniture Program 5 :45 — Dinner Music 6 :00 — Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special 6:15 — Harlan and Ralph 6:45 — Berning Ford Program 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra 7:30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Review 7:45 — Nu-co Painters 8:00— Luckey Boys 8 :15 — Dry Ridge Spring's Program 8:30 — Colonial Stages Program 8 :45 — Champion Sparkers (E. T.) 9:00— Camel Cigars 9:15 — Radio Circus 9:45 — Evening Chimes 10 :00— Shopper's Hour 10:15 — Mountain Vallev Varieties 10:30— Fuller's Orchestra 11:00— Slumber Music Friday, June 19 WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6:45— God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship 7:45 — Ray and Bob 7 :59— Gruen Time Signal 8 :00— Starr-Freeze Melodies 8:15 — Pilaris Program 8:30— Sweethearts of the Air (CBS) 8-45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS) 9;00— Oxol Feature (CBS 9 :15— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram 9:45— Don and Betty (CBS) 10:00— Emily Post (CBS) 10:15— Crisco Cooking Travelogues (CBS) 10:30— Commonsense For Mothers (CBS) 10:45— Helen Home (CBS) 11:03— Woman's H o u r — Tremlette Tully 11 : 30— Charles W. Reaiime Studio Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue P. At.— 12 :30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS) 1:15— Art Dry Cleaning Program 1 :30— Chicago Market Program 1 :45— Full Measure Gas 2 :00— Salon Orchestra (NBC) 2 :30 — Drinkmor Program 2:45— Columbia Educational Fea- ture (CBS) 3 :00— Homemaker's Talk by Julia Hayes 3:30— Charles W. Reaume Studio 3 :45 — Edna Thomas, Lady from Louisiana (CBS) 4:00— Asbury Park Casino Orches- tra (CBS) 4 :30— A. L. Fink Program 5 :00— Queen City Rug Makers 5 :15 — Cincinnati Trade School 5 :30— Stearns and Foster's Magic Mattress Man 5 :45~Studio 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores 5 :55 — Sports Review 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast 6:00 — Home Furniture Company — Kate Smith and Her Swanee Music (CBS) 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree 6:13— Time and weather 6:15— Linit Program (CBS) 6 :30— Red Goose Adventures (CBS) 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS) 7:15 — Barbasol Program (CBS) 7:30— Dutch Masters (CBS) 8:00—True Story Hour (CBS) 9:00— Van Heusen Program (CBS) 9:30_The March of Time (CBS) 10 :00 — Confessions of a Racketeer (E. T.) 10 :15 — Gruen Answer Man 10:25— Happv Feet 10:30— Coney Island Orchestra 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports 11:08— Studio 11:15— Pyol Blackberry Dudes 11:30— Nocturne — Ann Leaf, Ben Alley (CBS) WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6:00 — International Fiddlers 6:30— Gym Classes 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 8:00— Bradley Kincaid 8 :15— Organ Program, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 8 :30 — Morning Devotions 8:45 — Miracles of Mapinolia (NBC) 9:00— Ray Perkins (NBC) Here's Ann Leaf, diminutive organist, whose program you hear over WKRC at 11:30 on Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday nights. On June 28, Ann is going to be 25 years old. That's rather young to be so prominent on the air, especially considering that for a year and a hall, every night in the week without a sin- gle break, her organ recital has been signing off Columbia's 17 and a half hours of programs at its key station, WABC. She is variously known, this little lady of large talent, as "Little Organ Annie," "Sweet and Lowdown," and "Mitey Ann Leaf." Friday, June 19 -"The Hostess," Mrs. Lutye Sohngen -Your Garden -Premium Man -Island Serenaders -Live Stock Reports -Vocal Ensemble -Organ with Instrumentalist -Swift Program (NBC) -WLW Stars -River Reports; Time Signals -Tuxedo Fiddlers 9 :15- 9:30- 9:45- 10:00- 10 :30- 10:40- 11:00- 11:15- 11 :30- 11 :45- Noon- P. M.— 12:15 — Bulova Time 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:50— Live Stock Reports 1 ;00 — National Farm and Home (NBC) 1 :30— Salt and Peanuts 1:40— Market Reports 1 ;45— Netherland Plaza Orchestra 2:15 — Village Rhymester 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC) 3:00— Bradley Kincaid 3:15— Radio Guild (NBC) 4 :15 — Ramona 4 :30— Raymond Mitchem ; Mills Brothers 5:00— Words and Music 5:30— Old Man Sunshine 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) 6:15— Madame Alda (NBC) 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC) 6:45— WLW Highlights 7 :00— Baseball Scores 7:05— Elliott Brock Military Band 7:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 7 :45— Sterling Jack 8:00— Castilian Nights 8:30— Hoosier Editor 8:45— Armour Program (NBC) Friday, June 19 9:00— Paul Whiteman's Paint Men .30— Clara, Lu and Em (NBC) 9:45— Glenn Sisters and Ramona 10 :00— Kingtaste Sonneteers 10 :30— Variety 10:45— Bob Newhall Sport Slices 11 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra 11 :15 — Salt and Peanuts 11 ;30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm (NBC-Blue) Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra A. M.— 12 :30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 1 -.00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn, the Quaker Early Bird (NBC) 8 :15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC) 8 :45 — Records 9 :00 — Organ Program 9:15— Records 9 :30— National Home Hour (NBC) 10 :00— Hawaiian Serenaders (NBC) 10 :30— Realities of Romance (NBC) 11 :00— Sign Off P. M.— 12 :50 — Livestock Reports 1:00— Sign Off 2 :00 — Woman's Radio Review (NBC) 3:00— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC) 3 :15 — Records 3 :45 — Ramona 4 :00— Records 4 :30 — Moore Paint Program (NBC) 4 :45 — Records 5 :00 — Poems by Harry Holcomoe 5 :15— Don Becker, Ukelele. 5:30— The Gossipers (E. T.) 5 :45— Little Jack Little (NBC) 6 :00— Records 6:30— Alice Richards 6 :45 — Records 7:00— Cities Service Concert (NBC) , 8 :00— Clicquot Club (NBC) 8:30— Pond's Dance (NBC) 9:00— Kodak Week End (NBC) 9:30— RKO Theater of the Air (NBC) 10:00 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC) 10:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra Variety/ The spice of a radio program is variety. Listeners enjoy Reaume twice-a-day programs broadcast through WKRC, because they are assured of getting entertainment that is varied. And because the Reaume organization knows radio and its applications to the marketing of products and services, it is placing an increasing number of programs For advertisers and advertising agencies. Charles W. Reaume SATURDAY June 20 WGKY (202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 6:00 — Kentucky Good Morning 6:15— Bob White 6:30 — God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship 7:30— Cheerio (NBC) 8 :00 — Early Morning Dance 9 :15 — My New Kentucky Home, 9 :45— Kentucky Belle's Kiddie Club 10:30— Classic Hour 11 :00 — Musical Novelties 11:30 — Mountain Melodies 12 :00 — Popular Dance Melodies Saturday, June 20 12:30— Norris Brock live stock quo- tations 12:35 — Luncheon Concert 1 P. M.— SIGN OFF P. M.— 5 :45 — Queen Bros. 5 :55 — Ayers Sport Flash 6:00— Amos 'n' Andv (NBC) 6:15— Tastycast Jesters (NBC) (i :30— Hilo Serenaders— Latonia Race Track Program. 6:45— Hill Billy Kid 7:00— Rudy Vallee (NBC) 7:30— Medlev Five 8:00— "Skillet Lickers" 8:30— Little Red Riding Hood 8:45 — Hugh Cross 9:00— Cuckoo Club (NBC) 9:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — Voices at Dawn 7:15 — Radio Circus 7 : 30— Classified Directory 8:00— Shopper's Hour 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings 8 ; 30 — S tarr Freeze Morning Musicale 8 :45 — Radio Circus 9:15 — Broering Musicale 9:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program 10:00— Brevities 10:20— Nu-co Painters 10 :35— Kelvinator Program 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk 10:59— Simper Time Announcement 11 :00— Radio Circus 11:15— Travel Bureau 11:30— Fifteen Minutes of Light Opera 11:45— Studebaker Champions (E. T.) P. M.— 12:01— Starr Freeze Program (E. T.) 12:15— Bell Furniture Program 12 :30— Fuller, Inc. 12 :45— Bellonby Melodies 1:00— Reds vs. Philadelphia at Philadelphia (Double Header) 5 :00 — Lyric Hour 5 :30— Catholic Telegraph 5:45— Race Auto & Radio Supply 6:00— Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special 6:15— Harlan and Ralph, vocal and piano 6 :45 — Berning Ford 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view 7 :45 — Barker News 8:00— Luckey Boys 8:15— Dry Ridge Springs Program 8:30 — Evening Chimes 8:45 — Radio Circus 9:00— Camel Cigars 9 :15— Adam F. Meyer Coal Co. 9 :30— Mountain Valley Varieties 9 :45_Fuller's Orchestra 10:15 — Slumber Music WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) a. m.— :45— God's Bible School— Sunrise Worship 622 Broadway Radio Advertising DO YOU NEED MONEY? Cash for June taxes, household bills, etc., can be obtained promptly through our helpful Personal Loan Plan. Borrow up to your needs and repay it in small monthly amounts arranged conveniently for you. Open 8:30 to 5:00 The Central Acceptance Corporation 26 East Sixth St., between Vine and Walnut Cincinnati, Ohio. PArkway 6280. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY. JUNE 19, 1931. of Greater Cincinnati Radio Stations Saturday, June 20 7:45— Ray and Bob 7:59 — Gnien Tinu Si G 00 Thi I ommutei ■ (I BS I 8 :30 — Home Furniti m Companj Tony's Scrap Hook | - i Full Mea 9:00— Charles tt Rei Studio 9 :S0— Consolidated Merchants Pro- gain i lueen l itj Rug Makei i 10:15— Time; Weather 10 20 Woman's Hour Tremlette Tnlly 10 >15 — Starr-Freeze Melodies 11:00— Don Bigclow's Orchestra (CBS) ii 15 Drinkmor Program 11:30— Homemaker'E Talk by Julia Hayes Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue P. M.-- 12:30— ( incinnati Merchants Pro- grain 1:00 — Community Hospital Program 1:80— Columbia Farm Network Program (CBS) 2:00— Four Clubmen (CBS) 1 30 A. L. Fink Song Recital, Louie Johnson, tenor 3:00— Ann Leaf, organ (CBS) 3:30 -Charles W. Rcanmc Studio 3:46— Spanish Serenade (CHS) 1:00— Luna Park Orchestra (CHS) 4 :15 — Full Measure Gas Program -1:30— Lime Park Orchestra (CHS) 4 : 45 — Pl, ar is Tire Program 5:00— KampI Artists 5:15 — Cincinnati Trade School 5 :30 — Steam's & Foster's Magic Mattress Man 5:45— Studio 5 ;50 Eureka Baseball Scores ■> 55 — Sports Review B:59— Burke Weather Forecast :00 — Home Furniture Company — Kate Smith (CBS) 6:15— Studio 6:25— Stocks, Cohle and Tyrcc 0:28— Time and weather 6:30— Pyol Blackberrv Dudes 6:46— Camel Quarter Hour (CBS) 7 :00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS) 7:15— Studio 7:25— Happy Feet 7:30 — Junior Chaniher of Commerce 8:00— United Spanish War Veterans 8:30— Art Hicks' Tacoma Park Orchestra 9:00— C. A. C— Hank Simmon's Show Boat (CHS) 9:45- Studio Feature 10:00— Coney Island Orchestra 10 ;30 — To Be Announced 10:48— Will Osborne and His Or- chestra (CBS) ime; Weather; Sports 11 :08— Bert Loun and His Orchestra ,i BS) 11:30 — Nocturne — Ann Leaf, Ben Alley (CBS) WLW (428 m.-700 kc.) A. m.— 6:00 — International Fiddlers 6:30— Gvm Classes 7 I". V & P. Food New- (NBC) 8:00— Bradley Kim-aid 8 :15 — Organ Program 8:30— Morning Devotions 9 15 -Kashmiri Trio !>:00— Dance Miniatures (NB< I 0:30— Art Talks, Cherry Greve !> 15- WLW Mad Bag 10:00 — Organ Progra m, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 10:15— Elliot Brock, violin 10:30— Live Stock Reports 10:40 — Murrsv Horton's Orchestra 11:00— McCormick's Fiddlers U:I5— Swift Program (NBC i ii SO— Live Stock Reports ll:45— River Reports: Time Signals They're Back Again ! Renew your subscription to RADIO DIAL See Page 7 Phillips Lord and Arthur Allen, the stars of "Seth Parker" and Uncle Abe and David fame come back now in a new downcast show, "The Stebbins Boys." The program will be heard on WSAI at 10:15 every night except Saturday and Sunday, beginning Mon- day (June 22). WTAM also will have the program. Saturday, June 20 Noon — Governmental Glimpses. At- torney General Gilbert Bettman P. M.— 12:18— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:15 — National Farm and Home (NBC) 1 :30— Salt and Peanuts 1 :45— Sisters of the Skillet (NBC) 2 :00— Ncthcrland Plaza Orchestra 2:15— Bradley Kincaid 2 :30 — Chicago Serenade (NBC) ■i :00 — Ramona and Don Becker 3:15— Pacific Feature Hour (NBC) •1:00 — Merry Men Quartet 4 :30— Croslcy Dealers' Hour 5 :00— American Derby from Wash- ington Race Track. Home wood, III. (NBC) 5:30— Doctors of Melody 5:15— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos 'n' Andv (NBC) 6 :15— Tastveast Jesters (NBC) 6 :30— Baseball Scores 6:88— WLW Highlights 6:45— Mail Pouch (E. T.) 7 :00— Croslev Theater 7:30— Pop Concerts (NBC) 8:30— Domino Orchestra (NBC) 9:00— Croslev Salurdav Knights 9:30— Clara, Lu and Em (NBC) 9:45— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 10:00— Club Sohio 10:30— Variety 10:45— Bob Newhall Sport Slices 11 00 -Nighl Songs 11:30— Castle Farm Orchestra Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12 :30— Village Rhymester 12:40— The Doodlesockers 1 :00 — Guv Lombardo's Orchestra. Netherland Plaza 1 :30— H e n r y Busse's Orchestra. Castle Farm. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC) 8:15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra S :45 — Records 9.-0O— Bradlej Kincaid 9 :15 — Procter and Gamble Program (NBC) 10:15— Radio Household Institute (NBC) 10 30— Keys to Happiness (NBC) 11:0.1— Records Saturday, June 20 11:30 — Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop. Comm. Assn. 11:45— Records Noon— Sign off P. M.— 3:00— Classic Gems (NBC) 3 :30— Records 3:45 — Croslev Dealers Salute 4 :00— Records 5 :00 — Southern Singers & Mitchem 5:30— The Gossipers (E. T.) 5:45— Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC) (1:00— Records 6 :30 — To be announced 7 :00— Records 7:15 — Bavarian Peasant Band (NBC) 7:30— The Silver Flute (NBC) 8:00— General Electric Hour (NBC) 8:30— Club Valspar (NBC) 9:00— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC) 10 :00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC) 10:30 — Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 11:00— Sign off SUNDAY June 21 WCKY(202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 10:00— Nomads (NBC). 10:30— Hugh Cross. 10:4.5 — Hilo Serenaders. 11:00— Bob Wbite. 11:15— Echoes of the Orient (NBC). STATION T-U-R-F Your favorite turf and sport Publication on sale here THE SONG SHOP 36 Eosl 5lh St. ' .in. i. tin Sq, Sunday. June 21 ll :30— Little Red Riding Hood, 11 :45— Charlcnc and Kallicrine. La- dies of Melody. Noon — Jack Moore. P. M.— 12:15— Skillet Lickers. 12:45 — Jean Lanier, Juvenile Soprano. 1:00— Sign off. 5:45 — Lucille Fox, Blues. 6:00 — Superior Studios, music 0:15 — Italian Serenaders, 6:30 — Maurice Thompson, Baritone. 6:45— Bob White. T:00 — Columbia Recording Skillet Lickers. . 30 College of Music Sinfonia Pro- gram. 8 :00 -I [ugh Cross, the boj from Smoky Mountain. 8:15— Kentucky Belle. 8:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. 8; 15 ! ittle Red Riding Hood. D:00— Odas Mattox, the Cr ling Guitarist. .0:15— Floyd Gibbons (NBC). 9:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 6:00— Voices at Dawn. 9:00 — Morning Concert, 9:15 — Radio Circus. 9 :30— Invitation to the Waltz. 9 :45 — Travel Bureau. 10:00— Kelvitiator Program. 10:15 — Dry Ridge Springs. 10:30 — German Program. 10:45 — Berning Ford. 11:00— Radio Circus. 11:15— The Home Finder. 11:30— Take Time to Be Beautiful. 11:45 — Mountain Valley Greetings. Noon — Radio Circus. P. AL— 12:15 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 12 :30— Galvano & Cortez. 12:45— Fuller Garden Party. 1:00 — Every Friday Jewish Hour. 2 :00 — Starr Freeze Program 2:15— Paul and Gene, "The Minia- ture Kings of Jazz," 2:30 — Sundown Serenader. 2:45— Harlan and Ralph. 3:00 — Mildred Eichler, soprano. 3:15 — Hawaiian Bluebirds. 3:30— Donald Galloway. 3 :45— Variety. 4 :00— C. T. S. Musicalc Trio. 4:10— Fuller, Inc. 4 .30 — Travel Bureau. 4 :45 — Parkview Symphony Hour. 5:15— Radio Circus. 6:00— Mrs. Lloyd Hoshaw. 6:15 — Travelogue, Joe Sweeney. 6:30 — Church Federation Hour. 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7 :30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Review. 8:00— Lippert's Buick Program. 8:15— Radio Circus. 8 :30 — Evening Chimes. 9 :00— Scotland Yard. 9:30— Radio Circus. 10:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra, 10-30— Radio Circus. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6:45-7:45— God's Bible School- Sunrise Worship. Sunday, June 21 9 :00— God's Bible School. 10:00— Watchtower Program (e. t | 10:15— Jim Lightfietd— Veteran's Civil I [our. II :00— Services from l r irsi Church Of Christ Scientist. Noon— Popular Musical Program. P. M.— i ' ifi l ixol Feature (CBS). 12 :30 — American Legion Program 1 :30— Ballad Hour (CBS). 2:00— Gruen Old-Fashioned Garden. 3:00— Cathedral Hour, 4:00— French Trio (CBS). 4:15— Pastorale (CBS). 4:45— Theo Karle (CBS), 5 :00— Chicago Knights (CBS), 5:30— Twilight Reveries. 5:58— Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00— Dr. Klein's NewsReels(CBS). 6:15— Studio. 6:20— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6:25 — Sports Review. 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:45— The Boiwell Sisters (CBS) 6:58 — Time and weather. 7:00— Devils, Drugs and Doctors (CBS). 7 :15 — Kate Smith. Swance Music CBS). 7:30 — Kaltenbnm Edits the News (CBS). 7:45 — Boat house Liquid Coffee Program, 8 :00 — Grand Opera Miniatures (CBS). 8:30— Graham Paige (CBS). 9:00— Tacoma Park Orchestra. :30— Fortune Builders (CBS). 9:45— Star Reveries (CBS). 10:00— Coney Island Orchestra. 10:30— Around the Samovar (CBS). 11:00— Sports Review. 11:07— Quiet Harmonics (CBS). 11 :30 — Artist Invitation Program. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 8:59— Bulova Time. ft :00— Church Forum. 9 :30— Witherspoon Chorus (NBC). 10:00— Bulova Time. FREE SERVICE Brine your It ml in Tubes lo us, wo will tC6t | annlyzc and match them while you look on FREE. We carry every type of tube* needed for your radio. SPARTON, KEN-RAD, R. C. A., MAJESTIC, CUNNINGHAM 607 WALNUT ST. Radio Repairing Any Matte 193 1s R adio Sensation! CRESCENT RADIO COMPLETE WITH TUBES Nothing else to Buy" EMBODYING ALL THE LATEST DEVELOPMENTS Regulir Lilt Price $69-50 OUR SPECIAL Bargain $— International Broadcast (NBC). 1 :45-Sign off. 2:0(1 — Woman's Radio Review 3:00— Records. 3 :45 — Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4 :00 — Southern Singers. 4:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4 :45 — Records. 5:15 — Vocal Solos. 5:30 — The Gossipers (e. t.). 5 :45— Black and Gold Orchestra 6 :00— Records. (j::!0— Bradley Kincaid. 6:45 — Larry Grueter, Accordion. 7:00— Blackstone Plantation (NBC). 7:30 — National Dairy Virtuoso 8 :00 — McKesson Musical Magazine 8:30— Fuller Brush Man (NBC). 9:00— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC). .0:00 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 10:30— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). WEDNESDAY June 24 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — Hugh Cross, the boy from Smoky Mountain. 7:15— Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00Bob White, "Fascinating Phi- losophy." 8:15— Early morning dance program. 9:16— My New Kentucky Home, 9:45 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:30— Classic Hour. 11 :00— Musical Novelties. 1 1 :30— Mountain Melodies. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— 12:30— Live Stock Reports. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45 — Queen Brothers. 5:55— Avers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15 — Hilo Serenaders. 6:30 — Latonia Race Track— Tommy Ott. 6 : 45— Bill and Boh, the Delivery Boys. 6:45 — Steve Bates. 7:00— Steve Bates, with an Octo- phone. Wednesday, June 24 7:15 — Kentucky Belle, Crooner. 7:30— Christian Glee Club CNBC) 8:00— Queen Brothers. 8:15 — Lucille Fox, Blues, 8:30 — Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. 9:00— Classic Recital: Molly Moore, Ellis Frakes, Tommy Ott. 9:80— Wally, the Radio Clown. 9 :45— Bob White. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00 — Voices at Dawn. 7:15 — Radio Circus. 7 :30 — Classified Directory. 8:00 — Shoppers' Hour. K :15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30 — Starr Freeze Program. 8:45 — Radio Circus. 9:15 — Broeriug Musicale. 9:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program, 10:0(1— Brevities. 10 :05— Radio Circus. 10:35 — Kelvinator Program. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk, 10 :59— Simper Time. 11 :00— Vaudeville. 11:15 — Travel Bureau. 11:30 — Radio Circus. 11:45 — Studebaker Champions (E. T.). Noon— Organ Recital. P. M.— - 12:30— Fuller, Inc. 12:45— Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00— S tarr Freeze Program (E. T.). 1 :15 — Radio Circus, 1 :30 — Galvano and Cortez. 1:45 — Afternoon Melodies. 2:00— The Home Finder. 2:15 — Reds vs. Boston at Boston. 5:00 — Lyric Hour. 5 :30 — Crown Furniture Program. 5 :45— Ralph and Harlan. 6 :00 — Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special. 6:15 — Dinner Music. 6:45 — Berning Ford. 7 :00 — Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7:30 — Harry Hartmau's Sport Re- view. 7:45— Nu-Co Painters. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15— Dry Ridge Spring Program. 8:30 — Colonial Stages. 8:45— The Islanders. 9:00-Camel Cigars. 9:15 — Radio Circus. 9:45— Dance Frolic. 10:00— Radio Circus. 10 :30— Fuller's Orchestra. 11:00 — Evening Chimes. 11:15 — Radio Circus. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. Al.— 6:45 — Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Ray and Bob. 7:59— Gruen Time. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9 :00— Mirrors of Beauty (CBS). 9:15— Morning Minstrels (CBS). WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6 :00— International Fiddlers. 6:29 — Bulova Time. 6::it)— Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 7:59— Bulova Time. 8:00— Bradley Kincaid. 8:15— Mouth Health (NBC). 8 :30 — Morning Devotions. 8:45 — Popular Gems. 9:00— Morning Ballads. 9:15— Frances Ingrain (NBC). 9:30— Fashionette. 9:45 — Premium Man. 10:00- Murray Horton's Orchestra. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 1U:40— Organ and Vocal Solos. 11:00— Island Serenaders. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 1 1 :30— WLW Stars. 11:45— River Reports; Time Signals. Noon— Tuxedo Trio. P. M.- 12:15 — Bulova Time. [8:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Salt and Peanuts. 1:40— Market Reports. 1 :45 — Guy Lombardo's Orchestra. Netherland Plaza. 1:15— Village Rhymester. -.»o — \ mage Knyuiester. 2 :80— Chicago Serenade (NBC). I Tuesday, June 23 2 :45 — Edna Wallace Hopper 3:00— More Truth Than Poetry 3:15— U. S. Navy Band (NBC). 3 :45 — Eumer Refik, pianist. 4:00— Beauty Secrets by Rigaud. 4:15— Organ and Vocal Solos. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4 :40 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona. 5:00 — Murray Horton's Orchestra. 5:30 — Old Man Sunshine. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— WLW Highlights. 0:30— Berry Brothers (e. t.). 6:45 — Baseball Scores. 6:50 — Bradley Kincaid. 7:00— Armstrong Quakers (NBC). 7 :30— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 7:45— Sterling Jack. 8 :00— Plantation Davs. 8:30— Werk Bubble* Blowers. 9 -.00— Barbaso! Barbers (e. t.). 9:15— Tastyeast Candykids. 9 :30— Chevrolet Chronicles (e. t.), 10:00 — Cotton Queen Minstrels. 10;30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sports Slices. 10:58— Estate Weather. 11 :00 — Los Amigos. 11:30— Vox Celeste. Alidnight— Village Rhymester. A. M.— 12:10— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:30— Henry Busse's Orchestra. Cas- tle Farm. 1 :00— Guy Lombardo's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. RADIO DIAL 26 newsy issues! Mail this Coupon — enclose $1 6 Months for $1 .00 1 official complete accurate RADIO DIAL 22 E. 12th Street Cincinnati, Ohio Gentlemen: Enclosed find One Dollar ($1). Send RADIO DIAL for 6 months. ( ) New Subscriber [ ] Renewal Name City State RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY, JUNE 19. 1931. Wednesday, June 24 9:30 — Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:00— Full Measure Gas. 10:15 — Time and weather. 10 :18 — Woman's Hour, Tremlettc TuIIcy. 10 :45— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 11 :15 — Homemakers' Talk by Julia Hayes. 11:45 — Drink-Mor Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.- 12 :30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1:00— Farm Program (CBS). 1 :30 — Chicago Market Program. 1 :45 — Studio Feature. 2:00— Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2:30— Queen City Rug Makers. 2 :45 — Syncopated Silhouettes (CBS). 3:15 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 3:30— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 3:45— Talk bv Oscar L. Levin (CBS). 4 :00— Pharis Tire Program. 4:30— A. L. Fink Program. 5:00— Kampf Artists. 5:15 — Cincinnati Trade School Program. 5 :30 — Stearns' & Foster's Magic Mattress Man. 5:45 — Studio. 5:50— Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. 5:59— Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00— Kate Smith Swanee Music (CBS). G:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 8:13 — Time and weather. 6:15— Unit Program (CBS). 6:30 — Evangeline Adams "Astrol- oger" (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS). 7:00 — Pryor's Crcmo Military Band (CBS). 7 :15— The Barbasol Program (CBS). 7 :30— Symphonic Interlude (CBS). 7:45— Old Wurzburg Malt Program. 8:00— Gold Medal Fast Freight (CBS). 8:30 — Boathousc Liquid Coffee Program. 8:45 — Vincent Lopez and His Val- voliners (e. t.). 9:00— Rhythm Choristers (CBS). 9:15— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 9:30— McAleer Polishers (CBS). 9:45— The Bon Bons (CBS). 10:00— Don Bigelow & His Orches- tra (CBS). 10:15 — Gruen Answer Man. 10:25— Happy Feet. 10:30 — Coney Island Orchestra. 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports Re- view. 11:08 — Hollvwood Garden Orchestra (CBS). 11:30 — Nocturne; Ann Leaf, Ben Alley (CBS). Midnight— Sign off. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. A1.— 6 : 00— International Fiddlers, old- time music. 6:29— Bulova Time. 6:30-Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC), 8:00— Bradley Kincaid. 8:15 — Organ Program. 8:30 — Morning Devotions. 8:45— Bulova Time. 8:46— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC). 9:00— Mary Hale Martin (NBC). 9 :15 — Florence Frey's Workshop. 9:30— Dance Miniatures (NBC). 10:00— McCormick's Fiddlers. 10:15— Jim and Walt. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Organ Program, Arthur Chandler Jr. 11:00 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals. Noon — Crosley Singers. P. AL— 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Jim and Walt. 1:40— Market Reports. 1 :45 — Guv Lombardo's Orchestra. Netherland Plaza. 2:15 — Village Rhymester. 2:30 — Chicago Serenade (NBC). 3:00 — Weather Forecast. 3j01 — The Matinee Plavers. 4:00— Chats with Peggv Winthrop (NBC). 4:15 — Organ with Instrumentalist. Wednesday, June 24 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4 :40— Harriet Wellen, Don Becker. 5:00 — Afternoon Revelers. 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 5 :45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 6:15— DuPont Speed Blenders (e. t.). 6:30-Phil Cook (NBC). 6:45 — "Believe It or Not, " Ripley (NBC). 7 :00— Baseball Scores. 7:05— WLW Highlights. 7:1G— John Ruskin Orchestra (e. t.) 7 :30— R. F. D. Hour. 8:00— The Buddy Boys. 8 :30— G o 1 d m a u Band Concerts (NBC). 9:30— Canova Coffee Hour. 10:00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas tie Farm. 10:30— Variety. 10:45 — Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 11:00— Night Songs. 11:30— Crosley Theater. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. A. M.— 12 :30— H e n r y Busse's Orchestra. Castle Farm. 1 :00 — Guy Lombardo's Orchestra, Netherland Piaza. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc. A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45— Records. 9:15— Stero Program (NBC). 9 :30— National Home Hour (NBC). 10:00— Records. 10:15— Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10 :45— Records. 11:00— Sign off. P. At.— 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1:00— Sign off. 2 :00 — Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— E dna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 3 :15— Records. 3 :45 — Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4 :00 — Don Becker, ukulele. 4:15 — Sam Wilson, baritone. 4 :30 — Poems by Harry Holcombe. 4 :45 — Records. 5:00 — Old Man Sunshine. 5 ;25 — Civil Service Talk. 5:30 — The Gossipers (e. t.). 5:45— Little Jack Little (NBC). :00— Records. 0:15 — Boscul Moments, with Madame Alda (NBC). 6 :30— Records. 0:45— Back of the News in Wash- ington (NBC). 7 :00— Listerine Program (NBC). 7:15— Mae Questel (NBC). 7 :30— Mobiloil Concert (NBC). 8:00— Halsey Stuart (NBC). 8 :30— Palmolive Hour (NBC). 9:30— Coca Cola Program (NBC). 10:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10:30 — Guy Lombardo's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 1 1 :00— Sign off. THURSDAY June 25 WGKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7:00 — Hugh Cross, the boy from Smoky Mountain. 7:15 — Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Bob White, "Fascinating Phi- losophy." 8:00 — Early Morning Dance. 9:15— My New Kentucky Home 9 :45— Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC) 10:30— Northam-Warren (NBC). 10:45— Classic Hour. 11:00— Musical Novelties. 11:30— Skillet Lickers. Noon — Popular Dance Tunes. P. M.— 12:30— Live Stock Quotations. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. 12:45 — Rev. Chas. A. Vandermuelen. 1 :00— Sign off. 5 :45— Queen Brothers. 5:55 — Avers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 6:30 — Latonia Race Trace Program, with Little Red Riding Hood. Gertrude Dooley has the lead- ing" part this week in "The Waac," the Crosley Theatre play at WLW which will be given for the third time on Saturday night (June 20) at 7 o clock. She plays the part or Connie Folkstone, member of the Women's Auxiliary Army Corps, a British relief organization that played its part in France during the war. Wally Maher is heard opposite her as Tommy ArVillis, an American Doughboy. Inci- dentally, Maher gives the WLW Highlights every night and is master of ceremonies on the Buddy Boy program on Wednes- day nights at 8 o'clock. 7:00- 7:15- 7:30- 7:45- 8:00- S:30- 8:45- 9:00- 9:30- Thursday, June 25 -Tri- State Entertainers, with Lim and Ham. -Dixie Spiritual Singer-, (NBC). -Bob White. -BIu-Green Blues. -Crooning Guitarist. -Blackstone Plantation (NBC). -Betty May, contralto. -Ukelele Travelogue. -Earl Arnold's Orchestra. -Skillet Lickers. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. At.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn. 7:15— Radio Circus. 7:30— Classified Directory. 8:00 — Shoppers' Hour. 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8 :30 — Starr Freeze Program. 8:45 — Radio Circus. 9:15 — Broering Musicale. 9:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10 :00— Brevities. 10:05— Organ Recital. 10:20^Nu-Co Painters. 10:35— Kelvinator. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement. 11:00— Variety. 11:15 — Travel Bureau. 11:30 — Program of Waltzes. 11:45 — Studebaker Champions (E. T.). Noon — Radio Circus. P. M.— 12:15— Clean Up and Paint Up Cam- paign. 12:30— Fuller, Inc. 12:15 — Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00 — S tarr Freeze Program (E. T.). 1 :15 — Serenade. 1 :30 — Magnecoil Program. 1 :45 — Dance Frolic. 2:00— Harlan and Ralph. 2:15— The Home Finder. 2:30— Radio Circus. 2:45 — Memory Lane. 3 :15 — Radio Circus. 3 :45 — Novelty Notes. 4 :00 — Tea Time Tunes. 4 :15 — Reveries. 1:30— Organ Recital. 5:00 — Lyric Hour, 5:30— Bell Furniture Program. 5:45— Race Auto and Radio Supply. Thursday, June 25 6 :00 — Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special. 6:15 — Dinner Music. 6 :45 — Berning Ford. 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7:30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Re- 7:45- «:00- 8:15- 8:30- 8:45- 9:00- 9:15- 9:30- 9:45- 10:15- 10 :45- -Barker News. -Luckey Boys. -Dry Ridge Springs Program. -Evening Chimes. -Merchants' Review. -Camel Cigars. -Adam F. Meyer Coal Co. -Shopper's Hour. -Radio Circus. -Fuller's Orchestra. -Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 0:45 — Sunrise Worship. 7 :45 — Ray and Bob. 7 :59 — Gruen Time Signal. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8:15— Full Measure Gas. 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8 :45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 9:00— Drink-Mor Program. 9:15 — Consolidated Merchants' Pro gram. 9:45— Barbara Gould Beauty Talk (CBS). 10 :00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 10:30— Uneeda Bakers (CBS). 10:45 — Time and weather. 10 :48— Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tully. 11 :15 — Dream Home, Jimmy and Joan. 11:30 — Queen City Rug Makers. 11:45— Streit Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12 :30 — Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1:00 — Columbia Farm Program (CBS). 1 :30 — Studio Feature. 2 :00 — Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2:30— A. L. Fink— The Three Doc- tors (CBS). 2:45— A. L. Fink— Ben and Helen (CBS). 3 :00— Homemakers Talk by Julia Hayes. 3 :30 — Charles W. Reaume Studio. 3 :45— Pavilion Royal Dance Or- chestra (CBS). 4:00 — Asbury Park Casino Orches- tra (CBS). 4:30— Asbury Park Casino Orches- tra (CBS). 4:45— Meet the Artist (CBS). 5 :00— Pharis Program; Sports Flash. 5:15 — Cincinnati Trade School Program. 5:30 — Stearns & Foster's Magic Mat- tress Man. 5 :45 — Studio. 5:50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00— Kate Smith and her Swanee Music (CBS). 6:10— Stocks. Cohle & Tyree. 6 :13 — Time and weather. 6:15— Linit Program (CBS). 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS). 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15— Mary Charles (CBS). 7 :30— Kaltenborn Edits the News (CBS). 7 :45— Hamilton Watchman (CBS). 8 :00 — The Premier Salad Dressers (CBS). 8:15— Big Yank Workshirt (E. T.) 8 :30 — Detective Story Program (CBS). 9:00— The Lutheran Hour (CBS). 9:30— Fortune Builders (CBS). 9:45— Peter's Parade (CBS). 10:00— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 10:15— Studio. 10:20 — Sports Review. 10:25 — Happy Feet. 10:30 — Coney Island Orchestra. 11:00 — Gruen Witching Hour. 11:30 — Time and weather. 11:33— Art Hicks— Tacoma Park. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 00 — International Fiddlers. 6 :29— Bulova Time. 6:30— Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC), 7:59— Bulova Time. 00— Bradley Kincaid. -Organ Program. -Morning Devotions. 44 — Bulova Time. 45 — Popular Gems. Thursday, June 25 9:00— Ray Perkins (NBC). 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9 :30— Community Health, Dr." Carl Wilzbach. 9:45 — Housekeeper Chats, 10:00 — Murray Horton Orchestra 10:30— Live Stock Reports 10:40— Jim and Walt. 11:00— The Venetian Three 11:15— Swift Program (NBC) 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:4,5 — River Reports; Time Signals. Noon— Organ, Arthur Chandler, Jr. P. M.— 12:15 — Bulova Time. 12:16 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:45 — American Cvnamid Program (E. T.). 12 :50 — Live Stock Reports. :00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). :30— George, Lava Soap Man (NBC). :45 — Market Reports. : 50 — Guy Lombardo's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. :15— Village Rhymester. :30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). :45 — Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC). :00— Home Decorations (NBC). :15 — Weather Forecast. :16— Afternoon Revelers. :30— Maze of Melody (NBC). :00— Jim and Walt. :15— Gems of Melody (NBC). :30 — Live Stock Reports. 40 — The Crosley Singers. :00— Bradley Kincaid. :15 — The Ramblers. :29— Bulova Time. :30 — Old Man Sunshine. :45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). :00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). :15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). :30 — Glenn Adams, Dog Talks. :50 — Baseball Scores. :55 — Bradley Kincaid. :00— WLW Highlights. :15— Rin-Tin-Tin Thriller (NBC). :30 — Guy Lombardo's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. :00— Barbasol Barbers (e. t.). :15 — Horseshoe Gardens Orchestra :30— Russian Airs. 00 — Crimelights. :30— Clara. Lou and Em (NBC). :45 — Hires' Fireside Melodies. ;00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. :30— Variety. :45 — Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 58— Estate Weather Man. 00 — Old Masters' Chime Reveries. 9:( 9 ID L0 10 10:; 11 Midnight — Village Rhymester. A. AT.— 12:10— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12 :30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 1 :00 — Guy Lombardo's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45 — Records. 9:00— McCormick's Old Time Fiddlers. 9:15— Records. 9:45 — Organ Program. 10:00— McCormick's Old Time Fiddlers. 10:15— Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10:30— Records. 10:15— Sign off. P. M.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— Sign off. 1:45— Dr. Scholl Reveller (NBC). 2 .00 — Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 3 :45 — Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4:00 — Mona Motor Organ Recital. 4:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4 :45 — Records. 5:00— Travel Talk, Joseph Ries. 5:30 — The Gossipers (e. t.). 5:45 — Black and Gold Room Orches- tra (NBC). :00— Records. 6:25— Better Business Bureau Talk. 6 :30 — Records. 6:45— Vocal Solos. 7 :00— Flcischmann Hour (NBC). 8:00— Arco Birthday Party (NBC). 8:30— Jack Frost's Melody Moments (NBC). 9 :00— Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra (NBC). 10 :00— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10:30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 11:00— Sign off. JUN 27 193 Volume I, No. 6 FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1931 Price 5c Opera Stars Have Prominent Place This Week In Local Programs; Hew Features Are Booked On Each Station ADELE VASA r\dele Vasa, will sing "Nor- wegian Echo Song" in the first program of the Columbia Camp Concerts which WKRC will broadcast at 3 :30 Wednesday afternoon (July 1 ). The concerts are planned to supplement the American School of the Air broadcasts which are off the air for the summer. They are designed to reach the ( ( oniinued on page '■'• ) Six Red Games Are on WFBE Card This Week WFBE will broadcast play- by-play accounts of the four games the Cincinnati Reds will play at Brooklyn this week. The games are scheduled for 2:15 p. m. on Monday, Tues- day. Wednesday, and Thurs- day. Harry Hartman will do the reporting. July 4, the Parkview station will celebrate with two ball games relayed from Chicago where- the Reds play the Cubs. The morning game starts at 10:45, (he afternoon play at 3:15. Military Band Will Play From London Tuesday From London, England, the Wireless Military Band will broadcast through an NBC network including WSAI on Tuesday afternoon (June 30) at 3 :-40. Other international broadcasts will be relayed by WSAI in the near future. The dates will be announced in Radio Dial. Jewish Art Hour is Added to WKRG Sunday Schedule The Jewish Art program will be broadcast by WKRC on Sun- day morning (June 28) from 11 o'clock until noon in connection with the Columbia Broadcasting System. One of the most popu- lar programs on the air in other cities was aired by WKRC two weeks ago as an experiment. Last Sunday it was omitted from the schedule. Eighty-four tele- phone calls that came in as fast as the WKRC switch board could handle them convinced program directors there that the program must be made a permanent Sun- day feature. Liberty Takes True Story Place Liberty Magazine will go on the air Friday ( July 3 ) at 8 p. in. on the Columbia network and WKRC with a program built around features found in the magazine, probably in the man- ner of Collier's Hour. The new Bernarr McFadden magazine- child will take the place of the True Story hour. Vox Pop, the weekly page of listener letters in the magazine, will be personified on the air with a radio actor playing the part. Adventures of Sandy and Lil will be dramatized each week from the cover of the magazine. Here's Helen Gilhgan who sings with Milton Watson on the Star Reveries the Columbia network sends WKRC every Sunday night at 9:45, She has appeared as prima donna in many Broad- way musical comedy successes. She s a true Irish colleen, the daughter of a distinguished Irish family that has contributed many renowned scholars, scientists and authors to the list of Erin's famous sons. Thursday night (June 25) at 10:30 you can hear her on the Radio Roundup if you tune to WOWO (1160 kc-258.5) or WABC (860 kc.-346.6m.) Ryder Gup Match Results Will Be Told by Radio A resume of the team matches to be played between English and American professional golfers in competition for the Ryder Cup at at Scioto Country Club, Colum- bus, Ohio, will be broadcast over WSAI from an NBC, network by Alex Morrison of the American At Sea Ken Murray and Nick Lucas will appear in the RKO Theater of the Air Friday night i fune 36) at 9:30. The program will originate aboard the S. S. Conte Grande. WSAI broadcasts locally. Golfer magazine on Friday and Saturday (June 26 and 27) at 5:45 p.m. and C>:15 respectively. Geraldine Farrar Will Make Radio Debut Monday Packard Presents Arna Case, Cyre- a Van Gordon, John McCormack, Marian TaUey Geraldine Farrar, who for 20 years and more was the sensation of opera, will make her radio de- but Monday night (June 29) at 9:30 in the first of four pro- grams to be broadcast for the Packard Motor Car Company by the National Broadcasting Com- pany with VVLW as an outlet. Her voluntary retirement from the operatic stage after 20 years as a star has been brokm infre- quently in recent years by brief concert appearances. Until now, she has refused to appear on the air. John McCormick, Irish tenor; Cyrena Van Gordon, formerly of the Chicago Civic Opera : Anna Cast- of the Metropolitan, ami Marian Tallcy, tin- Kansas Chy girl who at the age of 19 made the most sensational Metropol- itan debut of the decade, will be heard on successive Packard broadcasts. Two Zoo Concerts Every Week Are Booked by WLW Concerts from the Cincinnati Zoo wilt he broadcast by WLW this summer at 2:30 every Wed- nesday and Saturday afternoon. Reuben Lawson, personnel manager of the Cincinnati Suu- phony Orchestra, is conductor. The concerts will be broadcast from the regular matinee per- formances in the Zoo club house. Complete Radio Programs Begin on Page 4 RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1931. Weekly RADIO DIAL Published every Thursday by thi 22 East 12th St., Cincinnati, Ohio. NATALIE G1DDINGS, Editor Radio Dial Publishing Co., Contents copyrighted. VOL. I JUNE 26, 1931 No. 6 What Will It Prove Anyway ? Next, Montgomery Ward & Co. are going to try it; meanin; find out what the radio audience likes best. Beginning July 1, the Chicago concern is to embark on a pn tentious month's effort to unearth this coveted information, will consist of four types of programs, each to be heard for out week, daily except Sunday at 8 :30 a. m., over an extensive NBC hook-up including WLW. The first week, Josef Koestner's orchestra will occupy the time. The second week, an entertaining dramatic sketch of home life will come to bat. The third week, modern minstrelsy will have its chance; and the fourth week, song and sentiment will be tried. Then listeners are to be asked to decide which of the four program types they want to hear the rest of the year. At first thought, this candid venture seems to deserve the "nation-wide listener poll," "research," and "solve a vexing prob- lem" phrases with which advance notices bristle. But what if one of the four competing types does win even a handsome ma- jority of the votes? Will that prove anything? In politics, majorities are decisive; but not in broadcasting. Far from it, minorities are all-important here, for the good and sufficient reason that endlessly varying tastes make the radio audi- ence an innumerable collection of minorities. Frankly, no one program or type of program can please a majority of listeners. And the bomerang of trying it is that this automatically displeases a host of minorities. In other words, the most popular stations are those that simply please the greatest lumber of successive minorities. This may not be flattering to the doubtlessly sincere Mont- gomery Ward effort. Nevertheless, it is the truth, if we know our listeners. The search for the perfect audience-insuring program- has lured many another sponsor into a popularity poll. But unless human nature has undergone a revolutionary change, the latest attempt will be no more conclusive than its predecessors. Three Bakers to Reveal Identity in Last Program Accelerating the racy pace they have kept up for many months, the Fleischmann "Three Bakers" will slage "Around the World" or "1S92 Marches On" as the ambitious undertaking that will mark their farewell program Monday night (June 29) at S o'clock over YVKRC and other Columbia stations. At the end of the half hour, Brad Browne, master of cer- emonies, will pull each Baker out for a personal introduction Conway Sisters Will Play Sunday On Same Concert Margaret and Patricia Con- way, graduates of the College of Music of Cincinnati, will play a piano and violin recital at WCKY Sunday night (June 2S) Art Hicks YVKRC points to Art Hicks and his orchestra as one of the snappiest dance bands heard on its wave length. Broadcasting from the Blue Grass Pavilion at Tacoma Park in Dayton, Ky., Hicks and his band have been as- signed to the S :;S0 period on Sat- urday night, 9 o'clock Sunday night, 1 1 :30 Tuesday night and 111:30 Thursday night. Ray Lawwill announces the broad- casts. "Slave of Russia," adapted from the melodrama, "The Serf." will be played Saturday night I June 27 1 at 9 o'clock in Hank Simmons' Show Boat. WKRC is the local outlet. DX DANCE BANDS WGN (720 kc — 416.4 m.) Woyn t King — 10:30 every niijht but Monday; Hci-bic Kay at the Trianon ballroom, Earl Burtnett at Lincoln Tavern, Bill Donahue at the Drake hotel share WGN's wave from II o'clock to 1 :30 every night except Sunday, when WGN Novelty En- semble plays at 11:30. WENR (870 kc — 344.6m.) Monday night: Cotton Club (NBC) 11 o'clock; Palais D'OR (NBC) 11:30; Hotel La Salle 12:30. Tuesday night: Hotel Pierre Conti- nentals (NBC) 11:30; Hotel Ln Salle midnight; Merry Gardens 12,30. Wednesday night: Hotel Pierre Con- tinentals (NBC) 11 o'clock; Ben Pollack (NBC) lt:30; White City midnight; Merry Gardens 12:30. Thursday night: Hotel La Solle 11:15; White City 11:30; Guyon's Paradise midnight; Merry Gardens 12:30. Friday night: Henry Busso (NBC) 11:30; Hotel La Salle midnight; Merry Gardens 12:30. Saturday night: Barn Dance 12:30; Merry Gardens and Hotel La Salle I o'clock to 2:00. KDKA (980 kc— 305.9 m.) Hotel William Penn: 10:45 Monday night; 10.15 Tuesday and Thurs- day nights; 11 Friday night. Phil Spitalny (NBC) 11 p. m Tues- day. Hotel New Yorker (NBC) II p. m. Wednesday. Don Bestor 10:15 Wednesday night. Del Lampe NBC) 11:15 Thursday night. WTAM (1070 kc— 280.2 m.) Merle Jacobs at the Golden Pheasant- 1 1 :30 p. m. Sunday and Wednesday. Emerson Gill at Lotus Gardens : 12:30 Sunday and Thursday nights; 11:15 Saturday. Paul Whiteman lNBC> — Monday at 11:15 p. m, Dick Fiddler at Bamboo Gardens — 12:30 Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday nights. Rudy Vollec (NBC) — 11:15 p. m. Tuesday. What's your favorite DX program? RADIO DIAL will pass the informa- tion on to other Cincinnati dialers. Around the Dial By THE DIAL TWISTER Harriet Lee, statuesque blonde, is Heard regularly over the Col urn hid Broadcasting Sys tern and WKRC She is one of the staff "blue" singers of the nation-wide chain. Arthur Bagley, of the NBC Tower Health Erercises, is spelling the words "gym class" in the daily announcements of late because of a recent misun- derstanding. Several radio fan* wrote to ask of the "largest gin glass." Three Peanut Boys Shift Easily to Stage from Radio The Three Peanut Boys who have been singing at WFBE, be- ginning this week are to appear every night on the floor show at Fuller's Gardens on Reading Road. They also will be heard in the Fuller broadcasts through WFBE. The boys formerly were with Fess Williams' and Louis Arm- strong's orchestras. On the air they have attracted so much at- tention that Earl Fuller, who owns Fuller's Gardens and man- ages WFBE, put them on his floor show to see if they could "draw" in person as well as by radio. The resultant success of their song and dance act has netted the three negro boys a contract at the Gardens. Gorno and Neely To Share Recital Romeo Gorno, pianist, and Uberto T. Neeley, violinist, fac- ulty members of the College of Music of Cincinnati, will play at WLW Sunday (June 1 28) at 6:30 p. m. in the first of a series of recitals by other faculty mem bers. The recital will include the first movement of Cesar Frank's "Sonata for Piano and Violin" and the Grieg "Sonata in G for Violin and Piano." Quacks Facts about medical quackery never before publicized will be brought to light by Dr. Howard W. Haggard in the "Devils, Drugs, and Doctors" program on WKRC and Columbia Sunday night (June 28) at 7 o'clock. "Dr. Jeckyl and Mrs. Hyde" will be played on the Irrational Broadcasting Company's Laven- der Network during the Buddy Boys program at WLW Wed- nesday night (July 1 ) at 8 o'clock. J. Cornelius Schwade- maga Fishbearder, Jr., reputed president of the IBC, says he plans to keep the cast from pull- ing shady business in their first mystery play by not giving them scripts of the play until the cur- tain rises. Who said band music isn't popu- lar? He's wrong, as the Cremo Military Baud is proving, daily ex- cept Sunday at 7 p. in. over WKRC. Many an old-timer is thanking Arthur Pryor for playing (and how!) the perennials they hear all too seldom; for instance, Sousa's "Manhattan Beach" the other eve- ning. In case you haven't found it out for yourself, "station KUKU" is as "cuckoo" as ever, Saturday at 9 p. m. on WCKY. "Ambrose J. Weems," "Mrs. Pennyfeather" and the "nickelodian" run a dead heat for the laugh honors. Speaking of laughs, you shouldn't overlook the Cotton Queen Min- strels, WLW at 10 p. m. on Tues- day. "Hink and Dink" turn out chortles at a rate that is nobody's business. There's a good quartet. And Charlie Eggleston is the genial interlocutor. By the way, he must be a mighty handy man to have around a studio. Earl Fuller's Orchestra is pro- viding dance music frequently and pleasingly at WFBE. Bob White, who turns up daily on WCKY, belongs to the scrap- book clan that compiles wit, wis- dom and sentiment for the delecta- tion of those who go in for that sort of thing. And he's a good one. His personality is especially pleasant. NBC and WSAI broadcast a pipeless organ the other day. What next? A croonless crooner? * * * Maybe the boys who sing 'em soft aren't packing them in like they used to. For instance, the new Unit feature, daily at 6:I5p.m. over WKRC, is counting on Dennis King to make the girls listen. He and his full rich voice ought to. Besides, he sings good numbers from light opera. * * * Yes, and here's a break for the male of the species. Harbor Lights is back on WLW, Sunday at 7:30 p. m. Tang of the sea, roaring adventure, "Captain Jimmie Norton" and_ all, it should pick up quite an audience of big, strong listeners. Some of the lads who lean to good gory mysteries are mourning because the Sherlock Holmes series (WSAI) has faded out till fall. But they still have plenty of dirty work at the crossroads. On Thurs- day there's Detective Story at 8-30 p. m. on WKRC, and if that doesn't satisfy their thirst for violence WLW follows up at 9 with Crime" Lights. What more could you ask in one evening? That Tommy Ott is doing some mighty nimble piano work at WCKY. The other evening he stop-gapped with just the kind of medleys that this department dotes Elliott Brock's Military Band is making a name for itself at WLW, 7:15 p. m. Friday. The dyed-in-the- wool march fans are wishing its program could run a half hour in- stead of just 15 minutes. * * * If you like organ music, you'll enjoy Nocturne, WKRC Saturday at 11:30 p. m. Ann Leaf just plays, without so much as an announcer to interfere. And she can play! * * * The many Cincinnati friends of Grace, George, and Hortense will be glad to know that the Don-Hall- Rose Trio has crashed the NBC after several successful months at WTAM.. They will be on the blue chain Saturday night at 10:30, and on the red, Tuesday at 5 p. m. Can't tell you what stations.. But if you twirl the dial diligently enough you're pretty sure to find them. * * * Good old barbershop harmony is coming back, and just where you'd expect to find it; in the Barbasol program, Monday, Wed- nesday and Friday at 7:15 p.m. over WKRC. The story is that these boys are just business men. But they know their minors. That kind of singing dosn't have to be confined to barbershops. Though maybe not as impressive as the winter edition, the Atwater Kent summer series is an attractive feature in its own right. If you're looking for something better than average, turn to WSAI Sunday at 8:1S p.m. Sad news to these ears is the announcement that Henry Thies'* Willys Memory Hour is to be off WLW's wave Monday night at 11 o'clock. Chime Reveries will move into the spot from the same hour on Friday. These were among the few 60 minute programs left on the air. Shindiggers The Queen Brothers from the hills of North Carolina have been named "The Blue Ridge Shindig- gers" by vote of WCKY listen- ers before whom they are ap- pearing regularly. Changes Lucille Fox of Corbin, Ky., is a new blue singer on WCKY's staff. Leonard Barnes, formerly of WGY, is announcing remote control dance programs for WLW. Seger Ellis, baritone and pianist, will return to WLW the first week in July. WLW had not yet assigned him new periods on the air by Radio Dial's press time. Bob Pierce, WLW's Old Man Sunshine has gone to WEEI, Boston. Brad- ley Kincaid has his 5 :30 p. m. period daily. Horses What sounds like a horse gal- loping down a dusty road? NBC production m e n have found that drumming on a derby hat with muffled xylophone ham- mers gives the desired effect. Howard Hafford Uses Phones to Direct Concert The Gruen Old-Fashioned Garden of Melodies last Sunday completed its first year on the air with Howard Hafford as its di- rector. The hour-long program of favorite instrumental and vocal music is broadcast by WKRC every Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock from the stage of Music Hall. Hafford is so me- ticulous in his direction that he wears ear-phones connected to a receiving set so that he can hear every note of the music as it sounds on the air rather than in the Music Hall studio. Bernie Fame Ben Bernie is beginning to suspect that many of the radio fans are using defective receiv- ing sets. Despite the fact he is an- nounced as the "Old Maestro," a week never passes without the receipt of a score of fan letters addressed — "Dear Old Microbe." RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1931. WGKY Players Will Stage New Mystery Drama "The Man Who Could Not Die," another mystery thriller, will be begun Monday night (J une 29) at 6:16 by the WCKY Players. It is the work of Eleanor Beach whose "Voo- doo Charm" was so popular with WCKY listeners this spring. "The Man Who Could Not Die" will be broadcast in six install- ments. The cast includes Jerry Akers, Maurice Thompson, Jetta Crane, Alma Ashcraft, Molly Moore, George Case and Billy Burke. Beethoven's Second Symphony Will Be Played Despite his acknowledged su- premacy as a composer of sym- phonies, Beethoven's two earliest works in this form still receive comparatively little attention, and few opportunities are given to hear the second, in D, which is to feature the Symphonic Hour Sunday afternoon (June 28) at S o'clock through VVKRC and (he Columbia chain. Wagnerian Wagner masterpieces seldom played on the air make up the Philco Symphony concert Tues- day night (June 30) at 8 :30 with WKRC the local Columbia out- let. The program includes the Prelude to Act III of "Seig- fried," descriptive of the scene as Siegfried climbs the rocks to where Brunnhilde lies sleeping in the ring of magic fire; "Song to the Evening Star" from "Tann- bauser;" "Dance of the Appren- tices" from "Die Meistersinger," and "Prelude and Lovedeath" from "Tristan and Isolde." Fay Templeton Fay Templeton, comedienne, diseuse and musical comedy star, will be heard at 6:30 p. m. Sat- urday (June 87) through WSAl and other NBC stations. ADELE VASA (Continued from f-ni/r 1) three million hoys and girls who are attending summer camps. Families on vacations also will he considered in planning the pro- grams. Listeners will be asked Wed- nesday to join in singing "Amer- ica the Beautiful." Dr. Bertha Chapman Cady, formerly of the American Museum of Natural History, will give a brief nature talk. A concert orchestra will play several selections from classic music literature, and games and dances for children will lie explained. It is possible that WKRC will continue to broadcast the entire summer series. Ultra-Ultra Pond's Dance (WSAI Friday nights at S :30) has music by Leo Reisman's Orchestra nf the ultra-ultra Central Park Casino. You Should Know - - Mary Smith of WLW Mary Smith, blonde beauty of the Crosley Theatre at WLW, has voice appeal" as well as stage presence to judge by the number of RADIO DIAL read- ers who want to know more about her. Mary is a golden blonde with fair skin, rose pink cheeks, and deep blue eyes. Though it prob- ably makes no difference to radio listeners, she would stand a good chance in any Ziegheld contest to determine the perfect proportions for the feminine figure. Here are the vital statistics about Mary: Birthplace: Highland County, O. First theatrical appearances : barn-yard circuses with Mary the principal attraction disas- trously riding two horses to en- tertain neighboring children at five pins admission. Hobbies : Horseback riding (she carries off blue ribbons in horse shows); swimming; golf; astrology; the stock market; making mince pies; collecting leather of all kinds including saddles, boots, belts, thongs, and pieces of leather. Her voice is unusually adapt- able and she can play five or six parts in one radio play without the radio audience detecting it. In fact, she never uses her own speaking voice on the air. She says it is "colorless" which evervone else knows is not true. Who is your choice for Radio Dial's "You Should Know" column? Write your preferences to the Editor. Pity the Post Man Tony Wons, master of cere- monies for the Camel quarter- hour scries on CBS and WKRC. received a fan letter on the en- velope of which was a facsimile of a clock with the hands point- ing tn 7:45 p.m. To the left appeared the inscription, "Are you Listenin' ?" Programs of Towns in New WGKY Wednesday Hour Towns within 200 miles of Greater Cincinnati are honored n a series of programs being broadcast by stations WCKY from 9 to 10 o'clock every Fri- day night. WCKY wants to acquaint its listeners with the highlights of interest in neighboring cities. Eight or ten of the station's most popular entertainers appear on each program, including among others the Georgia Skillet Lick- ers, the Black and Gold Marimba band, Little Red Riding Hood, Hugh Cross, the Crooning Gui- tarist, and Molly Moore. Graham- Paige Final Concert is Sunday Night The Graham- Paige program, with the Detroit Symphony Or- chestra and Edgar A. Guest, bids farewell to the ether waves for the summer months with the broadcast Sunday night ( June 28) at 8:30 over the" Columbia network and WKRC. Graham- Paige will return to the air in the Fall, and as far as is known at the present time, with the same talent. The farewell program of June 28 is made up entirely of selec- tions played in previous broad- casts. Lewisohn Stadium Concert The first of a series of broad- casts of portions of the Lewisohn Stadium Concerts in New York City will he presented over the Columbia network and WKRC at o'clock Thursday night (July ,9) with Willem van Hoog- straten conducting. Prizes VVFEE can't be convinced that "people don't listen to radio in the summer." They display 2,100 telegrams received in three days in the Radio Circus contest. Prizes are offered as an incentive to write. Douglas Evans, who has just been added to the staff of an nouncers of the Columbia Broad- casting System, is heard fre quently through WKRC. H. comes to the nation-wide chain from station WMCA of Nd York City. Prior to that he was chief announcer at station WGH, Newport News, Va. H father and grandfather wei army men, but Douglas chose the stage as a career and peared in numerous musical comedies both on tour and in New York. What the Hotel? "What the Hotel?" the third Don Becker play about Bradley Haines and his Chinese servant, Wong, will be broadcast by the Crosley Theatre at WLW begin- ning Sunday (June 28) at 2:30 p. m., and repeating on Wednes- day (July 1) at 11 :30 p. m. and Saturday (July 4) at 7 p. m. This time Haines is forced into the hotel business by Aunt Aga- tha. Wong's usual "dirty work at the cross roads" gets him out again. Becker promises a new story about Haines and Wong every three weeks. Martha Attwood and Everett Marshall, both Metropolitan Opera stars, will be guest artists on the General Motors program at 8 :30 p. m. Monday night (June 29) through WSAI. Their ages ranging from 7 to 15, the S. S. Wurlitzer Band plays frequently at station WKRC during the Wurlitzer Music Box Review broadcast every noon except Sunday. Their next air appearance will be on Friday, July 3. Lowell Gray (standing in back) is their director. Members of the orchestra are: (Sitting, left to right) John Hase, Raymond Wells, Elmer Westlund, Robert Yeager, Salva- dor Micili, John Sherman, Elmer Flamm ; (standing, left to right) Stanley Apseloff, John Popham. Lowell Gray (director), Ernest Bird, Thomas Harper. Charles Dowton, aged 7, is in front. Our Dialy Dozen By DON BECKER The other day, the mails brought a letter from a music publishing house. It asked if you would kindly read the enclosed circular on the "Curse of Prohibition" and then forward it to President Hoover. We always did want to write to the President, and here was our chance. Then we started thinking. This letter was too cold, too im- personal to send to the President, so after much deliberating we added that certain touch on the bottom. "How's Mrs. Hoover?" Well wc met the Lombardo's yesterday. Guy and Carmen. Guy really carries a $13.50 fiddle around, yet never plays it. Carmen was a little fidgety in his room. He started humming a bit. Disappeard. Came back in ten minutes and sent a wire to his mu- sic publisher. "Have just written new song. Think it's a Hit!" Carmen says his "Sweethearts On Parade" was one of his best selling songs. Says the record business is shot! Guy receives many letters ad- dressed to: "MR. GUY LUMBAGO." We were disappointed when we didn't hear one of our local boys announce the Robert Burns pro- gram for CBS Monday night, when it was broadcast by WKRC. We think the Panatella Peers are miss- ing a good bet both in local senti- ment and newspaper publicity by not selecting a "local" from each point of origination. Cliff Adams did his best job on Blue Ribbon for Bernie. Guy Lombardo agrees with us heartily! * * * Joseph Ries, WLW announcer again spent his Wednesday night off from the studios by watching a broadcast of the Canova Coffee Hour. This beats the Mailman-taking- a-walk gag all hollow! Why? During the broadcast an emer- gency came up, and they put him to work ! Then there's the "Song of the Pill*'— "WHEN YOUR LIVER HAS GONE!" You wouldn't "Kidney" would you? * * * Diaiaughingly yours, DON BECKER. New Concert Howard Hafford, tenor, and Dnane Snodgrass, pianist, will be presented by station WKRC in a new series of programs from 11 :30 p. m. to midnight on Sun- day, beginning this week. Haf- lord, musical director of the sta- tion, is widely known for his church and radio singing. Snod- grass is a WKRC announcer as well as an entertainer. Time Marches March of Time (WKRC), those news happenings drama- tized under the supervision of Fred Smith, former WLW di- rector, is off the air until Fall. V RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUNE 36, 1931. Here Are Only Complete Programs FRIDAY June 26 WCKY (202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M-— 7 :00— Hugh Cross 7:15 — Morning Devotions (NBC) 7:30— Cheerio (NBC) 8 :00— Bob White 8:15 — Early Morning Dance 9:15 — My New Kentucky Home, 0:45 — Dance Melodies 10:30— Classic Hour 11 :00— Musical Novelties 11:30 — Mountain Melodies Noon — Popular Dance Tunes 12:30— Norris Brock Live Stock Reports 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert P. M.— 1 :00— Sign off 5:45 — Blue Ridge Shindiggers 5:55 — Avers News Sport Flash 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) 6 :15 — Eilerman's Marimba Ser- enades 6 :45— Little Red Riding Hood— Latonia Race Track Program. 7:00— Bill and Bob. 7 :15— Hugh Cross 7:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House 8:00— Interwoven Pair (NBC) 8 :30 — Frances Belniear, Mildred Myers 8:45 — Wallie, the Radio Clown :0fl— Special Program Dedicated to Maysville, Ky. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — Voices at Dawn 7:15 — Radio Circus 7:30 — Classified Directory 8 :00 — Shopper's Hour 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings 8:30 — Starr Freeze Morning Musicale 8 :45— Radio Circus 9:15 — Broering Musicale 9 :30— Serenade 9 :45 — Klecman Furniture Program 10:05 — Bacca Coal & Iron Program 10:20— Radio Circus 10:35 — Kelvinator Program 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk 10 :. r if> — Simper Time Announcement 11:00 — Acme Awning Program 11:15 — Radio Circus 11 :3fl— Travel Bureau 1 1 :45 — S t u d e b a k c r Champions (E. T.) P. M.— l ^ :0l — - Serenade 12 15 — Radio Circus 12:80— Fuller, Inc. 12 :45 — Bcllonby Melodies 1 :00 — S tarr Freeze Program (E. T.) ! :!-=. — \audcvil1e 1 :30 — Magnccoil Program 1 :45 — Afternoon Melodies 2:15 — The Home Finder 2 :30 — Kenton Fishing Grounds Program 2 :45 — "The Parents' Forum" 3:00 — Afternoon Melodies 3 :30— Reveries :1 :45 — Dance Frolic 1 :ir>— Organ Recital 4 :30 — Radio Circus 4:45— Fuller Garden Partv 5::45 — Berning Ford Program 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra 7:30— Harry H a r t m a n's Sport Review 7 :4. r > — Nu-eo Painters 8:00— Luckey Boys .8:15 — Dry Ridge Spring's Program 8:30 — Colonial Stages Program 8:45 — Champion Sparkers (E. T.) 9:00— Camel Cit;ar> "1"— Radio Circus 9:45 — Evening Chimes 10 ;00 — Mountain Valley Varieties 10*15 — Fuller's Orchestra in l«j_ Slumber Music Friday, June 26 WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6 : 45— God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship 7 :45 — Musical Program 7:59 — Gruen Time Signal 8 :00— Starr-Freeze Melodies 8:15 — Pharis Program 8 :30— S wcethearts of the Air (CBS) 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS) 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS 9:15— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram 9:45_Don and Betty (CBS) 10:00— Emily Post (CBS) 10:15 — Crisco Cooking Travelogues (CBS) 10:30— Commonsense For Mothers (CBS) 10:45— Helen Home (CBS) 11:00— Time and weather (Burke — Robene— Burkhart ) 11 :03— Woman's Hour — Trcmlette Tully 11:30— Charles W. Reaume Studio Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue P. M.— 12 :30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS) 1:15 — Art Dry Cleaning Program 1 :30— Chicago Market Program I :45 — Full Measure Gas 2 :00— Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS) 2:30 — Drinkmor Program 2:45 — Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- gram 3 :00 — Homemaker's Talk by Julia Hayes 3 :30— Charles W. Reaume Studio 3 :45 — Edna Thomas,. Lady from Louisiana (CBS) 4:00— Rvden Cup Matches (CBS). (4:00 Sports Flash) 4:15 — Cosmopolitan Tours 1:00— Rvder Cup Matches (CBS). 4 :30— A. L. Fink Program 5:00 — Queen City Rug Makers 5:15 — Cincinnati Trade School 5 :30 — Stearns and Foster's Magic Mattress Man 5 :45— Studio 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores 5 :55 — Sports Review 5:59 — Burke Weather Forecast (i :00 — Kate Smith and Her Swanec Music (CBS) fi:10— Stocks, Coble & Tyree 6:18 — Time and weather 6:15 — Linit Program, with Dennis King (CBS) 6:30— Red Goose Adventures (CBS) 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7:00— Prvor's Crcmo Militarv Band (CBS) 7 :15— Barbasol Program (CBS) 7:30— Dutch Masters (CBS) 8:00— Pyol Blackberry Dudes 8:15 — To be announced 9:00— Gvpsv Trail (CBS) 9:30-Poet's Gold (CBS) 10:00 — Confessions of a Racketeer (E. T.) 10:15 — Gruen Answer Man 10:25— Happy Feet 10:30— Conev Island Orchestra 11:00— Time; Weather: Sports II :08 — Geo. Olscn and His Orchestra (CBS) 11 :15 — Pyol Blackberry Dudes 11 :30— Nocturne — Ann Leaf. Ben Alley (CBS) Midnight— Newton Announcement WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. ftl.— 6:00 — International Fiddlers G:30-Gym Classes 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) FRANK LUTHER Once a cattle herder on the western plains, Luther is now one of the busiest songsters on radio's large network hours. Singing second tenor with the "Men About Town," appearing as guest artists with Rudy Valleeand his Con- necticut Yankees on the Fleisch- mann Yeast Hour Thursday even- ing, July 2, over a large WEAF- NBC network, Is merely a part of the Luther dally program. Friday, June 26 8:00— Bradley Kincaid 8:15— Organ Program, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 8 :30 — Morning Devotions 8:45— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC) 9:00— Ray Perkins (NBC) 9 :15— "The Hostess," Mrs. Lutye Sohngen 9 :30— Your Garden 9 :45 — Premium Man 10:00 — Island Serenaders 10:30— Live Stock Reports 10:40— Vocal Ensemble 11:00 — Organ with Instrumentalist 11:15— Swift Program (NBC) 11:30— WLW Stars 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals Noon — Tuxedo Fiddlers P. M.— 12:15 — Bulova Time 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:50— Live Stock Reports 1 :00— National Farm and Home (NBC) 1 :30— Salt and Peanuts 1 :40 — Market Reports 1 :45 — Nctherland Plaza Orchestra 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC) 3:00— Around Town— D i a 1 o g u c (NBC). 3:15— Radio Guild (NBC) 4 :15 — Ramona 4:30— Raymond Mitchem; Mills Brothers 5 :00 — Words and Music 5 :30 — Bradlev Kincaid. 5 :45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) 6:15— Madame Alda (NBC) 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC) 6:45— WLW Highlights 7 :00— Baseball Scores 7:05— Elliott Brock Military Band 7 :30 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra 7 :45 — Sterling Jack 8 :00— Castilian Nights 8:30— Hoosier Editor 8:45 — Armour Program (NBC) Permanent Wave $7.50 Personal Attention of FLORENCE FREY BEAUTY EXPERT Heard Every Wednesday, 9:15 A. M.-WLW PERMANENT WAVES FOR CHILDREN A SPECIALTY POSITIVELY HARMLESS — PAINLESS — QUICK FLORENCE FREY STUDIO Friday, June 26 !) : 00— Paul Whiteman's Paint Men 9:30— Clara, Lu and Em (NBC) 9:45— Dupout Speed Blenders(E. T.) 10:00— Kingtaste Sonneteers 10 :30— Variety 10:45— Bob Newhal! Sport Slices 11:00— Vox Celeste 11:15— Salt and Peanuts 11 :30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm (NBC-Blue) Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra A. M.— 12 :30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 1 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) a. m.— 8:00 — Gene and Glenn, the Quaker Early Bird (NBC) 8 :15— Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC) 8 :45— Records 9 :00 — Organ Program 9:15— Records 9 :30— National Home Hour (NBC) 10 :00— Hawaiian Serenaders (NBC) 10:30— Realities of Romance (NBC) 11 :00— Sign Off P. M.— 12 :50 — Livestock Reports 1:00— Sign Off 2 :00 — Woman's Radio Review (NBC) 3 :00— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC) 3 :15 — Records 3 :45 — Ramona 4 :00— Records 4 :30 — Moore Paint Program (NBC) 4 :45 — Records 5 :00 — Poems by Harry Holcombc 5 :15— Don Becker, Ukelele. 5:30— The Gossipers (E. T.) 5:45— Ryder Cup Match (NBC) 6 :00— Records 0:30— Alice Richards :45 — Records 7:00— Cities Service Concert (NBC) 8 .00— Clicquot Club (NBC) 8:30— Pond's Dance (NBC) 9:00— Kodak Week End (NBC) 9:30— RKO Theater of the Air (NBC) 10 :00 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC) 10:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra Saturday, June 27 12 :30 — Norris Brock live stock quo- tations 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert 1 P. M— SIGN OFF p. m.— 5 :45 — Blue Ridge Shindiggers 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) 0:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC) 6 :30— The Hill Billy Kid — Latonia Race Track Program. 45 — Beach Combers 00— Rudy Vallee (NBC) 30— Medley Five 00— "Skillet Lickers" 30— Little Red Riding Hood 45 — Hugh Cross 00— Cuckoo Club (NBC) :30 — Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House SATURDAY June 27 WCKY (202m.— 1490 kc.) A. At.— 7:00— Hugh Cross 7:15— Morning Devotion (NBC) 7:30— Cheerio (NBC) 8:00— Bob White 8:15 — Early Morning Dance 9 :15 — My New Kentucky Home, '.) :45— Kentucky Belle's Kiddie Club 10:30— Classic Hour 11 :00— Musical Novelties 11:30 — Mountain Melodies 12:00— Popular Dance Melodies WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — Voices at Dawn 7:15 — Radio Circus 7 :30— Classified Directory 8 :00 — Shopper's Hour 8 : 15 — Mountain Valley Greetings 8 :30— S tarr Freeze Morning Musicale 8 :45 — Radio Circus 9 :00— Bacca Coal & Iron Program 9:15 — Broering Musicale 9 :45 — Klcemau Furniture Program 10 :00— Brevities 10:05— The Home Finder 10:20— Nu-co Painters 10 :35— Kelvinator Program 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk 10:59— Simper Time Announcement 11 :00— Acme Awning Program 11 :15— Radio Circus 11:30— Travel Bureau 11:45— St udebaker Champions (E. T.) P. M-— 12:01— Radio Circus 12:30— Fuller, Inc. 12:45— Bellonby Melodies 1 00— S tarr Freeze Program (E. T.) 1 :15— Vaudeville 1 :30 — Magnecoil Program 1 :45 — Radio Circus 2 :15 — Afternoon Melodies 2 :30— Kenton Fishing Grounds 2 :45— Fuller Garden Party 3:15 — Reveries 3:30— Payne Brothers and Herman Chitison 3 :45— Catholic Telegraph 4 :00— Organ Recital 4:15 — Radio Circus 4 :45— Tea Time Tunes 5:00— Lyric Hour 5:30— Radio Circus 6:00— Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special 6:15— Flarlan and Ralph, vocal and piano fi :30— Dinner Music 0:45— Berning Ford 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view 7:45 — Barker News 8:00— Luckey Boys 8:15— Dry Ridge Springs Program 8 :30— Evening Chimes 8:45 — Radio Circus 9 :00— Camel Cigars 9:45— Radio Circus 631 WALNUT STREET CHerry 6105 RCA Licensed Radio Tubes GUARANTEED FIRST QUALITY SPECIAL FOR ONE WEEK ONLY 201 -A 280 226 171 227 112 224 245 Any of the Abo Type. 39c Radio Tubes Tested Free. Bring in Your Old One: Quick, Accurate Checking. r'UTCC'VKD CTHDC original tire co. l^rlil,l^N.llK O 1 UKt COURT & RACE RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUNE 36, 1931. )f Greater Cincinnati Radio Stations Saturday, June 27 10 :00— Fuller's Orchestra 10 :30— Radio Circus 10:^5 — Slumber Music WKRG (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— G:45— God's Bible School— Sunrise Worship 7:4.i — Musical Program 8:00— Madam Flor-cnz 8:15— The Commuters (CBS) Gruen Time Signal) 8:80— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS) 8:45 — Full Measure Gas 9:15— Adam F. Meyer Coal Co. 9 :30— Mountain Valley Varieties 9 ;00— Charles W. Rcaume Studio 9 ;30— Consolidated Merchants Pro- gam 10 :00— Queen City Rug Makers 10:15— Time; Weather 10 :20— Woman's Hour — Trcmlette Tully ]0;45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies 11:00— Don Bigclow and His Orches- tra (CBS) by Home Furni- ture Co. 11:15 — Drinkmor Program 11 :30— Homemakcr's Talk by Julia Hayes Noon — Wurlitzcr Music Box Revue P. M.— 12 ;30 — Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram 1 :00 — Community Hospital Program I ;30 — Columbia Farm Network Program (CBS) 2:00— Four Clubmen (CBS) 2 :30— A. L. Fink Song Recital, Louie Johnson, tenor 3:00— Ann Leaf, organ (CBS) 3:30— Charles W. Reaume Studio 3:45 — Spanish Serenade (CBS) 1:00— Ryder Cup Matches (CBS) (4:00 Sports Flash) 4 : 15 — Cosmopolitan Tours ■1 :20— Ryder Cup Matches (CBS) 1:30— Luna Park Orchestra (CBS) 4 :45 — Pharis Tire Program 5 :00— Kampf Artists 5:15 — Cincinnati Trade School 5 :30— Steam's & Foster's Magic Mattress Man 5 :45— Studio 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores 5 :55 — Sports Review 5:59 — Burke Weather Forecast fi:00 — St. Moritz Orchestra (CBS) fi:15 — Studio 6:25— Stocks, Cohlc and Tvree fi :28— Time and weather 0:30— Pvol Blackberry Dudes 6:45— Camel Quarter Hour (CBS) 7:00— Pryor's Crcmo Military Band (CBS) 7 :15 — Studio 7 :20 — Cosmopolitan Tours 7 :25 — Happy Feet 7:30 — Junior Chamber of Commerce 8:00— Kate Smith and Her Swanee Music (CBS) 8:30— Art Hicks' Tacoma Park Orchestra 9:00 — Hank Simmons' Show Boat (CBS) 9:45 — Studio Feature 10:00— Mike Speciale and His Cru- saders — Coney Island 10:30 — To Be Announced 10:45— Will Osborne and His Or- chestra (CBS) 11:00— Time: Weather; Sports II :08 — Bert Loun and His Orchestra (CBS) 1 1 :.'10— Nocturne — Ann Leaf. Ben Alley (CBS) STATION T-U- R-F Your favorite turf and sport Publication on sale here THE SONG SHOP 36 East 5th St. Fountain Sq. Saturday, June 27 I WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6 :00— International Fiddlers fi:30— Gym Classes 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 8:00 — Bradley Kincaid 8:15— Organ Program 8:30 — Morning Devotions 8:45 — Kashmiri Trio 9:00— Dance Miniatures (NBC) 9:30— Art Talks, Cherry Greve 9:45— WLW Mail Bag 10 :00— Organ Program, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 10:15— Elliot Brock, violin 10:30— Live Stock Reports 10:40 — Murray Horton's Orcheslra 11:00— Bradlev Kincaid. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC) 11:30— Live Stock Reports H : 45 — River Reports; Time Signals Noon — Governmental Glimpses, At- torney General Gilbert Bettman P. M.— 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12 :45— National Farm and Home (NBC) 1 :30— Salt and Peanuts 1:45— Sisters of the Skillet (NBC) 2:00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra 2:15— Jim and Walt.. 2 :30— Cincinnati Zoo Symphony Con- certs. 3 :00— Ramona and Don Becker 3:15— Pacific Feature Hour (NBC) 3 : 30 — National Education Associa- tion Program (NBC). 4:00— Merry Men Quartet 4:30— Crosley Dealers' Hour 5:00 — Seckatory Hawkins. 5 :30— Doctors of Melody 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos 'ri' Andy (NBC) 6 :15— Tastveast Jesters (NBC) 6 :30— Baseball Scores 6:33— WLW Highlights 6:45— Mail Pouch (E. T.) 7:00— Crosley Theater 7:30— Pop Concerts (NBC) 8:00— Croslev Saturday Knights, 8:30— Domino Orchestra (NBC) 9:00— King Edward Cigar Band. 9:30— Clara. Lu and Em (NBC) 9 :45 — Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 10:00— Club Sohio 10 :30— Variety 10:45— Bob Newhall Sport Slices 11:00— Night Songs 11:30— Castle Farm Orchestra Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12 :30— Village Rhymester 12 :40— The Doodlesockers j : 00— Guy Lombardo's Orcheslra, Netherland Plaza 1:30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.- 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC) 8 :15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC) 8 :45— Records 9:00— Bradley Kincaid 9:15— Procter and Gamble Program (NBC) 10:15— Radio Household Institute (NBC) 10:30— Keys to Happiness (NBC) 11:00— Records 11:30— Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop, Comm. Assn. 11 :45 — Records Noon — Sign off P. M.— 3:00— Classic Gems (NBC) 3 :30— Records 3 :45 — Crosley Dealers Salute 4 :00— Records 5 :00— Southern Singers & Mitchem 5:30— The Gossipers (E. T.) 5:45— Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC) 6 :00— Records C:IS — Ryder Cup Match (NBC) 6:30— Fay Templcton (NBC). 7 :00_Records 7:15 — Bavarian Peasant Baud (NBC) 7:30— The Silver Flute (NBC) 8 :00— G eneral Electric Hour (NBC) 8:30— Club Valspar (NBC) 9:00— Luckv Strike Dance (NBC) 10 :00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 10:15— The Stcbhins Bovs (NBC) 10:30— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 11:00— Sign off a^R*^ Grace Kay White whose so- prano voice has been heard in a number of Broadway musical comedies, sings on sustaining programs of the Columbia Broadcasting 1 System. SUNDAY June 28 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 10:00— Nomads (NBC). 10:30— Hugh Cross. 10:45 — Hilo Serenaders. 11 :00— Bob White. 11:15— Echoes of the Orient (NBC). 11 :30— Little Red Riding Hood. 11 :45— Charlene and Katherine, La- dies of Melody. Noon — Jack Moore. P. M.— 12:15— Skillet Lickers. 12 : 45 — Men About Town. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45 — Lucille. Fox, Blues. :00 — Superior Studios, music. 6:15 — Italian Serenaders. 0:30— Maurice Thompson, Baritone. 6:45— Bob White. 7 :00— Columbia Recording Skillet Lickers. 7 ; :i0— College of Music Sinfonia Pro- gram. 8:00— Hill Billy Kid. 8:15— Kentucky Belle. 8:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. 8:45— Little Red Riding Hood. 9 : 00— Odas Mattox. the Crooning Guitarist. 9:15— Flovd Gibbons (NBC). 9 :30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Voices at Dawn. 9 :00 — Morning Concert. 9:15 — Radio Circus. 9:30— Invitation to the Wallz. 9 :45— Travel Bureau. 10:00 — Kelvinator Program. 10:15— Dry Ridge Springs. 10:30— German Program. 10:45 — Berninc Ford. 11:00— Radio Circus. 11:15— The Home Finder. 11:30— Take Time to Be Beautiful. 11 :45— -Mountain Valley Greetings. Noon — Organ Recital. P. M.— 12:15— Kleeman Furniture Program. 12 :30— Galvano & Corlez. 12:45— Fuller Garden Party. 1 :00— Every Friday Jewish Hour. 2 :00— Starr Freeze Program Renew your subscription to RADIO DIAL See Page 7 Sunday, June 28 15— Paul and Gene, "The Minia- ture Kings of Jazz," 30— Hawaiian Bluebirds. :45— Harlan and Ralph. 00— Travel Bureau. 30— Don Galloway. :45 — Radio Circus. :00— C. T. S. Musicale Trio. 10— Fuller, Inc. ;30 — Sundown Serenades : 45 — Fourth Christian Church. :00 — King's Hawaiians. :15— Parkview Symphony Hour. : 45_Fullcr Garden Party. 00 — Payne Brothers and Herman Cbitison. 15— Travelogue, Joe Sweeney. :30 — Church Federation Hour. :00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. :30— Harry Hartman's Sport Review. :00— Radio Circus. :30— The Orioles. :45 — Reveries. :00— Scotland Yard. :15— Mountain Valley Varieties. :30— Fuller's Orchestra. :00 — Slumber Music. WKRG (545 m.— 550 kc.) a. m.— 6 :45-7 :45— God's Bible School- Sunrise Worship. 9 :00— God's Bible School. 10 :00— Watchtowcr Program (e. t.) . 10 :15— Jim Light field— Veteran's Civic Hour. 11:00— Jewish Art Program (CBS). U :30— Jim Lightfield— Veterans' Civic Hour. Noon— Popular Musical Program. P. M-— 12:15— Oxol Feature (CBS). 12:30— American Legion Program 1:30— Ballad Hour (CBS). 2:00— Gruen Old-Fashioned Garden. 3 :00— Cathedral Hour. 4:00— French Trio (CBS). 4:15— Pastorale (CBS). 4;45_Theo Karle (CBS). 5:00— Chicago Knights (CBS). 5 ;30— Twilight Reveries. 5:58— Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00— Dr. Klein's News Reels(CBS). 6:15— Studio. 6:20— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6 :25— Sports Review. 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:45— The Boswell Sisters (CBS). 6 :58— Time and weather. 7:00— Devils. Drugs and Doctors (CBS). 7 :15_ Kate Smith. Swanee Music CBS). 7 :30— Kaltenborn Edits the News (CBS). 7:45— Boa thou se Liquid Coffee Program. 8.00— Grand Opera Miniatures (CBS). 8 :30— Graham Paige (CBS). 9 : 00— Tacoma Park Orchestra. 9:30— Fortune Builders (CBS). 9:45— Star Reveries (CBS). 10:00— Mike Speciale Crusaders — Coney Island. 10:30— Around the Samovar (CBS). 11:00— Time and weather. 11:03— Sports Review. 11:07— Quiet Harmonies (CBS). 11:30— Howard Hafford and Duane Snodgrass. Sunday, June 28 WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 8:59— Bulova Time. 9 ;00— Church Forum. 9 : 30— Witherspoon Chorus (NBC). 10 :00— Bulova Time. 10:05— Organ, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 10:25— River Reports. 10:29— Bulova Time. 10 :30— Rochester Concert Orchestra (NBC). 11:30— Troika Bells (NBC). Noon — Midday Jewels. P. M.— 12:29— Bulova Time. 12:30— Music of the Ages (NBC). 1 :30_ Yeast Foamers (NBC). 2:00— Crosley Theater. 2:30— Henry Thies' Orchestra. 3 :00— Sinfonietta (NBC). 3:30-Over Jordan (NBC). 3:45— John Barclay, Dagmar Ryb- ner (NBC).' 1 :00— Sabbath Reveries (NBC). 5:00— The Roamios. 5 :30— Plantation Days. 6:00— WLW Highlights. 6:30 — College of Music Concert. 6:55 — Baseball Scores. 7:00— Enna Jettick Melodies(NBC). 7:15— Blow the Man Down (NBC). 7 :30— Harbor Lights (NBC). 8:00— Heel Hugger Harmonies (NBC). 8:15— Bayuk Stag Party (NBC). 8 ;45_ Guy Lombardo's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 9:15— Variety. 9:30— KelloggSlumberMusic(NBC). 10:00— Crosley Concert. 10:45 — Murray Horton's Orchestra at Horseshoe Gardens. 11:00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm, 11:15 — Village Rhymester. 11:30— Henry Thies Orchestra. Midnight — Guy Lombardo's Orches- tra, Netherland Plaza. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) P. M.— 2 :00 — Sermonette and Hymn Time. 2:30 — Manhattan Guardsmen (NBC). 3:00 — National Sunday Forum (NBC). •1:00— Gilbert (t Sullivan Gems (NBC). DOES YOUR RADIO FADE If stations (ride on your set. It is probably due to faulty "Indlnc" tubes. This Is easily remedied —Just bring your tub— *- ■■■■■■■ match, and on.ilyic •lore. See us test, THIS SERVICE IS FREE 607 WALNUT Open Evenings Until Nine Phone: — Parkway 641S Radio Repairing Any Make For taxes, insurance, repairs, old bills or any other purpose, we have a Household Loan Plan whereby you can borrow what you need and repay it in small monthly amounts ar- ranged conveniently for you. You have a year or more in which to repay it. Open 8:30 to 5:00 The Central Acceptance Corporation 26 East Sixth St., between Vine and Walnut Cincinnati, Ohio. PArkway 6280. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1931. Sunday, June 28 5 :00— Catholic Services (NBC). 13:00— Gay Vienna I NBC). 6:30— RCA Victor (NBC). 7:00— Chase and Sanborn (NBC). 8:00— "Our Government," David Lawrence (NBC). 8:15— Atwatcr Kent (NBC). 8:45— Iodcnt Big Brother (NBC). 9-15-Goldman Band Concert (NBC). Monday, June 29 WKRG (545 m.— 550 kc.) MONDAY June 29 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. AT.— 7:00— Hugh Cross, the boy from Smoky Mountain. 7:15 — Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Bob White. "Fascinating Phi- losophy." 8:15— Early morning dance program. 0:15— My New Keutucky Home, Jetta Crane. 9 :45 — Dance Records. 10:30— Classic Hour. 11:00— Musical Novelties. 1 1 ;30 — Skillet Lickers. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— 12:30— Norris Brock Live Stock. 12 :35— Luncheon Concert. 1:00— Sign off. T, : 45— Blue Ridge Mountaineers. 5 :55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). C :30— Kentucky Belle— Latonia Race Track. 6:-15— Bill and Bob — the Delivery Boys. 7 :00— Bob White. 7:15 — Columbia Recording "Skillet Lickers." 7 :45 — Hilo Serenadcrs. 8:00— Steve Bates. 8:15— "The Man Who Could Not Die," mystery thriller. 8:45— Hill Billv Kid. 9 : 00— Stromberg Carlson (NBC). 9:30— U. of C. Quartet. 9:45— Wally, the Radio Clown. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 : 00 — Voices at Dawn. 7:15— Radio Circus. 7:30— Classified Directory. 8 :00— Eighth and Walnut Street Garage Program. 8:15— Mountain Valley Greetings. 8 :30— Starr Freeze Program. 8 :45— Radio Circus. 9:00— Hyde Park Community Pro- gram. 9:15— Broering Musicale. 9 : 45— Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00— Brevities. 10:05— Bacca Coal & Iron Program. 10:20— Radio Circus. 10:35 — Kelvinator Program. [0 ;50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:59 — Simper Time. 11:00— Acme Awning Program. 11:15 — Radio Circus. 11:30— Travel Bureau. 11 :45— Studeba ke r Champions (E. T.). Noon — Radio Circus. P. M.— 12 :30— Fuller, Inc. 12:45 — Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00— S tarr Freeze Program 1 :15 — Radio Circus. 1 ;30 — Magnecoil Program. 1 :45— The Home Finder. 2 :00 — K enfon Fishing Grounds Program. 2:15 — Reds vs. Brooklyn at Brooklyn. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30— Radio Circus. 6 ; 00 — Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special. 6:15 — Ralph and Harlan, voice and piano. 6 :30— Dinner Music. 6 :45 — Berning Ford. 7:00 — Radio Circus. 7 :30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7 :45— Nu-Co Painters. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15 — Dry Ridge Spring Program. 8:30— Radio Circus. 8 :45— Camel Little Cigars. 9:00 — Jewish Commercial Hour. 10:00— Mountain Valley Varieties. 10:15 — Shopper's Hour. 10:30 Dance Frolic. I (L45— -Slumber Music. A.M.— (j :45— God's Bible School— Sunrise Worship. 7 ;45— Popular Musical Program. 7:59 — Gruen Time. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8-30— Tonv's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The' Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9:00— Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 9 :30— Full Measure Gas. 9:45— Charles W. Reaumc, studio. 10:15— The Madison Singers (CBS) Home Furniture Co. 10:30— Unceda Bakers (CBS). 10:45— Time and weather. 10:48— Woman's Hour — Tremlette Tully. [l:15_Homemaker's Talk by Julia Hayes. 11 :45— Drink-Mor Program. Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram. 1 :00— A. L. Fink Program. 1 :30 — Chicago Market Program. 1 :45 — Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- gram. 2:00— Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2:30— Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies (E. T.) 3:00— Pharis Tire Program. 3:15— Queen Citv Rug Makers. 3 :30— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 3 :45— Thirtv-Minute Men (CBS). 4:00— Gypsy Music Makers (CBS). 4:15 — Cosmopolitan Tours. 4:20— Gvpsy Music Makers (CBS). 4:30 — Hoosier Photographer — Tramp Starr. 4 :45 — Mine. Belle Forbes C u 1 1 e (CBS). 5:00— Kampf Artists. 5 :15 — C i n c i n n a t i Trade School Program. 5 :30 — Stearns' & Foster's Magic Mattress Man. 5:45 — Studio. 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. (i:00— Studio Feature. 6:10— Stocks. Cohle & Tyree. 6:13 — Time and weather. 6 : 15 — Linit Program, with Denim King (CBS). 6:30— Evangeline Adams. "Astrolo- ger" (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7 :00 — Prvor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15— The Barbasol Program (CBS). 7 :30— Your Neighbors (Chubb- Steinberg). 7 :45— Old Wurzburg Malt Proeram 8:00— The Three Bakers (CBS). 8:30— An Evening in Paris (CBS). 8:45— Noxema Program (CBS). 9:00— Robt. Burns Panatella Pro- gram (CBS). 9 :30— Beltzhoover Bright Lights. 9 :45 — Steams' & Foster's Magic Mattress Man. 10:00— Pvrnl Blackberry Dudes 10:15 — Gruen Answer Man 10:2.5— Happy Feet. 10:30— Mike Snecialc and His Cru- saders — Coney Island. 11 ;00 — Time and weather. 11 :03— Sports Review. 1 1 :08 — Cosmopolitan Tours. II :15— Georee Olsen and His Music (CBS). 11 :3n_Norturnc (CBS). Tiny Tots Ask Radio to Solve Deep Problems The Gruen Answer Man re- ports that he senses a plague of spring fever and vacation-itis in his current listener mail as wit- ness this brief but eloquent in- quiry : The Gruen Answer Man has heen heard locally the past few months on alternate nights over WLW and WKRC. His daily chats made up of odd and inter- esting bits of information bring him a constantly increasing vol- ume of letters that rival the mail of the astrologer and horoscope reader. None of them reflect more poignant yearning than the diminutive letter reproduced above, he says. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. AL— 6:00— International Fiddlers. 0:2"— Bulova Time. fi:30 — Gym Classes. 7:45— A; & P. Food News (NBC). 8:00— Bradley Kincaid. 8:15 — OrganProgram, ArthurChand Icr, Jr. 8:30 — Morning Devotions. 8:44— Bulova Time. 8:45— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC). Monday, June 29 9 :00— Housekeeper Chats. 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9 :30— Musical Portrait. 9:45— Winifred S. Carter (NBC) 10:00— Syncopaters (NBC). 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10 ;40— Salt and Peanuts. 11 :00— Vocal Ensemble. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. ll:45_River Reports; Time Signals. Noon— Organ, Arthur Chandler, Jr. P. M.— 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 00— N a t i o n a 1 Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Bradley Kincaid. 1 ;40— Market Reports. 1 :45— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 215— Outstanding Speakers (NBC). 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 3:00— Matinee Players. 4:00— Chats with Peggy Wmthrop (NBC). 4:15_Glenn Sisters and Ramona. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4 : 40 — Afternoon Revelers. 5:00— Music Treasure Box (NBC) 5:05— Bradley Kincaid. 5:15— Mormon Tabernacle Choir. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— WLW Highlights. 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC). 6 :45— Baseball Scores. 6:50— Roxy's Gang (NBC). 7:30— Gold Medal Express (NBC). 8:00— Maytag Orchestra (NBC). 8:30-Real Folks (NBC). 9 :00— Musical Dreams. n -30— Packard Concert, with Gerald- ine Farrar (NBC). 10:00— Canada Dry. 10 :30— Variety. 10;45 — Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 10:50— Estate Weather Man. 11:00— Chime Reveries. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12 :30— H enry Busse's Orchestra Castle Farm. 1 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. Monday, June 29 WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC).. 8:15— Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45 — Records, i) :00— McCormick's Old Time Fid- lers. 9:30— Jean Carroll, please tell me (NBC). 9:45— Jerry Foy. 10:00— Blue Streaks (NBC). 10-15— Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10 :30— Records. 11:00— Sign off. P. M.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— Sign off. •2 :00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 3:45— Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4:00 — Crosley Singers. 4 :30— Records. 4 :45 — Minabelle and Chick. 5 :00— Records. 5:15— Cecy Gordon; Gene Perazzo. 5:30— The Gossipcrs (e. t.) 5 :45 — Records. 6:15 — "The World Today." James G. McDonald (NBC). 6:30 — Mrs. Lee Ach, poems. 6:45— Vocal Solos. 7 :00— "How's Business ?", Merle Thorpe (NBC.) 7:15— Webster Program (NBC). 7:30— A. & P.- Orchestra (NBC). 8 :30— General Motors P r o g r a n* (NBC). 9 :00— Records. 9 :30— Ramona. 9 :45— Simonize Program (NBC). 10 :00— Records. 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10:30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas tie Farm. TUESDAY June 30 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) 7 :00 — Hugh Cross, the Boy from Smoky Mountain. 7:15 — Morning Devotions (NBC) 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Bob White, "Fascinating Phi- losophy." 8:15 — Early morning dance program. 9 :15 — My New Kentucky Home, Jetta Crane. !) :45 — Dance Program. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC) 10:30— Classic Hour. 1 1 :00 — Musical Novelties. 11 :30 — Mountain Melodies. Noon — Dance Program. P. M.— 12:30— Live Stock Quotations. 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45— Hill Billy Kid. 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 0:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— Gus Van (NBC). C :30 — The Crooning Guitarist, Odas Mattox — Latonia Race Track Program. 6:45— Dr. Scholl's Ramblers (NBC) 7 :00 — Glenyce Chambers, blues. Tuesday, June 30 7:15 — Tri-State Entertainers, with Burger Bros., Ham and Lim. 7:45 — Crinoline Girl, Alma Ashcraft. 8:00— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. 8:30— Death Valley Days (NBC), 9 :00— Happy-Go-Lucky Girls. 9:15 — Luana Serenaders. 9 ;30— Men About Town. 9:45— Bob White. "Fascinating Phi- losophy." WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00— Voices at Dawn. 7:15 — Radio Circus. 7:30— Classified Directory. 8:00— Radio Circus. 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30— Starr Freeze Morning Musicale. 8:45— Radio Circus. 9:15 — Broering Musicale. 9 :45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10 :00— Brevities. 10:05— Bacca Coal & Iron Program. 10 :20— Nu-Co Painters. 10:35— Kelvinator Program. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:59 — Simper Time. 11 :00— Acme Awning Program. 11:15 — Radio Circus. 11:30— Travel Bureau. 11:45 — Studebakcr Champions Noon — Radio Circus. P. M.— 12:15— Clean Up and Paint Up. 12 :30— Fuller, Inc. 12:45 — Bellonby Melodies. 1:00— Starr Freeze Program (E. T.). 1 :15— Radio Circus. 1 :30— Magnecoil Program. l:45_The Home Finder. 2 :00— K e n t o n Fishing Grounds Program. 2 : 15— Reds vs. Brooklyn at Brooklyn. 5 :00— Lyric Hour. 5 -30 — Radio Circus. 6:00— Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special. 6 : i5_RaIph and Harlan. 6:30 — Dinner Music. 6:45— Berning Ford. 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 45 — Barker News. 0^ -Luckey Boys. 15— Dry Ridge Springs Program. 30— Radio Circus. 00— Camel Cigars. 15— Adam F. Meyer Coal. :30— Mountain Valley Varieties. 45— Licking River Fiddlers. 00 — Radio Circus. 30— Fuller's Orchestra. 00— Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. «.— 6:45— God's Bible School, Sunrise Worship. 7 : .13— Popular Musical Program. 7 :59— Gruen Time. _ 8 ; 00— Starr-Freeze Melodies (h. 1.1 8:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (Home Furniture Co.) (CBS). 8 :45 — Madam Flor-enz. 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS). 9:15— Columbia Mixed Quartel (CBS)— Home Furniture Co. MAJESTIC & NORGE Refrigerators Only $10 down 2 Years to Pay the Balance FRANK'S MUSIC and RADIO SHOP "Cincinnati's Personal Interest Store" 1207 VINE STREET Open Daily 9 to 9 RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1931. Tuesday, June 30 9 :30 — Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:00— Queen City Rug Makers. 10:15— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 10:45— Time and Weather. 10:48— Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tully. 11:16 — Full Measure Gas. 11 :30 — Homemaker's Talk by Julia Hayes. Noon — Wurlitzcr Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12 :30 — Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS). 1:15 — Art Dry Cleaning Program. 1 :30 — Studio feature. 2:00 — Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2:15 — Dream Home, Jimmy and Joan. 2:30— (A. L. Fink)— The Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45— (A. L. Fink )— Rhvthm Kings (CBS). 3:00— Italian Idvll (CBS). 3 :30— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 3:45— The Four Clubmen (CBS). 4 :00 — Organ and Voice. 4:15— Cosmopolitan Tours, 4 :20— Studio Feature. 4 :30— Bert Loun and His Orchestra (CBS). 4 :45 — Sweethearts of the Air (CBS). 5 :00 — Phans Tire Program. 5:15 — Cincinnati Trade School Program. 5:30 — Stearns & Fosters' Magic Mat- tress Man. 5 :45 — Studio. 5:50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5:55 — Sports Review. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6 :00 — Kate Smith's Swanee Music (CBS). 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 6:13 — Time and weather. 6:15 — Linit Program, with Dennis King (CBS). 6:30— Daddy and Rolio (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quartet hour (CBS). 7:00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15 — Rubel Baking Co. Program. 7 :30 — Kaltenborn Edits the News (CBS). 7 !45 — Studio Feature. 8 :00— Plantation Days. 8:30— Philco Symphony (CBS). 9:00— Ben Bernie and His Blue Ribbon Orchestra (CBS). 9 :15 — B oathouse Liquid Coffee Program. 9 :30 — Mike Speciale Crusaders — Coney Island. 10:00— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 10:15 — Cosmopolitan Tours. 10:20— Sports Review. 10:25— Happy Feet. 10:30 — Bridge Lessons by Tom Col- lins Jr. 10 :45 — Tacoma Dance Orchestra — Art Hicks. 11 :00 — Gruen Witching Hour. 11:30— Time and weather, 11 :32— T acorn a Park Dance Orchestra. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6 :00 — International Fiddlers. 6:29— Bulova Time. 6:30— Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 7 :59— Bulova Time. 8:00— Bradley Kincaid. 8:15— Mouth Health (NBC). 8:30— Montgomery Ward (NBC). 8:45 — Popular Gems. 9 :00— Morning Ballads. 9:15— Frances Ingram (NBC). 9 :30— Fashionette. 9:45 — Premium Man. 10:00 — Murray Horton's Orchestra. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40 — Organ and Vocal Solos. 11:00 — Island Serenaders. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals. Noon— Tuxedo Trio. P. M.— 12:15— Bulova Time. 13:16 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30 — Salt and Peanuts. 1:40— Market Reports. 1 :45 — Guy Lombardo's Orchestra Netherland Plaza. 2:15 — Robert Geddes, tenor. Just a Couple of Nit- Wits Making Merry on the Air Here is Bradford Browne, chief of the popular and idiotic pro- gram known as "The Nit-Wits," a regular feature each Monday night over the Columbia Broadcasting System network at 9:30. The charming young lady with the more or less operatic type voice is Lucille Black, known to the audience as Mme. Moocha de Polka. There are about seven others in the merry hand. WKRC has a local commercial at the time and doesn't carry the Nit-Wits. Try KMOX (1090 kc.-275.1m.) or WBBM (770 kc.-389.4m.) Tuesday, June 30 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 2 :45 — Edna Wallace Hopper 3 :00— More Truth Than Poetry 3:15— U. S. Navy Band (NBC). 3:45 — Eumer Refik, pianist. 4:00 — Beauty Secrets by Rigaud. 4:15 — Organ and Vocal Solos. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4 :40 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona. 5:00 — Murray Horton's Orchestra. 5:30 — Bradley Kincaid. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 0:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— WLW Highlights. 6:30— Berry Brothers (e. t.). 6:45 — Baseball Scores. 6:50— Bradley Kincaid. 7 :00— Armstrong Quakers (NBC). 7 :30— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 7:45 — Sterling Jack. 8:00— Plantation Days. 8:30— Werk Bubble Blowers. 9 :00— Barbasol Barbers (e. t.). 9:15 — Tastyeast Candykids. 9 :30— Chevrolet Chronicles (e. t.). 10:00— Cotton Queen Minstrels. 10:30— Variety. 10:45 — Bob Newhall, Sports Slices. 10:58— Estate Weather. 11 :00 — Los Amigos. 11:30— Vox Celeste. $25 ALLOWANCE for your old ICE BOX on this fine new GUARANTEED ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR Latest .id v j in .1 features In Ruitprool iway tbat old Ice . It t> worth S25 $159.50 alors. This exeat Is limited. Act Only sin down. WurlITzer 121 EAST FOURTH STREET (Bet. Walnut and Main) OPEN EVENINCS Tuesday, June 30 Midnight — Village Rhymester. A. M.— 12 :10— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 1 :00 — Guy Lombardo's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) 00— Gene anil Glenn (NBC). 15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra 45 — Records. 00— "Your Child," Grace Abbott Radio Household Institute (NBC). Tuesday, June 30 10:30— U. S. Army Band (NBC). 11:00— Sign off. P. M.— 12 :50 — Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop. Cotnm. Assn. 1 :00— Sign off. •2 :00— Women's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 40 — Broadcast from Loudon (NBC). :0I) — National Education Associa- tion Program. :30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). :45— Records. :I5 — Vocal Solos. :30— The Gossipers (e. 1.). :45 — Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC). :00— Records. :30 — Bradley Kincaid. :4S — Larry Grueter, Accordion. :00— Blackstone Plantation (NBC). :30 — National Dairy Virtuoso (NBC). :00 — McKesson Musical Magazini- (NBC). :30— Fuller Brush Man (NBC). :00— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC). :00 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. :lo— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). WEDNESDAY July 1 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — Hugh Cross, the boy from Smoky Mountain. 7:15 — Morning Devotions (NBC). 7 ;30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00Bob White, "Fascinating Phi- losophy." 8:15 — Early morning dance program. 9:15 — My New Kentucky Home, 9:45 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10 :30— Classic Hour. 11:00— Musical Novelties. 11 :30 — Mountain Melodies. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— 12:30— Live Stock Reports. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. 1:00— Sign off. 5:45— Little Red Riding Hood. 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 0:15 — Hilo Serenaders. 0:30 — Latonia Race Track — Tommy Ott. 6:45— Bill and Bob. the Delivery Boys. 00 — Italian Serenaders. 15 — Kentucky Belle, Crooner. 30— Christian Glee Club. 00— Hill Billy Kid. -Lucille Fox, Blues. 30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. Wednesday, July 1 y ; (ii) — Tri-State Entertainers. 9:15 — Eugenia Powers. 9:30— Steve Bates with an Octo- phone. 9 :45— Bob White. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — Voices at Dawn. 7:15— Radio Circus. 7 :30 — Classified Directory. 8 :00— Shoppers' Hour. 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30— Starr Freeze Program. S :45 — Radio Circus. 9:15 — Broering Musicale. 9 :45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00— Brevities. 1(1:05— Bacca Coat & Iron Program. 1.0:20— Radio Circus. 10:35 — Kelvinator Program. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:59 — Simper Time. 11 :0<) — Acme Awning Program. 11:15 — Travel Bureau. 11:30— Radio Circus. 1 1 :45 — S tudebaker Champions (E. T.). Noon — Organ Recital. P. M.— 12 :30— Fuller, Inc. 12:45 — Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00 — S tarr Freeze Program (E. T.). 1:15— The Home Finder. 1 :30 — Magnecoil Program. 1 ;45— Galvano & Cortez. 2 :00— K enton Fishing Grounds Program. 2 : 1 5 — R eds vs. Brooklyn at Brooklyn. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30— Radio Circus. 5:45 — Ralph and Harlan. 6:00— Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special. C:15 — Radio Circus. 6:30— Dinner Music. 6:45 — Berning Ford. 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7 :45— Nu-Co Painters. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15— Dry Ridge Spring Program. 8:30 — Colonial Stages. 8:45— Radio Circus. 9:00~Camel Cigars. 9:15 — Radio Circus. 9:45— Mountain Valley Varieties. 10:00— Radio Circus, 10 :30— Fuller's Orchestra. 11:00— Radio Circus. 11:15 — Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. 1H.— C :45 — Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Gruen Time. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9:00— Mirrors of Beauty (CBS). 9:15 — Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- gram. RADIO DIAL 26 newsy issues! 6 Months for $1.00 1 official complete accurate Mail this Coupon — « enclose $1 RADIO DIAL 22 E. 12th Street Cincinnati, Ohio Gentlemen: Enclosed hnd One Dollar ($1). Send RADIO DIAL for 6 months. [ ] New Subscriber [ ) Renewal Name Address City State 8 RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JUKE 26, 1931. Wednesday. July 1 9 :30— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:00— Full Measure Gas. 10:15— Time and weather. 10:18— Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tulley. 10:45 — Charles W. Reaume Studio. 11:15 — Homemakcrs' Talk by Julia Hayes. 11:45 — Drink-Mor Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12:30 — Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1:00— Farm Program (CBS). 1 :30 — Chicago Market Program. 1 :45 — Studio Feature. 2:00— Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2:30— Queen City Rug Makers. 2 :45 — Syncopated Silhouettes (CBS). 3:15 — Starr-Freeze Melodies (E. T.) 3:30— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 3 :45 — Columbia Camp Concert (CBS). 4:00 — Pharis Tire Program. 4 :15 — Cosmopolitan Tours. 4:20 — Asbury Park Casino Orchestra (CBS). 4:30— A. L. Fink Program. 5:00— Kampf Artists. 5:15 — Cincinnati Trade School Program. 5 :30 — Stearns' & Foster's Magic Mattress Man. 5 :45 — Studio. 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5:55 — Sports Review. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00 — Kate Smith Swanee Music (CBS). 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 6:13 — Time and weather. 6:15 — Linit Program, with Kennii King (CBS). 6 :30 — Evangeline Adams "Astro! oger" (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15 — The Barbasol Progra (CBS). 7 :30 — Rubel Baking Co. Program. 7:45— Old Wurzburg Malt Program. 8:00— Gold Medal Fast Freight (CBS). 8 :30— B oathouse Liquid Coffee Program. 8 :45 — Vincent Lopez and His Val- voliners (e. t.). 9:00— Rhythm Choristers (CBS). 9:15— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 9:30 — To be announced. 9:45— The Bon Bons (CBS). 10:00 — Talk by Tommy Arinoui (CBS). 10:15 — Gruen Answer Man. 10:25— Happy Feet. 10:30 — Mike Speciale Crusaders — Coney Island. 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports Re view. 11:08 — Cosmopolitan Tours. 1 1 :15 — Hollywood Garden Orchestra (CBS). 11 :30— Nocturne; Ann Leaf, Ben Alley (CBS). Midnight— Sign off. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6 :00— International Fiddlers, old- time music. 6:29— Bulova Time. 6 :30 — Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 8:00 — Morning Devotions. 8:15 — Bradley Kincaid. 8:30 — Montgomery Ward Program. 8:45— Bulova Time. 8:46— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC). 9:00— Mary Hale Martin (NBC). 9 :15 — Florence Frey's Workshop. 9:30— Dance Miniatures (NBC). 10:00— McCormick's Fiddlers. 10:15— Jim and Walt. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10 :40— Organ Program, Arthur Chandler Jr. 11:00 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 1 1 :30— WLW Stars. 11:45— River Reports; Time Signals. Noon — Crosley Singers. P. M.— 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:10— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1 :00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Jim and Walt. 1 :40— Market Reports. 1 :45 — Guv Lombardo's Orchestra Netherland Plaza. 2:15— Browning Mummery, tenor. | Wednesday, July 1 2 : 30 — Cincinnati Zoo Concert. 3:00— Weather Forecast. 3:01— The Matinee Players. 4:00— Chats with Peggv Winthrop (NBC). 4:15 — Organ with Instrumentalist. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4:40— Harriet Wellen, Don Becker. 5:00 — Afternoon Revelers. 5:30— Bradlev Kincaid. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 0:15— WLW Highlights. 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC). 6:45— "Believe It or Not, " Ripley (NBC). :00— Baseball Scores. 05— Mills Bros. Quartet. 15— John Ruskin Orchestra (e. t). 30 — Jack Frost Melodv Moments (NBC). 8:00— The Buddy Boys. 8 :30— G oldman Band Concerts (NBC). 9:30— Canova Coffee Hour. 10:00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 10 : 30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 11 :00— Night Songs. 11:30— Crosley Theater. Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. A. M.— 12:30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. 1 :00 — Guy Lombardo's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc. A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45 — Records. 9:15— Stero Program (NBC). 9:30— National Home Hour (NBC). 10 : 00— Records. 10 :15 — Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10:45— Records. 11:00— Sign off. P. M.— 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1:00— Sign off. 2:00— Woman's Radio Revi (NBC). 3 :00— E dna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 3:15 — Records. 3:45 — Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4:00 — Don Becker, ukulele. 4 :15 — Sam Wilson, baritone. 4:30 — Poems by Harry Holcombe. 4 :45 — Records. 5:00— Old Man Sunshine. 5:25— Civil Service Talk. 5:30 — The Gossipers (e. t.). 5:45— Little Jack Little (NBC). 6 :00— Records. 6:15 — Boscul Moments, with Madame Alda (NBC). C :30— Records. 6:45 — Back of the News in Wash- ington (NBC). 6 :30— Records. 7:15— Mae Questel (NBC). 7 :30— Mobiloil Concert (NBC). 8:00— Halsey Stuart (NBC). 8:30— Palmolive Hour (NBC). 9:30— Coca Cola Program (NBC). 10:00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). THURSDAY July 2 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— Hugh Cross, the boy from Smoky Mountain. 7:1,5— Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Bob White, "Fascinating Phi- losophy." 8:00 — Early Morning Dance. 9 :15 — My New Kentucky Home. 9:45 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:30— Northam- Warren (NBC). 10:45 — Classic Hour. 11 :00— Musical Novelties. 11:30 — Blue Ridge Mountaineers. Noon — Popular Dance Tunes. P. M.— 12:30 — Live Stock Quotations. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. Grace Hayes, musical comedy star, is the latest stage favorite to sign up with radio. She ap- pears at station WJZ on Sun- day nights at 6:45 now. Look for her soon on a commercial program with a local outlet. Thursday, July 2 :45 — Rev. Chas. A. Vandennuelen. :00— Sign off. :45— Hill Billy Kid. :55 — Ayers Sport Flash. :00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). :15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). :30 — Latonia Race Trace Program, with Little Red Riding Hood. :45— Betty May. :00 — D-i xie Spiritual Singers (NBC). :15— Bob White. :30— Blu-Green Blues. :45 — Crooning Guitarist. :00— Blackstone Plantation (NBC). :30 — Special Program Dedicated to Williamstown, Ky. :15 — Earl Arnold's Orchestra. :30— C lassie Recita 1— Molly Moore, Maurice Thompson, Tommy Ott. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn. 7:15 — Radio Circus. 7 :30 — Classified Directory. 8:00— Radio Circus. 8 :15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30 — Starr Freeze Program. 8:45 — Radio Circus. 9:15 — Broering Musicale. 9 :45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00— Brevities. 10:05— Bacca Coal & Iron Program. 10:20— Nu-Co Painters. 10:35— Kelvinator. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement. 11:00 — Acme Awning Program. 11 :15 — Radio Circus. 11:30— Travel Bureau. 11:45 — Studebaker Champions (E. T.). Noon — Radio Circus. P. M.— 12:15— Clean Up and Paint Up Cam- paign. 12:30— Fuller, Inc. 12:45 — Bellonby Melodies. 1 :00 — S tarr Freeze Program (E. T.). 1:15— Radio Circus. 1 :30 — Magnecoil Program. 1 :45 — The Home Finder. 2:00 — Kenton Fishing Grounds Program. 2:15 — Reds vs. Brooklyn at Brooklyn. 4 :45 — Radio Circus. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30— Ralph and Harlan. 5:45 — Radio Circus. 6:00 — Murphy & Goebel Furniture Special. 6:15 — Radio Circus. 6:30 — Dinner Music. 6:45— Berning Ford. 7:00— Earl Fuller's Orchestra. 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7:45 — Barker News. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15 — Dry Ridge Springs Program. | Thursday, July 2 8 :30 — Mountain Valley Varieties. 8:45 — Merchants' Review. 9 :00 — Camel Cigars. 9:15 — Adam F. Meyer Coal Co. 9 :30 — Shopper's Hour. 9:45 — Radio Circus. 10:15 — Fuller's Orchestra. 10 : 45— Slumber Music. WKRC {545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6:45 — Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Gruen Time Signal. 8 :U0— Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- gram. 8:15— Full Measure Gas. 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 9:00— Drink-Mor Program. 9 : 15 — Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 9 :45 — Barbara Gould Beauty Talk (CBS). 10:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 10:30— Uneeda Bakers (CBS). 10:45 — Time and weather. 10:48 — Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tully. II :15 — Dream Home, Jimmy and Joan. 11:30— Queen City Rug Makers. 1 1 :45 — Streit Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1:00 — Columbia Farm Program (CBS). 1 :30 — Studio Feature. 2 :00— Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2:30— A. L. Fink— The Three Doc- tors (CBS). 2 :45 — A. L. Fink — Ben and Helen (CBS). 3 :00 — Homemakers Talk by Julia Hayes. 3 :30 — Charles W. Reaume Studio. 3 :45— Rhythm Ramblers (CBS). 4 :00 — Asbury Park Casino Orches- tra (CBS). 4:15 — Cosmopolitan Tours. 4 :20 — Asburv Park Casino Orches- tra (CBS). 4:45— Meet the Artist (CBS). 5 :00 — Pharis Program; Sports Flash. 5:15 — Cincinnati Trade School Program. 5:30 — Stearns & Foster's Magic Mat- tress Man. 5 :45 — Studio. 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6 :00 — Kate Smith and her Swanee Music (CBS). 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 6 :13 — Time and weather. 6:15 — Linit Program, with Dennis King (CBS). 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS). 7:00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15 — Rubel Baking Co. Program. 7 :30 — Kaltenborn Edits the News (CBS). 7:45— The Old Wurtzlmrg Malt Pro- gram. 8:00 — The Premier Salad Dressers (CBS). 8:15— Big Yank Workshirt (E. T.). 8 :30 — Detective Story Program (CBS). 9 :00 — Mike Speciale Crusaders — Coney Island. 9:30— Fortune Builders (CBS). 9:45— Peter's Parade (CBS). 10:00— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 10:15 — Cosmopolitan Tours. 10:20— Sports Review. 10:25 — Happy Feet. 10:30— Art Hicks— Tacoma Park. 11:00— Gruen Witching Hour. 11:30 — Time and weather. 11:33 — Studio Feature. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6 :00 — International Fiddlers. 6 :29— Bulova Time. 6:30 — Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 7 :59 — Bulova Time. 8:00 — Morning Devotions. 8:15— Bradley Kincaid. 8 :30 — Montgomerv Ward Program (NBC). 8:44— Bulova Time. 8:45 — Popular Gems. 9:00— Ray Perkins (NBC). 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9 :30— Community Health, Dr. Carl Wilzbach. Thursday, July 2 9:45 — Housekeeper Chats. 10:00— Murrav Horton Orchestra 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Jim and Walt. 11 :00— The Venetian Three. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals Noon — Organ, Arthur Chandler, J r , P. M-— 12 :15 — Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12 :45 — American Cvnamid Program (E. T.). 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1 :00 — National Farm and Home (NEC), 1 :30 — George, Lava Soap Man (NBC). 1 :45— Market Reports. 1 :50 — Guy Lombardo's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 2:15 — Elliott Stewart, baritone. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 2 :45— E dna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 3:00— Home Decorations (NBC). 3 :15 — Weather Forecast. 3:16 — Afternoon Revelers. 3:30— Maze of Melody (NBC). 4:00— Jim and Walt. 4:15— Gems of Melody (NBC). 4:30 — Live Stock Reports. 4 :40 — The Crosley Singers. 5:00— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 5:15 — The Ramblers. 5:29— Bulova Time. 5 :30— Bradley Kincaid. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 0:15— T&styeast Jesters (NBC). 6:30— Glenn Adams, Dog Talks. d :45 — News Flashes from Hollywood (E.T.) 6 : 50— Baseball Scores. 6:55— Bradley Kincaid. 7:00— WLW Highlights. 7:15— Rin-Tin-Tin Thriller (NBC). 7 :30— Guy Lombardo's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 00— Barbasol Barbers (e. t.). 15 — Horseshoe Gardens Orchestra :30 — Russian Airs. 00 — Crimelights. 30— Clara, Lou and Em (NBC). 45 — Hires' Fireside Melodies. 00— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 30— Variety. 45 — Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 58 — Estate Weather Man. 00 — Great Composers. Midnight — Village Rhymester. A. M.— 12:10— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 1 :00— Guy Lombardo's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15— Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :'I5 — Records. 9:00— McCormick's Old Time Fiddlers. 9 :15 — Records. 9 :45 — Organ Program. 10:00— McCormick's Old Time Fiddlers. 10:15— Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10 :30— Records. 10:45 — Sign off. P. M.— 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— Sign off. 1:45— Dr. Scholl Reveller (NBC). 2 :00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 3:45 — Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4:00— Mona Motor Organ Recital. 4:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4 :45 — Records. 5:00— Travel Talk, Joseph Ries. 5:15— Ramona. 5:30 — The Gossipers (e. t.). :45— Black and Gold Room Orches- tra (NBC). .00— Records. 0:25— Better Business Bureau Talk :30— Records. :45 — Vocal Solos. 7 :00— Fleischmami Hour (NBC). 8:00— Arco Birthday Party (NBC). 8:30— Jack Frost's Melody Moments (NBC). 9:00— Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra (NBC). 10 :00— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10 :30— Henry Busse's Orchestra. Cas- tle Farm. 1 1 :00— Sign off. JUL -3 1331 ' ©cib I** 283 WEEKLY; 'OJIL Volume I, No. 7 FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1931 Price 5c hi;: hi celebrities from the stage, radio, and motion pictures will perform at 9 o'clock Monday night (July 6) in the White Owl Revue on a national Columbia network including WKRC. Pictured here are (left) Bell Baker, ballad queen of vaude- ville; (center) Irene Bordoni, French comedienne and (right) Helen Kane, the original "boop-boop-a-doop" girl. Others on the program will be the suave George Jessel as master of ceremonies; Walter T. Kelly, famous as the "Vir- ginia Judge;" John W. Green, Broadway song writer who com- posed Body and Soul; James Barton c,omedian and tap dancer who will dance before the microphone, and Guy Lom- bardo and his Royal Canadians. The program will replace the Robert Burns Panatela program for this week only. Stribling-Schmeling Fight, July 3, Will Be Heard Thru WLW The World's Heavyweight Championship fight Friday night (July 3) between Willie Stribling and Max Schmelhig will be broadcast at approxi- mately 10 p. m. by WLW in connection with the combined networks of the NBC. It is possible that WKRC also will broadcast the fight from CBS. For the NBC account, Floyd Gibbons will handle the broad- cast up to the fight. Graham McNamee will give the blow- by-blow description of the fight. Sam Taub, New York sport writer, will talk between rounds. Scheduled to go 15 rounds, the fight is expected to be on the air about an hour and a quarter. It is possible that it may start a little before 10 p. m. A listener writes Bob Burdette of WLW: "Since taking your morning Gym class exercises, I have gained 10 pounds. Now tell me how to reduce." Cincinnati Post Takes Control of Station WFBE Station WFBE since Saturday (June 27) has been operated by the Cincinnati Post, local Scripps-Howard paper. Harry Rubin will continue as manager of the station, according to Robert Segal, promotion man- ager of the paper. Segal says no drastic changes in the pro- grams or policy of the station are being contemplated for the time being. Bristoleers Are New CBS Feature The Bristoleers, a new musical program featuring Polly Waters, soprano, and Clyde Dengler, tenor, will have its premiere over WKRC and the Columbia Broadcasting System Tuesday night (July 7) at 8 :30 in the time formerly used by the Philco Sym- phony. A dance orchestra of twenty- five musicians under the direction of Sidney Lowenstem and a chorus will also be heard in selec- tions of music typical of foreign countries. Premier of Japan to Broadcast; Week is Full of Unusual Programs DX Stations Have Chain Features Not Carried Here Distant stations on NBC and CBS networks this week have programs not carried by local network outlts: Paul Downer, newly elected President of France, will speak from Paris at 3:30 p. m. Friday (July 3) on a Columbia network. Try WABC (860 kc— 348.6 m.) "Voice of St. Louis," present- ing an orchestra from the St. Louis Symphony, and vocalists from concert and light opera, will broadcast every Sunday morning at 10:30 on the Colum- bia network. Try KMOX (1090 kc— 275.1 m.) * * * Walter Damrosch will con- duct the San Francisco Sym- phony Orchestra Sunday (July 5) at 6 p. m. in an hour of music from Hillsborough, Cal., on an NBC chain. WHAS will carry it (820 kc— 366 m.) * * * Amos W. W. Woodcock, Di- rector of Prohibition, will dis- cuss his future plans and what they may mean to liquor traffic in the United States when he addresses the Columbia network at 8:15 p. m. Tuesday (July 7). Get it at WABC (860 kc— 348.6 m.) True Story Hour Starts Monday onNBCandWSAI Mary and Bob and their True Story dramas will be heard on an NBC network including WSAI at 9 o'clock Monday nights be- ginning this week (July 6). Their CBS period on WKRC (8 p. m. Friday) has been taken over by Liberty Magazine. New Symphony Series Begins With Wagner Howard Barlow will conduct an augmented symphony orches- tra in a new weekly program which will be presented over WKRC and a nation-wide Co- lumbia network for the first time Wednesday (July 8) at 7:30 p. m. with an all-Wagner program. New Features are Booked on Every Local Station MARY McCOY Mary McCoy, soprano whom you used to hear through WLW on the Camel Pleasure Hour, will sing Wednesday night (July 8) in the Westinghouse Salute at 8:30 with WCKY as the local NBC outlet. Robert Simmons, tenor, her co-star in many programs, ana a 21-piece concert orchestra conducted by William Wirges complete the entertainment bill. A special announcement by the Westinghouse Electric Com- pany is promised as a surprise feature. Eno Crime Club is New Mystery Drama on WKRC Another detective story series reaches Cincinnati listeners for the first time Monday night ( July 6 ) at 8 o'clock when WKRC takes the bi-weekly Eno Crime Club from the Columbia Broadcasting System. The other broadcast will be on Wednesday at 8:30 p. m. "Lawless Lady" by Leslie Charteris, a story of thievery, gangs, and a supposed countess, will be played the first week in two episodes. A new short story will be dramatized every week. Premier Wakatsuki of Japan, talking in Tokio, will be heard through station WLW and the National Broadcasting Company att 7 o'clock Friday morning as the first feature of the Fourth of July radio programs that wil give "fans a gala day of radio listening. The premier will speak in Jap- anese. His words will be inter- preted later to his listening audi- ence. The international broad- cast wHl be concluded at 7:20 a. m. when NBC will continue the program with Japanese music. * *" * WFBE will have a special In- dependence Day program at 9 a. m. ... At 10:45 a. m., and again at 3:15 p. m. the station will air the plays in the game be- tween the Reds and the Chicago Cubs at Chicago. * * * The Monroe Doctrine will be discussed by Under-Secretary of State William Richards Castle, Jr. in an NBC broadcast com- memorating the 100th anniver- (Coniinued on page 2) WKRC Gives Race Results as Soon As Horses Finish Results of each race at La- tonia are broadcast by WKRC within five minutes of the finish. WKRC lists the first result broadcast at 2:15 every after- noon except Sunday. Succes- sive announcements interrupt regular programs momen- tarily during the afternoon. Results of the races are phoned from the track to the station. Complete Radio Programs Begin on Page 4 RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1931. Weekly RADIO DIAL Published every Thursday by th< 22 East 12th St., Cincinnati, Ohio. NATALIE GIDDINGS, Editor Radio Dial Publishing Co Contents copyrighted. VOL. I JULY 3, 1931 This Summer Brings More Good Music As far as radio is concerned, 1931 promises to ring up a banner summer in one important particular: the amount of good music broadcast. To be sure, certain highly esteemed features of this type, heard during the winter, have been discontinued since the arrival of warm weather. However, the replacements already are compensating for these losses. Indeed, an unofficial tabulation seems to indicate that 1931 not only will put more good music on the air than any previous summer, but perhaps even a greater proportion than is heard in the course of a normal winter season. In addition to the Saturday series of Boston Pop Concerts and a similar Sunday afternoon series, NBC is airing the twice-weekly Gold- man Band Concerts, and is broadcasting the famous Ravinia Orchestra as well as Prince's Symphonic Ensemble. Columbia's most notable, but not only contribution to better summer music is the series of Lewi- sohn Stadium Concerts, heard for the first time over a nation-wide chain. Comes also the good news that WLW will air the Cincinnati Zoo Orchestra regularly. And meanwhile, such year-round favorites as the Stromberc-Carlson and Atwater Kent Programs carry on as usual, on as usual. These are merely highspots. But they serve to show that the summer of 1931 will have a generous share of fine music. And a good break for the radio audience it is, too. Up to now, the broadcasters have planned summer programs on the quaint theory that warm weather makes listeners crave more "hot" music. Maybe this tried but not true principle finally is bowing to something nearer the facts. As far as we have been able to observe, these are that, even in winter, the broadcast supply of good music does not keep pace with the demand, and that summer causes no material change in the tastes of the audience. If the summer of 1931 is evidence that similar views are beginning to filter into the studios, it may be more than a banner season. It may mean that the broadcasting of good music at last has turned the well- known corner. Barbara Maurel, staff contralto of the Columbia Broadcasting Company, will be one of the solo- ists in the Cathedral Hour VVKRC will broadcast at 3 o' clock Sunday afternoon (July 5). She will sing Rachmaninoff's setting of "Lead Kindly Light" with organ accompaniment. Or- gan composition by Bach, Pales- trina, and Haydn will be high spots of the hour of sacred music. Premier of Japan (Continued from page 1) sary of the death of James Mon- roe, at 1% :30 p. m. through WLW. The Tastyeast Jesters will cel- ebrate Independence Day with a novel interpretation of Stephen Foster's "Nancy Till" employing unusual instrumental effects. WCKY carries the program at 6:15 p. m. * * * Edgar White Burrili, known to radio listeners for his annual reading of "He Knew Lincoln," will read the Declaration of In- dependence as part of a dramatic narrative accompanied by an ex- act reproduction of the tolling of the Liberty Bell. This will be broadcast by WSAI at 6 :30 p. m. * * * Arthur Pryor and his Cremo Military Band will mark Inde- pendence Day with the playing of five stirring patriotic marches during their broadcasts over WKRC at 7 p. in. * * * Stephen Foster composer of "Swanee River" and "My Old Kentucky Home," will be mem- orialized in a program of his music to be heard over WSAI, NBC network, at 7:15 p. m. to celebrate the one hundred and fifth anniversary of his birth. An orchestra, chorus and soloists will present Foster's works. * * * Floyd Gibbons, headline hunter, will take on the task of breaking down well-established traditions built about the signing of the Declaration of Independ- Nightingales In the summer the song of the nightingale is so beautiful in England that the British Broadcasting Company has listening posts all over Eng- land to bring the nightingale's song to its listeners. A local listener with a short wave re- ceiver has reported to WFBE that he has heard the nightin- gale's song via radio and has received verification from the BBC. ence during the General Electric program (WSAI at 8 p. m.). Among other upsetting details, Gibbons will endeavor to show that the Declaration of Independ- ence was not signed on July 4. Governor Ritchie will be heard through WKRC at 10:45 p. m. The chief executive of the State of Maryland will deliver his speech at Patterson Park, in Baltimore, where a crowd of 200,000 is expected to assemble in an annual celebration of In- dependence Day. No title for the Governor's address has been announced. Revelers Return to G. M. Programs Back from their third Europ- ean concert tour, the quartet known as The Revelers, will be heard again on the General Mo- tors radio through WSAI and other NBC stations. This Monday (July 6) at 8:30 p. m., Lewis James, tenor, will be co-starred with Lois Bennett, soprano, as soloist with the quar- tet also singing several numbers. Miss Bennett is the Quaker Girl with Armstrong Quakers. Be- sides James, the quartet includes James Melton, Elliott Shaw, and Wilfred Glenn. Around the Dial By THE DIAL TWISTER Precious little publicity is spilled about it. But the Stromberg- Carlson Hour (Monday at 9 p. ni. over WCKY) goes on getting a regular and grateful hearing in the many homes where good music means something. It's worth it, too; one of the consistently fine features on the air. In fact, the only trouble is that 30 minutes isn't enough. Rochester is coming to be known on the air as a city of fine or- chestras. Besides its Civic Orches- tra, which broadcasts under the Stromberg banner, there is the Rochester Concert Orchestra, now doing a mighty enjoyable series of Sunday morning programs (10:30 over WLW). That's a guaranteed way to build a city's musical repu- tation. Maybe Cincinnati could take a leaf from Rochester's book. That Daddy and Rollo act (Sun- day, Tuesday and Thursday at 6:30 p. m. on WKRC) is prosper- ing as it goes along. Anyway, it's something different in the humor department. One of the best of its recent efforts was the commence- ment episode. And speaking of humor, plenty of listeners are glad to be meeting old friends again as The Stebbins Boys (Tuesday to Friday inclusive, at 10:15 over WSAI). These boys are Phillips Lord and Arthur Allen, former favorites as Uncle Abe and David. Yes, it's hard to keep such good men off the air for long. WFBE's nightly program of Slumber Music is well worth sam- pling, if you're one of those that find jazz hardly lulling. * * * Believe-it-or-not Ripley is going great guns in his weekly broadcast over WLW, Wednesday at 6:45 p. m. Rip is as interesting on the air as he is in print, which can't be said of a lot of them. The True Story Hour steps aside Friday (WKRC at 8 p. m.) to make room for a new Liberty program, True Story moves over to NBC and WLW— a good thing, for it's too good to lose. In three years True Story has become one of the best dramatic bills on the air. For one thing, it's so straight from life. And mighty well done besides; got what the critics call texture. * * * Those Nomads who get them- selves heard over WCKY Sunday at 10 a. m. put on a good show. Maybe the lines aren't so hot. But that orchestra, with its violins and guitars, is refreshing enough to make up for that, and then some. * * * Those Goldman Band Concerts (Sunday night at 9:15 over WSAI, and Wednesday night at 8:30 on WLW) are worth a twist of the wrist any old week. Edwin Franko knows how to handle a big hand, as only the few best do. And there's Del Staigers and his cornet thrown in'as good measure. 'Floyd Gibbons is still laying hold of plenty of ears every Sun- day night (WCKY at 9:15). They say he's one of the highest priced men on the air. Well, he's worth it. Anybody who can step right out of the loudspeaker and sit down beside you is better than just good. * * * Floyd, of course, suggests the General Electric Hour (Saturday at 8 p. m. on WSAI). It's only a 30-minute hour now, but Erno Rapee is filling Walter Damrosch's shoes as well as anybody can. His selections are especially enjoy- able, too. * * * If drama is your dish, don't overlook NBC's Radio Guild (Fri- day at 3:15 p. m. over WLW). It has the happy faculty of putting on something as different as it is well done. The last two plays, "Captain Applejack" and "The Swan," have been particularly good. Those coming up should be of as high caliber. Bob White Goes to WKRC for Daily News Broadcast Bob White, of WCKY, has moved to WKRC, where he is on the air twice a day with news flashes and news opinions under the title "What's Happening." He also is in charge of the Chil- dren's Quarter Hour on WKRC every afternoon except Sunday. Watch Radio Dial for his schedule. At the Kentucky sta- tion he did a well-liked program of early morning philosophizing. History Dramas Have Place in Nash Parade Dramatic highlights of history are recreated in the Nash Parade of Progress, WSAI and other NBC stations are broadcasting at S o'clock every Tuesday. Max Bendix. who is to be official bandmaster of the Chicago World's Fair in 1933. leads a hand that plays during the pro- gram. Harrisburg, Pa., will be host to Henry, George, Flo and Pete on Tuesday, (July 7), when at S p. m., radio's original "black- out" performers dedicate their entire presentation to that city. WKRC will carry the program which will highlight the adven- tures of "The Big Shot" and "Little Jimmie," two jail birds, and another installment of "Mey- er and Moe." Dr. Howard W. Haggard, as- sociate professor of physiology at Yale University, will describe medical practices of the days of the American Revolution, when he speaks to listeners of WKRC Sunday (July 5) at 7 p. m. in the Fastman Kodak program. Two New Mike Men Are Heard in Cincinnati Two new an- nouncers are heard these days on Cincin- nati station wave lengths. One is Wil- liam Brenton, who has just been added to the staff of an- ay nouncers f o r ^ t h e Columbia WM brenton Broadcast- ing System and is heard through Station WKRC. The other is Leonard J. Barnes, who has been given the majority of WLW's re- in o t e con- trol announc- ing jobs. Barnes was" at Station WGY, Sche- nectady, for eight years. His popularity in the East was so great that the radio editor of an Albany (N. Y. ) paper has organized a "Bring Back Barney" club. Barnes worked at WGY with Joseph A. Chambers, new WLW technical supervisor, on the per- fecting of the first successful portable remote control equip- ment. J. BARNES In response to numerous re- quests from his radio listeners, Dennis King will sing the roman- tic "Kashmiri Song" from the Indian Love Lyrics in the Linit broadcast over WKRC and the Columbia network on Tuesday, (July 7), at 6:15. On Monday, (July 5), he will recite Sara Teasdale's poem "Barter" and 11 sing "Litttle Grey Home in the West." * * * Tunes from the musical com- edy "Sally" will be heard when a miniature presentation of the show is broadcast over the Co- lumbia network, Sunday, July ) , at at 9 :45 p. m. as a feature of Star Reveries. Helen Gilli- gan, soprano, and Milton Wat- son, tenor, again will sing the leading roles. * * * Gus Haenschen, NBC orches- tra conductor, has gone from the Palmolive Hour (WSAI Wed- nesday at S :30 p. in.) to the Coca Cola program. (WSAI Wednes- day at 9:30 p. m.) Erno Rapee, NBC's new musical director, con- ducts the Palmolive orchestra now. * * * The Merry Men of WLW are returning to New York July 4; and will no longer be heard on the air in Cincinnati. * * * The Hill Billy Kid has shifted to WKRC from WCKY and will be on the air al 7:45 every morn- ing except Sunday. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1931. WKRG Takes CBS Sustaining Features WKRC has added several new Columbia features for this week that may not remain on its sched- ule In the future. All of them are immensely successful with other station audiences. Dial them this week : ADVENTURES IN WORDS — Tuesday, (July 7) at 4 15 p. m. Dr. Frank Vizetelly, edi- tor of Literary Digest and Funk and Wagnall's Dictionary, goes adventuring with words, their origins and their meanings. * * * BILL SCHUDT'S GOING TO PRESS— Wednesday, (July 8) at 5 p. rh. * * * THE NIT WITS— Wednes- day, night, (July S) at 9:30 This is Bradford Browne's riot- ous program of nonsense featur- ing "The Dear Little Nit Wits.' Music from New "Follies" Will Be Played in Advance Tunes from the "Ziegfield Follies of 1931" which will have its premier soon, will he played in the Pond's program Friday night (July 10) at 8:30 through WSAI. They include "Wrapped Up in You," and "Do the New Yorker." Harold Arlen, com- poser of several tunes in "You Said It," a new Broadway revue, and also of the scorching floor shows for the Cotton Club in Harlem will sing some of his own songs. Vox Celeste Vox Humana at WLW (Tues- day nights at 11:30) has turned into Vox Celeste with Eugene Perazzo playing classics of organ literature. The singers appear no more. "Dorothea Barlow is one of th Crosley Theatre leading ladies and a very good reason why th WLW studios are always full of young men who want to see the Theatre in action. Ravinia Opera Concerts Can Be Heard on Sunday Ravinia opera concerts, played in the open air opera theater at Ravinia, 111., are to be broad- cast during -the snmmer by the National Broadcasting Company at 3 o'clock every Sunday after non with WLW in the hook-up. Members of the Chicago Sym- phony orchestra under the direc- tion of Erich de Lamar ter com- pose the orchestra. Up to this time, broadcasting from the open-air theater has not been per- mitted to any one although its grand opera is famous. Boxing, Wrestling Are on WFBE Card of Sporting Events Boxing bouts on Monday, nights at the Music Hall arena, and wrestling matches at Redland Field every Friday are to be included on WFBE's sport schedule beginning this week. All matches are broad- cast at D o'clock with Harry Hartman at the microphone. You Should Know --- Georgia Skillet Lickers WLW Breaks Out With Multitude of New Programs WLW has booked a multitude of new programs to begin this ek and next: "In Romany" at S p. m. Fri- day (July 10) is a program of Hungarian music by an or- chestra and soloist "The Icyeast Jamboree" on Tuesday and Friday at S :15 p. m. features Murray Horton's orchestra and the Mills Brothers quartet "Wilderson's Wild Cats" at 9:45 p. m. Friday are a "jazzo-hotto" band directed by Keith Wilder- son who plays "hot" trumpet in Henry Thies' orchestra "The Singing Violin" (Saturday at 11 p. m.) is to be played by Virginio Marucci, concert master of WLW's staff orchestra Henry Thies' orchestra program for the NBC network is to be heard now at 11 p. m. on Sun- day's instead of at 11:30 "Moon River" at 11:30 p. m. on Sunday, Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday features the sweet- singing Glenn Sisters with ; background of vibraphone, or gan, and celeste in lullabies and love songs Henry Thies and his orchestra play one of their typical dance programs for Canada Dry ginger ale at 10 o'clock Tuesday and Thursday Thev play again earlier on Tuesday night (9:15) as "The Hottentots" with the suggestion that "the Hottentot's so very hot, I wish I were a Hotttentot "Crimelights" move Tuesday, (Tuly 7) to 9 o'clock and the Crosley Theatre on Wednesday (Tidy R) moves to 11 o'clock from 11 :30 p. m "Castilian Niffhts," a Spanish program, will shift on Thursday to 8:30 p. m. EVALYN KNAK J , featured star ol Hollywood and frequent co-star with George Arliss, temporarily deserts the motion picture spotlight for the micro- phone As one of the leading players in "The Radio Newsreel of Holly- wood," a 52-week radio serial taking listeners behind the scenes on the movie lots. Miss Knapp joins Winnie Lightner, Richard Barthelmess, John Barrymore and others in a feature whirh shows that Hollywood life is not alt play and no work With a story of love and adventure running throughout, the new playlets present a side of Hollywood life little featured. WLW carries the program by elec- trical transcription on Thursdays at 6:45 p. m. Life Guards Will Speak Each Week in Summer Daze A life guard a week will face the microphones for Columbia broadcasting stations including WKRC as part of the Summer Daze program at 8:45 Monday nights. The bronzed gods of popular summer resorts around Manhattan will tell their most interesting experiences. Hawai- ian music will help give seaside atmosphere. The program is sponsored by the Noxzema Chemical Co. Our Dlaly Dozen By DON BECKER For quite some time we ve been reading about tins person and that person" receiving letters, whose en- velopes arc addressed with charac- teristic comments or drawings in- stead of the actual name. Ripley received a letter with noth- ing on it but "Believe It Or Not. Salt and Peanuts found one with two "salt shakers" on the envelope. Tony Wons (as per Radio Dial) received one on the envelope ol which was a fac-siimle of a clock and to the left, "Are You Lts- tenin'?" This department will put up with this until it reads where some celebrity received a letter with Nothing" on the envelope. * * * We've an idea for somebody. Why not broadcast a half hour of "Electric Fans." Swell idea for the sumrar. And think how nice it would be to turn on your radio and instead of "hot" music, there would come forth a nice, cool breeze! Every business has its own ex- pressions. Radio is no exception. Some day you might meander into a studio, and certainly you d want to be up to the minute with your conversation. After five years of research, and several packages of cigarettes, 1 have compiled a list of some ot Radio's choicest phrases. Read them. Georgia corn fields couldn't hold WCKY's Skillet Lickers after their phonograph records started selling' at a rate that now makes their combined sales over eight million. Left to right the boys are: Bert Layne, Clayton McMichen, Riley Puckett who is blind, and Hoyt ("Slim") Bryant. McMichen holds Henry Ford's silver loving cup as the best old-time fiddler in the United States. He has won the competition four times. The four are real sure-'nuff Georgia "crackers," as you can tell by hearing 1 them do their own announcing on WCKY. "The Parents Forum" a new WFBE studio feature is sched- uled each Friday afternoon at 2:45. This program sponsored by The Parents Magazine. Moth- ers who are already "vacation- tired." will get helpful sugges- ions from Elizabeth Graydon who is in charge of the program. . Charlotte Harriman, contralto, and George Beuchler, baritone, will sing popular ballads in the Rallad Hour of the Columbia Broadcasting Svstem, Sunday afternoon. (Tuly 5), at 1:80. Andre Xostelanetz will conduct the orchestra which will play "Sierra Morena." "Kiki" and "Danse Russe Trepak" in addi- tion to accompanying the solo- ists. * * * The Boswell Sisters— Martha. Connie and Vet. will harmonize "South Sea Rose" over the Co- lumbia network and WKRC Sunday. ("July 5), at 6:45 p. m. Two Opera Stars Will Sing Monday Anna Case and Cyrena Van Gordon, one of the Metropolitan Opera and the other of the Chicago Civic Opera, will sing on the Packard concert Monday night (July 6 at 9:30 through WLW and other NBC stations. Both artists are American girls who have proved that native singers can win laurels in Amer- ican opera in the face of foreign competition. German Music Festival to be Heard Wednesday A rebroadcast in this coun- try of a musical festival in Bad Homburg, Germany, will be attempted by the National Broadcasting Company with WSAI as an outlet at 3:15 Wednesday afternoon (July S). The program will come on the third day of the four-day festival. Included in the con- cert will be "Come Autumn Time" (Leo Sowerby), "Ku- hla Khan" (Charles Griffes), "Africa" (William Still), and "Piano Concerto in D Minor" (Edward MacDowell). Study them carefully. AW NERTZ— This signifies dis- sension in the ranks. SCRAMM— (1) Get out. (2) "I'm broke." LOUSEY— Meaning something is lousey. IN YOUR HAT— See, "Aw Nertz." MIKE — Obsolete word for micro- phone. JUST FAIR— Term used describ- ing an exceptionally fine ^pro- gram. Radio's word for per- fect." DO A VALLEE— To be hit with something. Preferably a grape- fruit. SET UP— (1) Arrange the musi- cians for broad cast. (2) Ginger- ale and Ice. THE BIRD— (Sound) This is ef- fected bv placing the tongue be- tween the lips and blowing lustily. Used in connection with announcers. * * * Our Dialy Dozen is jealous of this "You should Know" column next door to us. We're so jealous we've decided to run it out of business by start- ing one of our own. Beginning next week the "What We Know About " department will be put into working order. Of course, those two dashes at the end of "About" is where the name will go— such as— "What We Know About Aimee Semple Mac- Pherson" or "You" or anything like that. The first one will be: "WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT ROBERT BURDETTE AND MURRAY HORTONI" By the way, have you heard the "Song of the Bottle Baby?" "YOU DON'T NEED GLASSES." Dialaughingly yours, DON BECKER. RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1931. Here Are Only Complete Programs FRIDAY July 3 WGKY (202m, M.- -1490 kc.) A 7:00— The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15 — Morning Devotions (NBC) 7:30 -Cheerio (NBC) 8 :00 Early Morning Dance. {> :15— My New Kentucky Home, 'i 15 -Dance Melodies 10:30— Classic Hour 11 :00— Musical Novelties 11 :30 — Mountain Melodies Noon — Popular Dance Tunes 12 :30— Norris Broclc Live Stock Reports 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert P. M.— 1 :00— Sign off 5 ;45— Blue Ridge Shindiggers 5:55 — Ayers News Sport Flash 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) Ci : 1 5 — Eilerman's Scrcnaders 6:45— Little Red Riding Hood — Latonia Race Track Program. 7:00— Bill and Bob, 7:15 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7:30— F.arl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House 8:00— Interwoven Pair (NBC) 8:30— Duke, His Uke and His Sis- ters. 8:45— Wallie, the Radio Clown :00 — Special Program Dedicated to Wellston, Ohio. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M-— 7 :00 — Voices at Dawn 7:15 — Radio Circus 7 :30— Classified Directory 8:00 — Shopper's Hour 8:15 — Mountain Vallev Greetings 8:30— Starr Freeze (E. T.) 8 :45 — Radio Circus 9 :15 — Broering Musicale :45 — Kleeman Furniture Program 10:05— Bacca Coal & Iron Program 10:20— Radio Circus 10:35 — Kclvinator Program 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk 10 :50 — Simper Time Announcement 11:00 — Acme Awning Program 1 1 :15 — Radio Circus 11 :45 — St n debaker Champions (E. T.) P. M.— 12:01— Serenade 12:15— Radio Circus 12 -30— Fuller, Inc. 1 :00— S tarr Freeze Afternoon Musicale I :15 — Kroness 1 :30— Vaudeville I : 15 — Radio Circus 2:15 — Tlie Home Finder '_' :30 — Matinee 2:45— "The Parents" Forum" 3:00 — Afternoon Melodies 3 :30— Reveries 3 :45 — Dance Frolic 4:00— Ralph and Harlan ■1 :15— Organ Recital 1 :45— Variety 5:00— Lyric Hour 5:30 World Series Program 0:00— Dinner Music 6:15 — World Series Program 6:45— Berning Ford Program 7 :00 — Dance Frolic 7 30 — Harry Hart man's Sport Review 7:45— Nu-co Painters 8 :00— Luckey Boys 8 :15 — Dry Ridge Spring's Program 8:30 — Colonial Stages Program 8 :45 — Champion Sparkcrs ( E. T.) 9:00 — Coney Island Dance Frolic 0:l- r > — Radio Circus 9:45— Evening Chimes 10 i'ii— Mountain Vallev Varieties 10:15— Slumber Music WKRC (5+5 m.— 550 kc.) A. At.— 6:45 — God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship 7:4-5— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Gruen Time Signal 8 ;0Q— Starr-Freeze Melodies 8:15 — Pilaris Program 8:30— Sweethearts of the Air (CBS) Friday, July 3 8-45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS) 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS 9:15 — Studio Feature. 9:30— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram IfliuO— Rhvthcm Kings (CBS). L0 30- Melody Parade (CHS). 10:4" — What's Happening. 11:00— Time and weather (Burke— Robene — Burkhart) 1 1 :03— Woman's Hour— Tremlette Tullv 11 :30— Charles W. Reaume Studio Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue P. M.— 12 :30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS) 1:15— Art Dry Cleaning Program 1 :30— Chicago Market Program 1 :45 — Full Measure Gas 2 :00— Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS) 2:15 — Race Result from Latonia, Ky. o -20— Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2 :30 — Drinkmor Program 2:45 — Madam Flor-enz: Beauty Pro- gram 3 :00— Homemaker's Talk by Julia Hayes 3 :30— Charles W. Reaume Studio 3:45— Edna Thomas, Lady from Louisiana (CBS) 4:00— Jewish Art Program (CBS). 4:15 — Children's Quarter Hour. 4:30— A. L. Fink Program 5 :00 — Queen City Rug Makers 5:15— Cincinnati Trade School 5 :30— Steams and Foster's Magic Mattress Man 5 :45 — Studio 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores 5:55 — Sports Review 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast 6:01) — Kate Smith and Her Swanee Music (CBS). — Home Furni- ture Company. 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree 6:13— Time and weather 6:15 — Linit Program, with Dcuni: King (CBS) 6 :30— Red Goose Adventures (CBS) 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7:00— Prvor's Cremo Military Band (CBS) 7:15— Barbasol Program (CBS) 7:30— Dutch Masters (CBS) 8 :00— Liberty Magazine Hour (CBS). 8:15— Pvol Blackberry Dudes 9:00— What's Happening 9:15— Gypsy Trail (CBS). 9:30— Poet's Gold (CBS) 10:00 — Confessions of a Racketeer (E. T.) 10:15 — Gruen Answer Man 10:25 — Happv Feet 1030— Coney 'Island Orchestra, Mike Speciale and His Crusaders. 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports 11:08— Geo. Olsen and His Orchestra (CBS) 11 : ir>— Pvol Blackberry Dudes 11:30— Nocturne — Ann Leaf, Ben Alley (CBS) WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6:00 — International Fiddlers 6:30— Gym Classes 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 8:00 — Morning Devotions 8:15— Bradley Kincaid 8 :30— Montgomery Ward Program (NBC) 8:45— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC) 9:00— Ray Perkins (NBC) 9:15— "The Hostess." Mrs. Lutye Sohngen 9:30— Book News 9:45 — Premium Man 10:00 — Island Serenaders 10:30— Live Stock Reports [0:40— Merry Men Quartet 11-00 — Organ with Instrumentalist 11:15— Swift Program (NBO U:30— WLW Stars 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals Noon— Tuxedo Fiddlers P. M.— 12:1'.— Bulova Time 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:50— Live Stock Reports 1 00— National Farm and Home (NBC) 1 :30— Singin' Sam 1 :40— Market Reports 1 :45— Netlierland Plaza Orchestra 2:15— Salt and Peanuts White, whose voice familiarly known to radio as "The Silver Masked of the old Silvertown I be g'uest Friday, July 3 11 -30— Henrv Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm (NBC-Blue) Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra A. M.— 12 :30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 1 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn, the Quaker Early Bird (NBC) 8:15— Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC) 8 :45 — Records 9 :00 — Organ Program 9:15— Records 9 :30— National Home Hour (NBC) 10:00— Hawaiian Serenaders (NBC) 10 :30— Realities of Romance (NBC) 11 :00— Sign Off Joe more listener Tenor Cord orchestr; soloist with the Nestle Ghoco- lateers Friday night (July 10) at 7 o'clock with WLW as the local NBC outlet. He will sing " A c u s h 1 a , "Mother Machree," and "I Hear You Calling Me." Because White's Silvertown contract re- quired him to wear a solid silver mask in all public appearances many were the stories that grew up about him. Some said he was an overseas veteran whose face had been hideously scarred in the war. Some said he had no nose. Others said a jealous woman had thrown acid in his face. P. M.— 12 :50 — Livestock Reports 1 :00— Sign Off 2:00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC) 3:00— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC) 3:15 — Records 3 :45 — Ramona 4 :00— Records 4 :30— Moore Paint Program (NBC) 4 :45 — Records 5 :00 — Poems by Harry Holcombe 5:15— Don Becker, Ukelele. 5:30— The Gossipers (E. T.) 5:45— Records. 6:30— Alice Richards ■ 6:45— Records 7:00— Cities Service Concert (NBC) 8 :00— Clicquot Club (NBC) 8:30— Pond's Dance (NBC) 9:00— Kodak Week End (NBC) 9:30— RKO Theater of the Air (NBC) 10 :00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC) 10:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 11:00— Sign Off. Friday, July 3 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC) 3:00— Jim and Walt 3:15— Radio Guild (NBC) 4:15— Talk by Winner of Indianap- olis Races 4:20— Ramona 4:30— Raymond Mitchem; Mills Brothers 5:00— Words and Music 5 :30 — Bradley Kincaid. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos 'n* Andy (NBC) 6:15— Madame Alda (NBC) 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC) 6:45— The Chatter. 7 :00— Baseball Scores 7:05 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona 7:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 7 :45 — Sterling Jack 8:00— "In Romany" 8:15— Icveast Jambnree 8:30— Hoosier Editor S:45— Armour Program (NBC) 9:00— Paul Whiteman's Paint Men 9:30— Clara, Lu and Em (NBC) 0:45— Wildcrson's Wildcats 10 :00— Stribling - Schmelling F i g h t (NBC) 10 :30— Variety 10:45— Bob Newhall Sport Slices 11:00— Vox Celeste 11:15— Salt and Peanuts SATURDAY July 4 DOES YOUR RADIO GET DISTANCE? If not, you better have the tubes tested. All factories recommend that you put in a full set of tube: each year. In your case it probably isn't necessary, but the sure way is to bring your tubes to LINK'S RADIO TUBE SHOP at 607 Wal- nut St. They will test, match and analyze your tubes while you look on at no charge. They also will gladly answer any questions in re- gards to poor or troublesome radio reception. Phone PArkway 6415 and ask for Radio Repairing. THIS SERVICE IS FREE at Link's Radio Tube Shop. 607 Wal- nut Street. WCKY (202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7:00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15 — Morning Devotion (NBC) 7:30— Cheerio (NBC) 8:00— Early Morning Dance. 9 :15 — My New Kentucky Home, 9 :45— Kentucky Belle's Kiddie Club 10 :30— Classic Hour 11 :00— Musical Novelties 11:30 — Mountain Melodies 12 :00 — Popular Dance Melodies 12:30 — Norris Brock live stock quo- tations 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert 1 P. M.— SIGN OFF 5 :45 — Blue Ridge Shindiggers 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC) 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC) 6 :30 — Lawson's Hawaiian?, Latonia Race Track Program. Saturday, July 4 P. M.— 7:00— Rudy Vallee (NBC) 7:30— Earl Vrnold's Orchestra from Lookout House 8:00— "Skillet Lickcrs" 8:30— Little Red Riding Hood 8:45 — The Crooning Guitarist o : 00— Cuckoo Club (NBC) 9:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Voices at Dawn 9 ;00 — Independence Day 9:30— Radio Circus 10:43— Reds vs. Chicago, at Chicago P. M.— 12:15 — Radio Circus 1 :00— The "Orioles" 1 : to — Frances Allen 1 i80— Ralph and Harlan 1 :45— Mildred Eichler 2:00— Radio Circus 2:15 — Hawaiian Bluebirds 2:30— Marion Clark 2:45 — Don Galloway, tenor 3 :00— To be announced 3:15— Reds vs. Chicago, at Chicago 5:30— Catholic Telegraph 5:45— Frank Zwygart, baritone 6:00 — King's Hawaiians 6 :30 — Dinner Music 6:45 — Sundown Serenader 7:00— Dance Frolic 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view 7 :45 — Organ Resital 8:00— Luckey Boys 8:15— Galvano and Cortez 8:30— Evening Chimes 8:45 — Radio Circus 9:00— Licking River Fiddlers 9:15 — Radio Circus 9:30— Dance Frolic 10:00— Slumber Music 10:00— Fuller's Orchestra 10:30— Radio Circus 10:45— Slumber Music WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M— 6 :45— God's Bible School— Sunrise Worship 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7:59— Gruen Time Signal 8:00— Madam Flor-enz 8:15— What's Happening 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS) 8:45 — Full Measure Gas 9 ; 00— Charles W. Reaume Studio 9 :30— Consolidated Merchants Pro- gam 10:00— Queen City Rug Makers 10:15— Time; Weather 10 :20— Woman's Hour — Tremlette Tully 10:45— Starr-Freeze Melodies (1*..T.) 11:00— Home Furniture Co. Program 11 :15— Drinkmor Program U : :iO— Homcmakcr's Talk by Julia Hayes Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue P. M.— 12 :30— Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram 1 : 00— Community Hospital Program 1:30— Columbia Farm Network Program (CBS) 2:00— Four Clubmen (CBS) IF YOU NEED MONEY For taxes, insurance, bills or any other pur| a Household-Loan Pla: can borrow what you i it in small monthly am conveniently foi repairs, old sea, we have whereby you ed and repay jnts arranged You have a yea: which to repay it. Open 8:30 to 5:00 The Central Acceptance Corporation 26 East Sixth St., between Vine and Walnut Cincinnati, Ohio. PArkway 6280. R \l)Id D! \l.. FRIDAY, .IV LY 3, 1931. :>f Greater Cincinnati Radio Stations Saturday, July 4 ' i . Rai i R< nil from I .1 t on i a, Ky. • 30 1 Fink Song Recital. Louie Johnson, tenor 3:00— Ann Leaf, orfjan (CBS) ; 30 I harlcj W . Ri aume Studio : 16 v inish Si n n idi 1 1 BS > 1 00— Luna Park 1 Ircheitra £( BS) 1 BO I hifdrcn's < (uartt r Hour. ,( ;-16— Pharis Tire Program 6:00— Kampf Artists 6:16 — Cincinnati Trade School 8:30— Steam's & Foster's Magic Mattress Man S 15 Studio 5:50— Eureka Baseball Scores , ;, ;55— Sports Review 5:69 — Burke Weather Forecasl 8:00— St. Moritz Orchestra (CBS) Home Furniture Co. 6:15— Studio fi:25 — Stocks, Cohle and Tyrec fi:28 — Time and weather 6:30 Pyol Blackberry Dudes 0:45— Camel Quarter Hour (CBS) 7:00 — Pryor's Crcmo Military Band (CBS) 7:15 — What's Happening 7 :2fl — Happy Feet 7:IIU — Junior Chamber of Commerce 8:00— United Spanish War Veteran's 8:30— Art Hicks' Tacoina Park Orchestra 9:00 — Hank Simmons' Show Boat (CBS) 0:45 — Studio Feature 1.0:00 Arlie Simmond's Orchestra, Conev Island 10:80— To Be Announced 10:45— Talk by Gov. Albert C. Ritchie (CBS) 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports [1:08— Guy Lombardo and His Or- chestra (CBS) 11 :30— Nocturne — Ann Leaf, Ben Alley (CBS) WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— :80 International Fiddlers' fiOO Rebroadcast from Japan I NBC) '< : !0 Special Japanese Music (NBC) 7:30 — Southern Singers 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) .- :00 -Morning Devotions 8:15— Bradley Kiucaid 8 ;80 — Montgomery Ward Program (NB( I 8:45 — Kashmiri Trio 0:00— Dance Miniatures (NBC) 9:30— Art Talks, Cherry Grcvc D:45— WLW Mail Bag 10 :00 — Organ Program, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 10:15— Elliot Brock, violin hi :80 — Murray Horton's Dance Or- chestra 10:40 -Murray Horton's Orchestra U:00— Brndlev Kincaid. II :15— Swift Program (NBC) 11:30— Piano and Vocal Solos 11:15 — River Reports; Time Signals Noon — Governmental Glimpses, At- torney General Gilbert Bettman P. M.— 12:16 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra 1 ..' '" Mnnrni - Centennial Meinnrial Commission 1 NBC I 1 ;80— Glenn Sisters and Rainona I :-1S— Sistors of the Skillet iM'.i ) 2:00— Nethcrland Plaza Orchestra 2:15— Jim and Walt. ' :80 ( lini innati i uo Symphonj * *on- certs, 8:00— Ramona and Don Becker 3:15— Pacific Feature Hour (NBC) 4 :00— Merry Men Quartet 1 .i" Crosley Dealers' Hour 5:00— Seckatorj Hawkins. 5 80 Doctors of Mclodj 5^5— Lowell Thomas (NB) | ■ taun V Andi (NBC) 6:15— Tastveast Jesters (NBC) G 30 -Baseball Scores 6 ■'-: rhe I hatter 6^5— Mail Pouch (E. T.) T :00— Crosley Theater R F. D. Hour 8:00— Crosley Saturday K i B:S0— Domino Orchestra (NBC) 9:00— King Edward Cigar Band. 1 lara, Lu and Era (NBC) 9 l- r ' — Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens in no— Club Sohio in IS— Bob Newhall Spi rl - It ;00— The Singing Violin 11:30— Castle Farm Orel Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:30— Village Rhymester 18:40— The Doodlesockcrs Hank Simmons' Show Boat begins its third year on the Colum- bia Broadcasting System and WKRC with its performance Satur- day night (July 4) at 9 o'clock. Anticipating' the event, the cast presented Hank (Harry C. Browne) with a huge birthday cake. The presentation was made by Edith Thayer (left) and Elsie Mae Gordon (right), who play the parts of Jane McGrew and Maybelle. Browne, creator of the Show Boat, confesses that he has never been nearer to a real show boat than half a mile. He is a veteran Sunday, July 5 | WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. Al.— 8:00— Voices at Dawn. 9:00 — Morning Concert. 9:15— Radio Circus. 9 :30— Invitation to the Waltz. 9:45 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 10 :00— Kelvinator Program. 10:15 — Dry Ridge Springs. 10:30 — German Program. 10:45 — Berning Ford. 11:00— Radio Circus. 11:15 — The Home Finder. 11:30— Take Time to Be Beautiful. 11:45— Tile Way Fire-Proof Home Program. P. M.— 12:15 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 12:30— Galvano & Cortez. 12:45 — Organ Recital. 1 :00 — Every Friday Jewish Hour. 2 :00 — Starr Freeze Program 2:15 — Matinee. 2:30— Hawaiian Bluebirds. 2:45— Harlan and Ralph. 3:00 — Afternoon Musicalc. 3 :45 — Radio Circus. 4 :00— C. T. S. Musicalc Trio. 4:10— Fuller, Inc. 4 :30 — Sundown Serenader. 4 :45 — Tea Time Tunes. 5 :00 — King's Hawaiians. 5:15 — Parkview Symphony Hour. 6:00— Radio Circus. 0:15— Travelogue, Joe Sweeney. fi:30 — Church Federation Hour. 7:00— Dance Frolic. 7 :30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Review. 8:00— Radio Circus. 8:30— The Orioles. 8:45 — Reveries. 9 :00— Scotland Yard. 10:15 — Mountain Valley Varieties. 10:30— Slumber Music. Saturday, July 4 1:00— Ralph Bennett's Orchestra, 1:30 — Henry Bussc's Orchestra, Castle Farm. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC) 8 : 15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC) 8:45— Records 9:00— Bradley Kincaid 9:15 — Procter and Gamble Program (NBC) in ;l.'i — Organ Program. 10:30— Keys to Happiness (NBC) 11:10— Records 1 1 :30 — Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop. Coinm. Assn. 11 :45 — Records Noon— Sign off P. At.— 3:00— Classic Gems (NBC) 3 :30— Records 3 :45 — Croslev Dealers Salute 4 :00— Records 5:00 — Southern Singers & Mitchcm 5:30— The Gossipers (E. T.) 5 :45— B lack and Gold Orchestra (NBC) 6:00— Records G i". Mr. Bones 8 I o. (NBC). - ; nti— Records 7:15 — Bavarian Peasant Band (NBC) 7:30— The Silver Flute (NBC) 8:00— General Electric Hour CNBi l 8:30— Club Valspar (NBC) 9:00— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC) 10:00 — Henry Bussc's Orchestra, Ca>tle Farm 10:30— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 11 :0n— Sign off Sunday, July 5 10 :30 — The Crooning Guitarist. 10:45— Beach Combers. 11:00— Nau Sisters. 11:15— Echoes of the Orient (NBC). 11:30— Little Red Riding Hood. 11:45 — Charlenc and Kalherine, La- dies of Melody. Noon — Jack Moore. P. Al.— 12:15— Skillet Lickers. 12:45— Men About Town. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45 — Lucille Fox, Blues. 0:00 — Lawson's Hawiians 6:30 — Maurice Thompson, Baritone. 6:45 — Italian Serenaders 7 :00— Columbia Recording Skillet Lickers. 7:30— College of Music Sinfonia Pro- gram. 8:00— Nau Sisters. 8:15— Kentucky Belle. 8:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. 8:45— Little Red Riding Hood. 9:00— Odas Mattox, the Crooning Guitarist. 9:15— Floyd Gibbons (NBC). 9:30 — Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6:45-7:45— God's Bible School- Sunrise Worship. 9:00— God's Bible School. 10:00— Watchtowcr Program (e. t.) 10 :15— Jim Liglitfield— Veteran's Civic Hour. 11 :00— Services of First Church of Christ Scientist Noon — Popular Musical Program. P. M.— 12:15—0x01 Feature (CBS). 12:30 — American Legion Program 1:30— Ballad Hour (CBS). 2:00— Grucn Old-Fashioned Garden. 3:00— Cathedral Hour (CBS) 4:00— French Trio (CBS). 4 :15— Pastorale (CBS). 4:45— Theo Karlc (CBS). 5:00— Chicago Knights (CBS). 5:30— Twilight Reveries. 5 :58 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00— Dr. Klein's News Rccls(CBS). 6:15— Studio. 6:20— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6 :25 — Sports Review. 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:15— The Boswell Sisters (CBS). 6 :58 — Time and weather. 7 :00— Devils, Drugs and Doctors (CBS). 7:15 — Kate Smith, Swance Music CBS). 7 :30— Kaltenborn Edits the News (CBS). 7:45— B oath ou se Liquid Coffee Program. SUNDAY .Tulv 5 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc. A. M.— L0:0O— Nomads (NBC). KEEP COOL A $0,85 ELECTRIC FANS PRICED AS LOW AS Inductive type — can be placed on a radio or anywhere without interference. Come in and see them, and cool off. "HEADQUARTERS FOR FANS" 1° OF/"* if IT D CTr.DU ORIGINALTIRECO. UtlE.l'JVn.K. O I VJKL. COURT & RACE Sunday. July 5 8 00 - Vround the Samovar (CBS) 8:80-r-Graud Opera Uimtun (( BS) 9:00— Art Hick's. Tacoma Park 9:30— Fortune Builders (CBS). 0:45— Star Reveries (CBS). 10:00— Arlie Simmond's Orchestra al i om j Island 10:30— To Be Announced 1 1 :00— Time and weather. 11:03 — Sports Review. 11:07— To Be Announced 11:30— Howard Haflford and Duane Snodgrass. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) a. m.— 8:50— Bulova Time. 9:00-Church Forum. 9 :30— Witherspoon Chorus (NBC). 10:00— Bulova Time. 10:05 — Organ, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 10:25— River Reports. 10 :29— Bulova Time. 10 :30— Rochester Concert Orchestra (NBC). 11:30— Troika Bells (NBC). Noon — Midday Jewels. p. m.— 12:29— Bulova Time. 12:30— Music of the Ages (NBC). 1:30— Yeast Foamers (NBC). 2 :00— Crosley Theater. 2:30 — Henry Thies' Orchestra, 3 :00— Ravinia Opera Concerts (NBC). 3:30— Over Jordan (NBC). 3 :45 — John Barclay, Dagmar Ryb- ner (NBC). 4:00— Sabbath Reveries (NBC). 5 :00 — The Roamios. 5 :30— Plantation Days. 6 :00— The Chatter. 6 :30 — Conservatory of Music Con- cert (NBC). 6 :55— Baseball Scores. 7:00— Enna Jettick Melodics(NBC), 7:15— Blow the Man Down (NBC). 7:30— Harbor Lights (NBC). 8 :00 — Heel Hugger Harmonies (NBC). 8:15— Bayuk Stag Party (NBC). 8:45— Ralph Bennett's Orchestra, 9:15— Variety. 9 :30— Kellogg Slumber Music ( NBC) . 10 :00 — Crosley Concert. 10:45 — Murray Horton's Orchestra at Horseshoe Gardens. MAKE IT A MUSICAL u 4 th" Take a portable phonograph along on your Fourth of July holiday . . . dance to all the latest hits on . . . MELOTONE RECORDS (made by BRUNSWICK) TWO HITS on each Record for 25c Stop in today. "MOONLIGHT SAVING TIME" The SONG SHOP 36 East Fifth Opposite Fountain Square RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1931. Sunday, July 11:00— Henry Thies and His WLW Orchestra (to NBC "Blue" Network). 11:30— Moon River. Midnight— Henry Bussc's Orchestra, at Castle Farm. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc] P. M._ 2:00 — Sennoncttc and Hymn Time. 2:30— Manhatta n Guardsmei (NBC). 3 :00 — National Sunday Forum (NBC). 4:00— Gilbert & Sullivan Gems (NBC). 5 :00— Catholic Services (NBC). 6:00— Gay Vienna (NBC). 6:30— RCA Victor (NBC). 7:00— Chase and Sanborn (NBC). 8 :00 — "Our Government," David Lawrence (NBC). 8:15— Atwatcr Kent (NBC). 8:45— Iodent Big Brother (NBC). 9:15 — Goldman Band Concert (NBC). MONDAY July 6 WCKY(202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15 — Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8 .00 — Early morning dance program. 9:15 — My New Kentucky Home, Jetta Crane. :45 — Dance Records. 10:30— Classic Hour. II :00— Musical Novelties. 1 1 :30— Skillet Lickers. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— 12:30— Norris Brock Live Stock. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. 1 :00— Sign off. 6:45 — Blue Ridge Shindiggers. 5 :55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 6 :15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 0:30— Kentucky Belle. 6:45— Bill and Bob — the Delivery Boys. 7 :00— Columbia Recording "Skillet Lickers." 7:30 — Charlcne and Catherine. 7 :45 — Beach Combers. 8:00— Steve Bates. 8:15— "The Man Who Could Not Die," mystery thriller. 8:45— Little Red Riding Hood. 9 :00— Stromberg Carlson (NBC) 9:30-U. of C. Quartet. 9 :45— Wally, the Radio Clown. WFBE (250 m.-1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn. 7:15— Radio Circus. 7 :30— Classified Directory. 8:00— Eighth and Walnut Street Garage Program. 8:15— Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30— Starr Freeze Program (E. T.) 8:45— Radio Circus. 9:00— Hyde Park Community Pro- gram. 9:15 — Broering Musicale. 9:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00— Brevities. 10:05— Bacca Coal & Iron Program. 10:20— Radio Circus. 10:35 — Kelvinator Program. 10:50— Polar Rav Health Talk. 10:59— Simper Time. 11 :00 — Acme Awning Program. 11:15— Radio Circus. 11:30 — Travel Bureau. 11 :45— S t u d e b a k (E. T.). Noon— Radio Circus. P. M.— 12:30— Fuller, Inc. 1 :00— S tarr Freeze Afternoon Musicale. 1:15— Kroness Brothers Program. 1:30— Radio Circus. 1 :45— The Home Finder. 2:00— The Islanders. 2:15— Matinee. 2:45— Novelty Notes. 3:00 — Memorv Lane. 3:30— Down South 4:00— Radio Circus. 4:30— Organ Recital. 4:45— Ralph and Harlan. 5:00— Lvric Hour. 5:30— World Scries Program. 0:00 — Dinner Music. 6:15 — World Scries Program. 6 :4o — Berning Ford. Champions Monday, July 6 7 :00— Radio Circus. 7 :30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7:15— Nu-Co Painters. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15 — Dry Ridge Spring Program. 8 :30 — Land o'Sky Program. 8 :45 — Coney Island Dance Frolic. 9 :00— Boxing Bouts at R c d I a n d Field. 10:30 — Mountain Valley Varieties. 10:45 — Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A.M.— 6 :45 — God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship. 7:45 — Popular Musical Program. 7:59— Guien Time. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8 : 1 5 — What's Happening 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9 :00 — Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 9 :30— Full Measure Gas. 9:45 — Charles W. Reatime, studio. 10:15— The Madison Singers (CBS) Home Furniture Co. 10:30— Uneeda Bakers (CBS). 10:45 — Time and weather. 10:48— Woman's Hour — Tremlctte Tully. 11 :I5 — Don Bigclow and His Orches- tra (CBS) 11:30 — Enric Madriguera's Cuban Or- chestra (CBS) 11 :45 — Drink-Mor Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12 :30— Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram. 1:00— A. L. Fink Program. 1 :30 — Chicago Market Program. 1 :45— Madam Flor-enz Bcautv Pro- gram. 2 :00CharIcs W. Reaumc Studio 2:15— Race Result from Latonia Ky. 2 :20— Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS) 2:30— Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies (E T) 3:00— Pharis Tire Program. 3:15— Queen City Rug Makers. 3 :30— St. George Hotel Orchestra (CBS) 4:00— Dancing by the Sea (CBS) 4:30— Hoosier Photographer- Tramp Starr. 4:45— Children's Quarter Hour 5:00— A. W. Kampf Jewelery Co., Spec. Artists Program 5:15— Cincinnati Trade School Program. 5 :30— Stearns' & Foster's Magic Mattress Man. 5 :45— Studio. 5:50— Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. 5 :59— Burke Weather Forecast, fi :00— Studio Feature. 0:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 0:13— Time and weather. 6:15— Unit Program, with Dennis King (CBS). 6 :30— Evangeline Adams, "Astrolo- ger" (CBS). Vi%~ Camcl Q uarte r-Hour (CBS). 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band 7:15— The Barbasol Program (CBS). 7 :30— What's Happening I : i5~ 0Id Wl ' r z'>urg Malt Program. 8:00— Eno Crime Club (CBS) 8:30— An Evening in Paris (CBS). 8:45— Noxcma Program (CBS) 9:00— Roht. Burns Panatella Pro- gram (CBS). 9 :45— Studio Feature 10:00— Pyrnl Blackberry Dudes 10:15— Gruen Answer Man 10:25— Happy Feet. 10:30— Arlie Simmond's and His Or- chestra. Coney Island 11:00 — Time and weather. 11:03— Sports Review. 11:08— George Olsen and His Music 11:30— Nocturne (CBS). Letter Box WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. AL— 6:00— International Fiddlers. 6:2.0— Bulova Time. 6 :30 — Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 8:00 — Morning Devotions. 8:15— Ball Brothers Canning Time. 8 :30— Montgomery Ward Program (NBC). 8:44— Bulova Time. 8:45— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC). 9:00 — Housekeeper Chats. 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9:30— Musical Portrait. 9:45— Winifred S. Carter (NBC). 10:00— Svncopaters (NBC). Radio Dial is interested in the opinions of its readers. It will endeavor to answer questions. Unsigned letters will not be con- sidered but signatures will be with- held when the request is made. * * * Dear Sirs: T am interested in international broadcasting. My husband and I have been having an argument about inter- national broadcasting that we thought you might settle. He says the broadcasts are from phono- graph records. I think they are sent by cable. Can you tell us which one is right? Mrs. M. H. N., Walnut HiUs. Husband and . wife are both wrong. Trans-oceanic programs are broadcast on short-wave lengths (like WLW's short-wave sister-station W8XAL) which are picked up in America on short- wave receiving stations and then are rebroadcast on regular long- wave lengths by NBC and CBS network stations. Dear Editor: * * * I think Ray Perkins is by far the best program on the air. Why doesn't WLW have him every day instead of just Thursday and Fri- day morning? Miss L. T. S., Covington, Ky. Ray Perkins is under contract to Libby. McNeil and Libby, who use him on only two of their NBC programs. * * * Dear Sirs: I heard your announcement over WKRC and I bought a copy of your paper. It has everything in the radio line that I wanted to know. Real dope. Let's have a little more about Amos and Andy, and not so much about Rudy Vallee, though. With best wishes for success. Yours truly, Miss I. M., Cincinnati. Vallee-dictory. * * * Gentlemen: I find your publication very in- teresting as well as convenient. I trust you will allow me to state that I, and doubtlessly many other Dialers, would appreciate it if you would include in your program schedules the time at which inter- national broadcasts are to be re- layed through Cincinnati stations. Mrs. G. L., Georgetown, Ky. Suggestion noted. See front page Monday, July 6 10:00— Canada Drv. 10:30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Ncwhall, Sport Slices. 10:50— Estate Weather Man. 11:00— Chime Reveries. Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12 :30— H c n r y Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. 1 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC).. 8:15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8:45 — Records. 9:00— Mrs, Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9:15— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 9:30 — Jean Carroll, please tell me (NBC). 9:45 — Jerry Foy. 10:00— Blue Streaks (NBC). 10:15 — Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10 :30— Records. 11:00— Sign off. P. M.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— Sign off. 2:00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 3:45 — Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4:00 — Crosley Singers. 4 :30— Records. 4 :45— Minabelle and Chick. 5:00— Records. 5:15 — Cecy Gordon; Gene Perazzo. 5 -30 — The Gossipers (e. t.) 5:45 — Records. 0:15— "The World Today," James G McDonald (NBC). 6:30 — Mrs. Lee Ach, poems. G:45— Vocal Solos. 7 :00 — "How's Business ?", Merle Thorpe (NBC.) 7:15— Webster Program (NBC). 7:30— A. & P. Orchestra (NBC). 8:30 — General Motors Program (NBC). 9:00— True Story Hour (NBC. 9 :30— Ramona. 9 :45— Simonize Program (NBC). ] :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra 10:15— The Stebbius Boys (NBC). 10:30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. Tuesday, J„[ y ? 9 :00— Happy-Go-Lucky Girls. 9:15 — Italian Serenaders 9 :30— Skillet Lickers. WFBE (250m.-1200kc.) A. M.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn. 7 :15 — Radio Circus. 7:30— Classified Directory. 8:00— Radio Circus. S :15 — Mountain Vallev Greetings 8:30— Starr Freeze (E. T.) 8 :45 — Radio Circus. 9:15 — Broering Musicale. 9:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program 10:00— Brevities. 10 :05 — Bacca Coal & Iron Program 10:20-Nu-Co Painters. 10:35 — Kelvinator Program. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:59 — Simper Time. 11:00 — Acme Awning Program. 11 :15 — Radio Circus. 11 :45— Stud ebake r Champions Noon — Radio Circus. P. M.— Monday, July 6 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Salt and Peanuts. 11:00— Mills Brothers Quartet. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11 :45 — River Reports; Time Signals. Noon— Organ, Arthur Chandler, Jr. p: m.— 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1:00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Seger Ellis. 1 :40— Market Reports. 1 :45 — Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 2:15— Outstanding Speakers (NBC). 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 3 :00— Matinee Players. 4:00— Chats with Peggy Winthrop (NBC). 4:15— Jim and Walt. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4 :40 — Afternoon Revelers. 5:00— Music Treasure Box (NBC). 5:05— Bradley Kincaid. 5:15 — Mormon Tabernacle Choir. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— The Chatter. 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC). 6:45 — Baseball Scores. 6:50— Roxy's Gang (NBC). 7:30— Gold Medal Express (NBC) 8:00— Maytag Orchestra (NBC). 8:30— Real Folks (NBC). 9:00— Musical Dreams. 9:30— Packard Concert, with Anna Case and Cyrent Van Gordon I (NBC). TUESDAY July 7 WCKY(202m.— 1490 kc.) 7 :00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15— Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30-Cheerio (NBC). 8 :00 — Early morning dance program. 9:15— My^ New Kentucky Home, Jetta Crane. 9 :45 — Dance Program. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:30-Classic Hour. 11 :00— Musical Novelties. 11 :30 — Mountain Melodies. Noon — Dance Program. P. M.— 12:30— Live Stock Quotations. 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert. 1:00— Sign off. 5:45— Blue Ridge Shindiggers 5:55— Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC) 6:15— Gus Van (NBC). 6:30— Men About Town. 6:45— Dr. Scholl's Ramblers (NBC). 7:00— Glenyce Chambers, blues. 7:15 — Tri-State Entertainers, with Burger Bros., Ham and Lim. 7 :4o— Crinoline Girl, Alma Ashcraft 8:00— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. 8:30— Death Valley Days (NBC), 6: :15— Clean Up and Paint Up. :30— Fuller, Inc. :00— S tarr Freeze Afternoon Musicale. :15 — Radio Circus. :45 — The Home Finder. :00— Matinee. :30 — Radio Circus. :00— Organ Recital. :15 — Fance Frolic. 45 — Variety. 00 — Day Dreams. 30— Radio Circus. 45— Ralph and Harlan. 00— Lyric Hour. :30 — World Series Program. :00— Dinner Music. 15 — World Series Program. :45 — Berning Ford. :00— Dance Frolic. :30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. :45 — Barker News. :0^ —Luckey Boys. :15 — Dry Ridge Springs Program: :30 — Radio Circus. :45— Conev Island Dance Frolic. : 00— Variety. :15— Adam F. Meyer Coal. :30 — Mountain Valley Varieties. :45— Licking River Fiddlers. :00 — Radio Circus. :30 — Slumber Music. FLORENCE FREV BEAUTY EXPERT Every Wednesday 9:15 A. M. WLW PERMANENT WAVE $5.00 PjjlUv.1, H.™i„. _ P.|„T„, _ QukJ , FLORENCE FREY STUDIO 3! Walnul Sfn»l CH.rry 6105 Look — The following is a list of Radios we repair and service. PHILCO BRUNSWICK STROMBERC- ATWATER-KEN1 ARCADIA AUDIOLA BALKE1T BOSCH BREMER TULLY BUCKINGHAM Cl.ORlATONE COLONIAL EVEREADY FEDERAL FREED- FRESHMAN MOTORS GILF1LLAN CRAYBAR JACKSON LEUTZ CONTINENTAL WORKR1TE We will call at your home, inspect your Radio and test your tubes for 75c. WM. THREM Up-Town Radio Shop 68 East McMicken Ave. CHerry 789S RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1931. Tuesday, July 7 WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M— 6:45 — God's Bible School, Sunrise Worship. 7:45 — Popular Musical Program. 7:59 — Gruen Time. 8:00— Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 8:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8 :30— Tony's Scrap Book ( Home Furniture Co.) (CBS). 8:45 — Madam Flor-enz. 9:00—Oxol Feature (CBS). 9:15— Home Furniture Co., Melot. Parade (CBS) 9 :30— Consolidated Merchants' Pr» gram. 10:00— Queen City Rug Makers. 10:15— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 10:45 — Time and Weather. 10 :48— Woman's Hour, Tremlette TuIIy. 11:15 — Full Measure Gas. 11:30— Enric Madriguera's Cuban Or- chestra (CBS) 11:45— Drinkmor Program (CBS) Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12 :30 — Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS). 1 :15 — Art Dry Cleaning Program. I :30— Studio feature. 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio 2:15— Race Result from Latonia Ky. 2 :20— Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS) 2:30-(A. L. Fink) - T h e Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45-(A. L. Fink)— Rhythm Kings (CBS). 3:00— Italian Idyll (CBS). 3:30— Four Clubmen (CBS) 4:00— Frank Ross, Songs (CBS) 4:15— Adventures in Words (CBS) 4 : 30— Children's Quarter Hour 4:45— Sweethearts of the Air (CBS). 5:00— National Security League Broadcast (CBS). 5:15— Cincinnati Trade School Program. 5:30— Steams & Fosters' Magic Mat- tress Man. 5:45— Studio. 5 :50— Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 0:00 — Home Furniture Co., Kate Smith (CBS) 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 6:13 — Time and weather. 6 :15— Linit Program, with Dennis King (CBS). 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quartet hour (CBS). 7:00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15 — Rubel Baking Co. Program 7:30— Kaltenborn Edits the News (CBS). 7:45 — What's Happening 8:00— Henry George (CBS) 8:30— The Bristoleers (CBS) 9:00— Ben Bernie and His Blue Ribbon Orchestra (CBS). 9:15 — Boat house Liquid Coffee Program. 9:30 — Arlie Simmond's and His Or- chestra, Coney Island. 10:00— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 10:15— Studio. 10:20— Sports Review. 10:25— Happy Feet. 10:30— Bridge Lessons by Tom Col- lins Jr. 10:45— Asbury Park Casino Orchestra (CBS). 11 :00— Gruen Witching Hour. 11 :30 — Time and weather. 11:32— Art Hick's, Tacoma Park. Native born Hawaiians, the South Sea Islanders, will play F .day night (July 3) at 7 o'clock as guests of the Nestle Choco- lateers through WLW and other NBC stations. The rive Hawaiians appeared in "The Bird of Paradise" and other stage productions. They are rated among the test of Hawaiian musicians. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc) A. At.— G :00 — International Fiddlers. 6:29— Bulova Time. 6 :30 — Gym Classes, 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 7:59— Bulova Time. 8:00 — Morning Devotions. 8:15— Bradley Kincaid. 8 :30— Montgomery Ward (NBC). 8:45 — Popular Gems. 9:00— Morning Ballads. 9:15— Frances Ingram (NBC). 9 :30 — Fashionette. 9:45 — Premium Man. 10:00— Murray Norton's Orchestra. 10:30 — Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Organ and Vocal Solos. 11:00 — Island Serenaders. , 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). Tuesday, July 7 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45— River Reports; Time Signals Noon — Tuxedo Trio. P. M.— 15 — Bulova Time. 16 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. :50 — Live Stock Reports. :00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). ;30— Glenn Sisters and Ramona. 40 — Market Reports. :45 — Ralph Bennett's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. :15 — Antoinette Werner West, soprano. :30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). :45 — Edna Wallace Hopper ;00— More Truth Than Poetry :15— U. S. Navy Band (NBC). :00— Salt and Peanuts. :15 — Eumer Refik. :30 — Live Stock Reports. 40 — Organ and Vocal. :00 — Murray Horton's Orchestra. :30 — Bradley Kincaid. :45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). :00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 15— The Chatter. 30 — Southern Singers. :45 — Baseball Scores. 50 — Ramona. :00— Armstrong Quakers (NBC). :30— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. :45 — Sterling Jack. :00— Plantation Days. :15 — Icyeast Jamboree. :30— Werk Bubblef Blowers. :00 — Crimel ights. :15 — The Hottentots. :30 — Chevrolet Chronicles (e. t. ) . :00— Cotton Queen Minstrels. :30— Variety. :45 — Bob Newhall, Sports Slices. 58— Estate Weather. :00 — Los Amigos. :30 — Moon River. Midnight— Village Rhymester. A. M\— 12 :10— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 1:00— Ralph Bennett's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. Tuesday, July 7 WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— :00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 15 — C a m p b e 1 1 Soup Orchestra 45 — Records. 00— Mrs. Blake's Raido Column NBC). 10:00— Talks by Dr. Ella Opuen- heimer (NBC). 10:15— Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10:30— U. S. Army Band (NBC). 11 :00— Sign off. p. m.~ 12:50— Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop. Comm. Assn. 1 :00— Sign off. 2 :00 — Women's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 3:45— Scger Ellis. 4:00— Lady Next Door (NBC). 4:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4:45 — Records. 5:15 — Vocal Solos. 5:30 — The Gossipers (e. t.). 5 :45 — Records. 6 :30— Bradley Kincaid. 0:45 — Larry Grueter, Accordion. 7 :00— Blackstone Plantation (NBC). 7 :30 — National Dairy Virtuoso (NBC). 8:00— Nash Parade (NBC). 8:30— Fuller Brush Man (NBC). 9:00— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC). 10 .00 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 11:00— Sign Off. WEDNESDAY July 8 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A.M.— 7 :00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7 :15— Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8 :00 — Early morning dance program. 9:15 — My New Kentucky Home, 9 :45 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). Wcdneiday, July S 10:30— Classic Hour. 11 :00— Musical Novelties. 11:30— Blue Ridge Shindiggcrs. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— 1:30 — Live Stock Reports. ! :35 — Luncheon Concert. :00— Sign off. ) :45 — Kentucky Belle, i :55 — Ayers Sport Flash. i:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 1:15 Charlene and Catherine. :30— Tommy Ott. :15— Bill and Bob, the Delivery Boys. ':00 — Lawson's Hawaiians. ' :30— Christian Glee Club. 1:00— Blue Ridge Shindiggcrs. 1:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. 1 :00 — Tri-State Entertainers with Burger Bros. Hani and Liver, :30— Lucille Fox, Blues. :45 — Steve Bates, with an Oclo- phone. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M\— 7:00— Voices at Dawn. 7 :15 — Radio Circus. 7:30 — Classified Directory. 8 :00 — Shoppers' Hour. S:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30— Starr Freeze (E. T.) 8:45 — Radio Circus. 9:15 — Broering Musicale. 9:45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00— Brevities. 10:05— Bacca Coal & Iron Program. 10:20— Radio Circus. 10:35 — Kelvinator Program. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:59— Simper Time. 11:00 — Acme Awning Program. 11:15 — Radio Circus. 11:45 — Studebaker Champions (E. T.). Noon— Organ Recital. P. At.— 12 :30— Fuller, Inc. 1:00— Stahh Freeze Afternoon Musicale. 1:15 — Kroness Brothers Program. 1 :30 — The Home Finder. 1 :45 — Galvano & Cortez. 2 :00— Matinee. 2:45 — The Parents' Forum. 3:00— Dance Frolic. 3:30 — Ralph and Harlan. 3:45— Light Opera. 4:00 — Paul and Gene, "Miniature Kings of Jazz." 4:30 — Radio Circus. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:45 — World Series. 6:00 — Dinner Music. 0:15 — World Series Program. 6:45 — Berning Ford. 7 :00 — Dance Frolic. 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7:45— Nu-Co Painters. 8 :00 — Luckey Boys. 8:15— Dry Ridge Spring Program. 8 :30 — Colonial Stages- Wednesday, July 8 8:45 — Coney Island Dance Frolic. 9:00— Tile- Way Fire-Proof Home Program. 9:30 — Jewish Commercial Program. 10:30— Radio Circus. 11:15 — Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— G:45 — Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Gruen Time. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS) y :15 — Madam Flor-euz Beauty Pro- gram. 9 :30 — Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:00— Full Measure Gas. 10:15 — Time and weather. 10 :18— Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tulley. 10:45— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 1 1 :15 — What's Happening. 11 :30— Columbia Revuef (CBS). 11 :45 — Drink-Mor Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. AL— 12:30 — Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1:00— Farm Program (CBS). 1 :30 — Chicago Market Program. 1 :45 — Studio Feature. 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio 2:30 — Queen City Rug Makers. 2:15 — Race Result from Latonia, Ky. 2:45— Dancing by the Sea (CBS) 3:15— Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 3:30— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 3 :45 — Columbia Camp Concert (CBS). 4:00— Asbury Park Casino Orchestra (CBS). 4:30— A. L. Fink, Luna Park Or- chestra (CBS) 5:00— Bill Schudt's Going to Press (CBS). 5:15 — Cincinnati Trade School Program. 5 :30 — Stearns* & Foster's Magic Mattress Man. 5 :45— Studio. 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00 — Kate Smith Swanee Music Home Furniture Co. (CBS). 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 6:13— Time and weather. 6:15 — Linit Program, with Kennis King (CBS). 6 :30— Evangeline Adams "Astrol- oger" (CBS). 6:45— Came! Quarter-Hour (CBS). 7:00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7 :15 — The B a r b as o 1 Program (CBS). 7:30— Howard Barlow (CBS). 7:45 — Old Wurzburg Malt Program. 8 :00— Gold Medal Fast Freight (CBS). RADIO DIAL RENEW YOUR SUBSCRIPTION 6 months for $1-°° Pin a dollar bill or check to this coupon RADIO DIAL 22 E. 1 2th Street Cincinnati, Ohio Gentlemen: Enclosed find One Dollar ($1). Send RADIO DIAL for 6 months. [ ] New Subscriber 1 ] Renewal City State. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1931. Wednesday, July 8 8 :30— B oathouse Liquid Coffee Program. 8:45— Vincent Lopez and His Val- voliners (e. t.). 9:00— Wliat's Happening 9:15— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 9:30— Nit Wit Hour (CBS). 10:00— Will Osborne and His Or- chestra (CBS). 10:15— Gruen Answer Man. 10:25— Happy Feet. 10:30— Arlie Simmond's and His Or- chestra, Coney Island. 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports Re- view. II : 08— Hollywood Garden Orchestra (CBS). 11 :30— Nocturne ; Ann Leaf, Ben Alley (CBS). Midnight — Sign off. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6 :00— International Fiddlers, old time music. 6 :29— Bulova Time. 6:30— Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 8:00 — Morning Devotions. 8:15— Seger Ellis. 8:30 — Montgomery Ward Program. 8:45— Bulova Time. 8 :46— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC). 9:00— Mary Hale Martin (NBC). 9 :15 — Florence Frey's Workshop. 9:30— Dance Miniatures (NBC). 10:00— McCormick's Fiddlers. 10:15 — Salt and Peanuts. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40 — Organ Program, Arthur Chandler Jr. 11 :00 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals. Noon — Crosley Singers. P. M.— 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12j50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). I :30— Salt and Peanuts. 1 :40— Market Reports. 1:45 — Ralph Bennett's Orchestra, Nctherland Plaza. 2:15 — Melville Ray, tenor. 2:30— Cincinnati Zoo Concert. 3:00— Weather Forecast. 3:01 — The Matinee Players. 4:00— Chats with Peggy Winthrop (NBC). 4:15— Fiddlers. 4:30 — Live Stock Reports. 4:40— Organ and Cello. 5:00 — Afternoon Revelers. 5:30— Bradley Kincaid. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— The Chatter. 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC). 6:45 — "Believe It or Not, " Ripley (NBC). 7 :00— Baseball Scores. 7 :05— Mills Bros. Quartet. 7:15— John Ruskin Orchestra (e. t). 7:30— Jack Frost Melody Moments (NBC). 8:00— The Buddy Boys. 8 :30 — G oldman Band Concerts (NBC). 9 :30 — Canova Coffee Hour. 10:00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 10 :30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 11:00— Crosley Theatre. 11 :30 — Moon River. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. A. M.— 12 :30— H enry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. 1:00— Ralph* Bennett's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. Wednesday, July 8 10-15— Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10 :45— Records. 11:00— Sign off. P. M.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1:00— Sign off. 2 : 00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— E dna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 3 :15— Frankfurt Concert (NBC). 4:15— Sain Wilson, baritone. 4:30— Poems by Harry Holcombe. 4 :45 — Records. 5 : 00— McCormick 'Fiddlers. 5:25— Civil Service Talk. 5:30— The Gossipers (e. t.). 5 : 15 — Records. 6-15— Boscul Moments, with Madame Alda (NBC). 6 :30— Records. 6:45— Back of the News in Wash- ington (NBC). 6 :30— Records. 7:15— Mae Questel (NBC). 7:30— Mobiloil Concert (NBC). 8:00— Halsey Stuart (NBC). 8:30— Palmolive Hour (NBC). 9:30— Coca Cola Program (NBC). 10 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 11:00— Sign Off. THURSDAY July 9 WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45— Records. 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9:15— Stero Program (NBC). 9 :30— National Home Hour (NBC) 10:00— Records. WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7;00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15— Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8 :00 — Early Morning Dance. 9 :15 — My New Kentucky Home. 9 :45 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:30— Northam- Warren (NBC). 10:45— Classic Hour. 11:00 — Musical Novelties. 11:30— Blue Ridge Shindiggers. Noon — Popular Dance Tunes. P. M.— 12:30— Live Stock Quotations. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. 12:45 — Rev. Chas. A. Vandermuelen. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45 — Blue Ridge Shindiggers. 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— Tastveast Jesters (NBC). 6:30— Little Red Riding Hood. 0:45 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7 :00— D ixie Spiritual Singers (NBC). 15 — Italian Serenadcrs. 30— BIu- Green Blues. 45 — Betty May. 00— Blackstone Plantation (NBC). 30— Skillet Lickers. 00 — Earl Arnold's Orchestra. 30 — Steve Bates witha an Octo- phone. 9 :45 — Men About Town. Ann Greenway, a headliner in vaudeville, night clubs, and sound film reviews, will be Rud; Vallee's guest artist in th> Fleischmann Yeast program WSAI will broadcast Thursday night (July 9) from 7 to 8 o'clock. Vallee will dedicate the pro> gram to La Fiesta de Los An> geles, a Pacific Coast celebra- tion commemorating the one hundred fiftieth birthday of the city of Los Angeles. Miss Greenway will sing "It's Tough On Me," "At Your Command," "Why Dance?" and "Slow Waters," a song new to radio. She has been seen in the picture "Half Marriage," and "Night Parade," and now is to appear in "And How?" a new technicolor review. Thursday, July 9 00— World Series Program. 15 — Radio Circus. 15— St. Louis vs. Reds, at St. Louis. 15 — Lyric Hour. :45 — Berning Ford. 00— Dance Frolic. :30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 45— Barker News. 00— Luckey Boys. 15— Dry Ridge Springs Program. 30— Land o' Sky Program. 45— Coney Island Dance Frolic. 00— Mountain Valley Varieties. 15— Adam F. Meyer Coal Co. 30— Radio Circus. 00— Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6:45 — Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7:59— Gruen Time Signal. 8:00— Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- gram. 8:15— Full Measure Gas. 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 9 :00— What's Happening. 9:15— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 9 :45 — Barbara Gould (CBS). WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn. 7:15 — Radio Circus. 7 :30— Classified Directory. 8:00— Radio Circus. 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30— Starr Freeze Program (E. T.) 8:45 — Radio Circus. 9:15 — Broering Musicale. 9 :45 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00— Brevities. 10:05 — Bacca Coal & Iron Program. 10:20— Nu-Co Painters. 10:35— Kelvinator. 10:50— Polar Ray Health Talk. 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement. 11 :00 — Acme Awning Program. 11:15 — Radio Circus. 11:30 — Travel Bureau. 11 :45— S t udebake r Champions (E. T.). Noon — Radio Circus. P. M.— 12:30— Fuller, Inc. 1 :00 — S tarr Freeze Afternoon Musicale. 1 :15 — Radio Circus. 1 :45 — The Home Finder. 2:00— Radio Circus. 2:30— Matinee, 2:45— Ralph and Harlan. The second Columbia Camp Concert (WKRC, Wednesday, July S at 3:30 p. m.) will be called the "The Seasons" and will include instrumental and vo- cal music about the seasons of the year. Lawson's Hawaiians play dreamy Hawaiian music at WCKY on Wednesday and Sat- urday and Sunday evenings. A member is 11-year-old Loraine McClaine who plays the ukulele and sings harmony with Zelma Lawson. Prentice Lawson is chief Hawaiian. Wellston, O., will be honored Friday night (July 3, at 9 o'clock when WCKY dedicates a pro- gram to the town. The Classic Trio of WCKY will play this week on Friday, (July 3), at 9:30 p. m. to per- mit Molly Moore, soprano, to make theatrical appearances on its Wednesday night period. Works of John Wakefield Cad- man will be played and sung in eluding "Cycle of the Years" and "Cycle of Indian Songs." Music from the Lewisohn Sta- dium Concert on Thursday ( July 9) -will be broadcast by WKRC at 9 p. m. Willem Van Hoogstra- ten will conduct the New York Philharmonic orchestra. At the end of each of the Camel Quarter Hours onWKRC at G :45 p. m. the week of July G, (Monday), Morton Downey, sen- sational high-nole tenor, will whistle the choruses of "Carolina Moon." Beauty Talk Tremlette rogram 00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 30— Studio Feature. 45 — Time and weather. 48 — Woman's Hour, Tully. 11 :15 — Drinkmor Program. II :30— Queen City Rug Makers. 11:45 — Streit Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue P. M.— 12 :30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00— Columbia Farm P (CBS). 1 :30— Studio Feature. 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 2:15 — Race Result from Latonia, Ky. 2:30— A. L. Fink— The Three Doc- tors (CBS). 2 :45 — A. L. Fink — Ben and Helen (CBS). 3:00— Melodv Magic (CBS) 3:3(1— Rythm Ramblers (CBS). 4:00 — Asbury Park Casino Orches- tra (CBS). 4:45 — Children's Quarter Hour. 5:00— Frank Ross, Songs (CBS). 5 :15— C i n c i n n a t i Trade School Program. 5:30-— Will Osborne and His Orches- tra (CBS) 5 :45 — Studio. 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6 :00 — Kate Smith and her Swanec Music (CBS) Home Furni- ture Co. 0:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 6 :13 — Time and weather. 6:15 — Liuit Program, with Dennis King (CBS). 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6 :45 — Camel Quarter-Hour ( CBS ) . 7:00 — Pryor's Crenio Military Band (CBS). 7:15 — Rubel Baking Co. Program. 7 :30— Kaltenborn Edits the News (CBS). 7:45— The Old Wurtzburg Malt Pro- gram. 8 :00 — The Premier Salad Dressers (CBS). 8:15— The Boswcll Sisters (CBS). 8 :30 — Detective Story Program (CBS). 9:00 — Arlie Simmond's and His Or- chestra, Coney Island. 9:30— Fortune Builders (CBS). 9:45— Peter's Parade (CBS). 10:00— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 10:15— Studio. 10:20— Sports Review. 10:25— Happy Feet. 10:30— Art Hicks— Tacoma Park. 11:00 — Gruen Witching Hour. 11:30 — Time and weather. 11:33— Nocturne (CBS). Thursday, July 9 9:00— Ray Perkins (NBC). 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9 :30— Community Health, Dr. Carl Wilzbach. 9:45 — Housekeeper Chats. 10:00— Murray Horton Orchestra 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40 — Glenn Sisters and Rainona 11:00— The Venetian Three. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11 :30— WLW Stars. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals. Noon — Organ, Arthur Chandler, J r , P. M-— 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12 :45 — American Cynamid Program (E. T.). 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1 :00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Seger Ellis. 1 :45 — Market Reports. 1:50 — Ralph Bennett's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 2:15 — Mary Steele, contralto. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 2:45— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 3:00— Home Decorations (NBC). 3 :15 — Weather Forecast. 3:16 — Afternoon Revelers. 3:30— Maze of Melody (NBC). 4:00— Bradley Kincaid. 4:15— Gems of Melody (NBC). 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4:40 — Organ and Vocal. 5:00— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 5:15— The Ramblers. 5 :29 — Bulova Time. 5:30— Bradlev Kincaid. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 6:30— Glenn Adams, Dog Talks. f>:4.j — News Flashes from Hollywood (E.T.) 7 :00— Baseball Scores. 7:00— The Chatter. 7:15— Rin-Tin-Tin Thriller (NBC). 7 :30 — Guy Lombardo's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. 8:00— Varsity Four. 8 :15— Horseshoe Gardens Orchestra 8:30 — Castilian Nights. 9:00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, at Castle Farm. 9:30— Clara, Lou and Em (NBC). 9 :45— Glenn Sisters and Ramona. 10:00— Canada Dry Program. 10:30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 10 :58— Estate Weather Man. 11:00 — Great Composers. 11:30— Moon River. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. A. M.— 12 :30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 1:00— Ralph Bennett's Orchestra, Netherland Plaza. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A, 0:00 (J :» 0:30- 7:45 7:59- 8:00- 8:15- 8:30- 8:44- 8:45- M.— International Fiddlers. Bulova Time. 1 — Gym Classes. —A. & P. Food News (NBC). ■Bulova Time. Morning Devotions. Bradley Kincaid. -Montgomery Ward Program (NBC). Bulova Time. Popular Gems. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15— Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45 — Records. 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9 :15 — Records. 9:45 — Organ Program. 10:00— McCormick's Old Time Fiddlers. 10:15— Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10 :30— Records. 10:45— Sign oft. P. M.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— Sign off. 1:45— Dr. Scholl Reveller (NBC). 2:00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 3:45— Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4:00— Mona Motor Organ Recital. 4:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4 :45 — Records. 5:00— Travel Talk, Joseph Ries. 5:15 — Ramona. 5:30— The Gossipers (e. t.). 5 :45 — Records. 6 :25— Better Business Bureau Talk. :30— Records. 6:45— Vocal Solos. 7:00— Fleischmann Hour (NBC). 8:00— Arco Birthday Party (NBC). 8:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 9 :00— Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra (NBC). 10:00— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens. 10:15— The Stebbins Bovs (NBC). 10 :30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 11:00— Sign off. ©C1B 120563 ^X JUL -9 193! WEEKLY Marian Talley, Kansas City' operatic sensation, will desert her mid-Western wheat fa and her voluntary retirement on Monday night (July 13) long enough to sing on the Packard concert at 9:30 through WLW and "other NBC stations. Miss Talley had an audition at the Metropolitan when she was 15. It was successful and Kansas City backed her from that time on until she made her debut four years later with such acclaim as has not rung from that audience in years. Outside and inside the opera house en- thusiasm was unbounded. Be- fore she was 25, she had sung in 120 cencerts and had given 50 performances at the Metro- politan. Then a year or so ago she gave up the stage, bought herself a wheat farm, and said she was through with singing forever. R. Strauss, Negro Choir, Appear in Lewisohn Concert "Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks" by Richard Strauss, and the Hall Johnson negro choir will be heard Sunday night (July 12) at 8:30 through WKRC when the Columbia net- work broadcasts an hour of the Lewisohn Stadium concert with Willem van Hoogstraten con- ducting. The Strauss tone poem (not to be confused with the works of any of the numerous Johann (Continued on page 3) WKRC Carries Finals in Nat'l Tennis Tourney Semi-final and final matches in the National Professional Tennis Tournament will be broadcast from Forest Hills, L. I., over WKRC and the Columbia network at 3 o'clock Friday afternoon (July 11). Ted H u s i n g, Columbia sports announcer, will follow the play from a special sound- proof booth in a corner of the West Side stadium. Micro- phones placed at the net and alongside the umpire's chair will pick up all of the sounds incidental xo the toun.cy. Outstanding contenders in the list of entrants for the professional crown, are "Big Bill" Tilden, Vincent Rich- ards, Karel Kozeluh of Czecho-SIovakia, J. Emmett Pare, Robert L. Seller, Al- bert Burke, Charles M. Wood and Howard Kinsey. Explorer to Speak in Bill Schudt's Going to Press George Palmer Putnam, pub- lisher, author, editor and ex- plorer, will speak during "Bill Schudt's Going to Press" at 5 p. m. Wednesday (July 15) with WKRC the local Columbia out- let. A former newspaperman, Put- nam is an officer of the Ex- plorers Club, has been connected with many notable expeditions and has conducted explorations in the far north under the aus- pices of the American Museum of Natural History and the American Geographic Society. His wife is the former Amelia Earhardt, aviatrix. His young son, David Binney Putnam is the author of several books of his explorations with his father. Alfred Fenboque, flutist from the Cincinnati Symphony orches- tra, and John Quincy Bass, pianist, will play the College of Music program at WLW at 6:30 p.m. Sunday (July 12). Boswell Sisters The Boswell Sisters— Martha. Vet, and Connie, sing on the Co- lumbia network through WKRC on Sundays at 6:45 p, m. New Orleans-born, the Bos- well Sisters were West Coast radio stars exclusively until the Camel Pleasure Hour brought them east by fast train from San Francisco as guest trio. Thi sang their close harmony with their deep Southern drawl so successfully that they were called back again, this time to stay as Columbia staff members, It's obvious that they really are sisters. Vet is really Hel- vetia. And if you want to be New Orleans about it, Martha becomes Mahtha. Each sister has her own individual micro phone talent. Connie is re garded as the best "blues' singer and has her own pro- gram which WKRC carries at 9 p.m. on Wednesday. Martha plays all the accompaniments (Continued on page 2) H. G. Wells Will Broadcast from London Monday H. G. Wells, English au- thor, will be heard in a broad- cast from London at 3 :20 Monday afternoon (July 13) with WYRC as the local Co- lumbia outlet. His subject will be an impression of Russia in the Melting Pot. Wells made a personal tour of the Soviet Union in 1920 and later published "Russia in the Shadows." His inter- est and research in the devel- opment of Russia has con- tinued since then. In both novels and articles. WgUs has been conspicuous for his speculations as to the world of the future. Former Picture Idol Takes Radio for "Come-back" Francis X. Bushman, one time idol of the motion pictures, will be beard in the Armour program at 8 :30 every Friday night for 10 weeks beginning this week (July 10). WLW is the local NBC outlet. For 10 minutes of each broad cast, Bushman will entertain his listeners with his impressions of the stars he has known during his motion picture career. He will also talk about interesting episodes in the production of the many so-called "epic" pictures. Among these 'picture briefs" will be the story of the filming of "Ben Hur" in which he played "The Mighty Messala." It is not known whether or not he will mention his late pub- licity-drawing statement that he would welcome proposals of mar- riage from wealthy women. Bushman has been in the thea- tre for more than 30 years and has played in more than 150 stage productions and more than 100 pictures. -< Ruth E 1 1 i n g , syncopating songstress and one of the bright- est stars in the brilliant firma- ment of Ziegneld's new "Fol- lies," will sing four of her spe- cialty arrangements of new tunes as guest artist on the Chase and Sanborn program through WSAI on Sunday night (July 12) at 7 o'clock. Dave RubinofFs orchestra plays the program. The Jewish Art program on WKRC and the Columbia net- work is broadcast on Friday afternoons at 4 o'clock instead of on Sunday mornings. Dixie Dugan Series is Dramatized in Liberty Hour J. P. McEvoy's sketches, "The Adventures of Dixie Dugan," will be heard over WKRC every week as part of the Liberty Radio Hour on Friday at 8 o'clock. Other highspots include playlets, featuring Sandy, Lil and Little Ulysses ; addresses by prominent persons ; Hollywood gossip by Frederick Smith; in- troduction of a new mystery character "Vox Pop." Two St. Louis Games Will Be Aired by WFBE When the Reds clash with the St. Louis Cardinals in St. Louis on Friday, July 10, and Saturday, July 11, Harry Hartman of WFBE wil give fans a play-by-fplay account of the games. Because of the difference in time, the broad- casts will be at 4:15 p. m. Complete Radio Programs Begin on Page 4 RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1931. Weekly RADIO DIAL Published every Thursday by th< 22 East 12th St.. Cincinnati, Ohio. NATALIE GIDDINGS, Editor Radio Dial Publishing Co. Contents copyrighted. VOL. I JULY 10, 1931 No. 8 Have You Won Your Prize Today? Regardless of whether business in general has turned the now well- known corner, these certainly are boom times for the great contest industry. Anyone who hath ears and listeneth to radio can scarcely be unaware of that. In their big-hearted way. the sDonsors of heaven-knows-how-many programs are fairly showering prizes on listeners: ginger ale cars, motor boats, radio sets, books, and vacation trips among other things, not to forget mere money in cow-choking $10,000-batches. If the bull market keeps up, the sponsor who does not give away something really handsome will be black-listed as a piker. To be sure, these glittering prizes are not handed over just """.the asking. To win one, you must dash off a knockout slogan, a high- pressure letter, a smash advertisement, or guess something or other. But that is no trouble at all. The announceemnts say so quite positively. With such rich takings to be had for a few minutes of simply fun, we begin to wonder why anyone bothers to work. By comparison, investing in sweepstake tickets is the plodder's way. But why this contest stampede? Some listeners, more curious than grateful for two-handed generosity, have been asking that prying question. Just between ourselves, the answer is mail and yet more mail. To be sure, publicity crowds into the picture too. (Doesnt it always?) However, the lead role goes to mail. The one doubt that besets every sponsor is "but how many people are hearing my program?" The more letters, the more listeners, runs the accepted dictum. "Therefore," reason the broadcast promoters, "if we put on a contest that brings in ten times as many letters, this proves that we have ten times as many listeners." There is a bare possibility that something else could be said about that. Around the Dial By THE DIAL TWISTER It's a Boy! Bradley Kincaid, "the mountain boy" of WLW, is the proud father of a nine pound son who has been named William Bradley, Jr., although the Bradley and Junior are to be dropped from the name. At Christ hospital where he and his mother are spending this week (he arrived on July 1 at 4 a. m.) he is being called "Billy Boy," not so much because his name really is William but because that is one of his father's favorite songs. Billy Boy has two-year-old twin sisters waiting in College Hill to welcome him home and planning to share their beds, their little chairs, and their toys with him. They too, have radio names, Barbara and Allyne. Had there been only one little girl, she would have been called Barbara Al- len after the ballad that their father has most often been asked to sing. When two lit- tle girls arrived, however, the name had to be divided and made over a little. Tlie ancient superstition about programs slumping in summer takes it on the chin again, this time from the new Packard series (Monday at 9:30 p. m., on WLW). Geraldine Farrar's radio debut alone was enough to cause a flurry at any old season. The other solo stars are dazzling too. Not to over- look Nat Shilkret's symphony or- chestra. This dialer shares with many a ripening admiration for the versatile maestro. Hank Simmons' Showboat cele- brated its fourth air birthday last Saturday night (WKRC at 9 o'clock). In case anybody asks you, four years is advanced senility for a radio act. But there's noth- ing senile about the Showboat. It still packs them in week after week to hear that villain's "dirty laugh" among other choice mor- sels. Four years looks like just a good start. Brass bands are coming into their own sure enough. The latest proof of that is the new Nash Motors program (WSAI Tuesday at 8 p. m.). Its bright spot is Max Bendix's band, and a rattling good one. Of course, there's a historical sketch, too, if you can find your way around the "amphitheater of the air" and what not. But that band of Max's is a show by itself. Plenty of Sousa in its programs, which peeves nobody either. Yes, and that Manhattan Guards- men Band (WSAI Sunday at 2:30 p. m.) rates a listen, too, if you crave foot-lifting brasses. Harold Sanford swings the baton, and mixes in good concert numbers with snappy marches. Looks like the great band drought is about broken. Let her break, eh? Mixed choruses are making the comeback many listeners have been hoping for; as witness the Wither- spoon Singers (Sunday at 9:30 a. m. over WLW). This mighty well balanced group does the kind of program that can't be dupli- cated by any other ensemble. What's more, you're sure to find a favorite song among their selec- tions. The same Harold Sanford men- tioned a minute ago also directs the series of Gilbert and Sullivan oper- ettas that are keeping plenty of sets busy Sundays (WSAI at 4 p. m.). They don't write music or lines like those today. Besides able singing, there's enough dialogue to keep the story moving. And be- lieve it or not, the performance runs a full hour. Those Philco programs (Tues- day at 8:30 over WKRC) are keep- ng up the pace that kills boredom for lovers of real music. Howard arlow's symphony orchestra doesn't need to ask odds from any of them, and his programs are consistently high-class. Speaking of consistent, how about Phil Cook? Making 'em laugh every night (WLW at 6:30) is a man-sized chore. But Phil does it, makes you like him be- sides. Now he's got "Puffy" doing a trick giggle, just when most of us thought we were good to man- age the "O. K., Colonel." Army of voices hardly says it. The Dutch Masters feature (WKRC. Friday at 7:30 p. m.) is one you can count on for once popular songs that date back any- where from five to thirty or more years. Ever notice how those old tunes revive the days they used to be part of? The College of Music program (WCKY, Sunday at 7:30 p. m.) is one you shouldn't pass up if you're looking for something considerably above average. Both the material and its performance are satisfying. Perazzo Selects All-Grieg Music for Organ Concert Eugene Pe- razzo, one of WLW's or- ganists, will play a program of music by Edward Grieg next Friday (July 17) at 11:30 p. m. His program includes the prelude to "Olav Trygvason," Berceuse, the first Peer Gynt Suite, Heart Wounds, To Spring, and March of the Dwarfs. Perazzo is a violinist and pianist as well as an organist. Born in Italy, he later returned there to study at the Royal Con- servatory in Milan, Italy. He plays the Vix Celeste program on Friday night at 11 o'clock. Mabel Jackson, soprano, and Mary Alice Cheney, contralto, who left WLW for New York a year ago, have been engaged by the Columbia Broadcasting System to sing every Friday at 9 p.m. beginning next week (July 17), in the Pillsbury Pageant, a new program sponsored by the Pillsbury Flour Mills. WKRC will carry it. — ■ ■— They will sing in a mixed quartet under the name of The Song Birds." Toscha Seidel, violinist, known locally for his Sun- day afternoon concerts; Theo. Karle, tenor, and an orchestra directed by Sam Lanin complete the feature. : Four Centuries Adds Only Ten Years to Lives Four centuries of medical practice have added not more than 10 years to the expectancy of life of people who have reached the age of 27. That statement is by Dr. How- ard W. Haggard who talks on Devils, Drugs, and Doctors in the Kodak program through WKRC and Columbia at o'clock Sunday night. It is part of his talk for this Sunday (July 12) when he will review medical innovations throughout the centuries, taking as examples 10 kings who lived more than 400 years ago. Artistic Temper- ament? Premier Wakatsuki of Ja- pan who was scheduled to broadcast by short wave from Japan on the morning of July 4 through NBC sta- tions including WLW at the last moment canceled his mi- crophone engagement without giving a reason. Japanese music from Tokyo filled the time announced for the Pre- mier's talk. Old Maestro Back in Chicago after a tour of the Middle-West, "Old Maestro" Ben Bernie begins a new weekly series of sustaining programs over the Columbia net- work (July 5), 11:30, which WKRC will take Monday and Friday at 11 p. m. Dr. Howard W. Haggard's series of talks on "Devils, Drugs, and Doctors" (Sunday at 7 p. m. over WKRC) continues to be as informing as it is easy to listen to. The subject may be medicine. But it's far from a bitter dose. That Christian Glee Club (WCKY, Wednesday at 7:30 p. m.) is always a good bet when you're looking for close harmony. Hy Rye and Willie Winsom, wise-crack, strum guitars and ukes, and recite their comical ad- ventures in the Rubel Baking Company program on WKRC at 7:15 p. m. Tuesday and Thurs- day. Although they have been on the air for some time, they have just begun a new kind of radio act full of funny patter, instru-la new kind of "perspective" mental, music and songs. | ensemble music broadcasting. Whiteman Uses New Microphone Paul Whiteman's Paint Men (WLW Friday at 8 p. m.) use a new "parabolic directional mi- crophone" to pick up their mu- sic. The microphone is some- thing like a shallow dish with a regular microphone fastened to and facing its center. If you can understand it that way, NBC ra- dio engineers will explain to you that the parabolic directional mi- crophone functions like an auto- mobile headlight except differ- ently. With the headlight, the rays of light leave from a point. In the microphone the sounds go into the point of the so-called "howl" to be picked up. The microphone is reported to give can imitate 1 of a banjo the Boswell Sisters {Continued from page 1) and sings too. Vet is "jack-of- all-trades" and harmonizes, plays several musical instru merits, and "plunk-plunk fectly. Their first public appearances were as a trio playing piano, 'cello and violin. Connie was only 7 when she played solo 'cello with the New Orleans Philharmonic orchestra. Each sister has a hobby- Martha's the cook and her Cre- ole gumbo is famous. Vet sews, designs costumes, and tap danc- es, Connie models little figures out of soap, rock salt, butter, and even onions. She also play 6 musical glasses £ ruined her mother's best cryB' set perfecting the accompj ment. They're full Once they solved the prol once ital 'Hsh- { ideas. blem of overcrowded studios in 3*0 Francisco by drawing a diagram of trapezes and turning bars as a means of getting from one end of a room to the other over heads of musicians. They only quarrel at rehearsals. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1931, You Should Know- --Ted Husing Boys who a generation ago wanted to grow up to be cow- boys, firemen, or "cops," now have little boys of their own who want to be radio announcers. To the radio listener, the an- nouncer seems a cross between the drum major of a college band, a matinee idol, and the kind of a fellow who gets passes to every show from the circus to Broadway successes. In reality, a radio announcer who really is something beside a voice that reads what someone else writes, is a hard-working individual who does about three times as much work as a man in an office. Take Ted Husing of the Co- lumbia Broadcasting System, for Instance. Husing is said to be possessed of more nervous energy than any other radio announcer. He hasn't an ounce of fat on his wiry frame and yet during a football broad- cast he sheds as much as five to seven pounds. He never stops going, never seems fatigued. He spent the entire night and part of the next morning before the Taft funeral broadcast in the morgue of a Washington newspaper, gathering data that he considered absolutely essential for ( the job ahead of him. Then he went out and talked almost steadily for three hours during Columbia's report of that moving event. Last summer he finished three play-by-play broadcasts of the international polo matches and the finals of the men's singles tennis tournament just in time to catch a train to Newport for the broadcasts of the America's Cup Races. Most of the next six days he spent, on his feet, on the bridge of the Coast Guard Cut- ter "Champlain." Most of the nights he was tutored by Herbert Stone, a yachting expert, in the mysteries and intricacies of yacht racing. He returned to New York after that gruelling schedule, thin and drawn, but full of enthusiasm and eagerness to begin preparations for the im- pending World Series and the 1930 football season. He is a tyrant with his en- gineers, an intolerant martinet with his assistants and co-work- ers, but they would all cut off an arm for him, they say. That is the measure of Ted Husing. Ted was born Edward Britt Husing 29 years ago in a town just nicely inside the border of the United States — Deming, N. M., but he moved with his family to Gloversville, N. Y., where the Erie Canal and its banks supplied the background for his early ath- letic activity. He threw himself, as he does now, into the thick of everything, and was the natural leader of his own gang of kids. When his family moved to New York, Ted entered Stuy- vesant High, where he went in for basket ball, football, base- ball and boxing. The war inter- rupted what vague plans he had for college. Ted added a few years to his right age, and al- though he never saw the West- ern Front, he did manage to get near France as Governor's Island where he was a physical instructor in the training camp. The end of the war found Ted restless and without plans for the future. The comparatively dull routine of college did not hold any appeal and the next few years he spent playing profes- sional sports in the fall and win- ter and roaming the country dur- ing the summer months, hitch hiking or riding the rails. Between then and the time he was picked from 609 other ap- plicants as an announcer at WJZ, he had only about two permanent iobs. Selling wicker furniture held his interest for a month or two, and the only other job was as a runner with a Wall Street firm. That lasted for two weeks at $12 dollars a week. The sec- ond week he was there, Jess Wil- lard met Jack Dempsey for the heavyweight championship of the world. Ted bet the head of his firm a week's salary that the Manassa Mauler would knock out the hulking cowboy, Willard, in the fourth round of the fight. The employer gave him odds of 10 to 1, and Ted quit his job with $120. With his immense energy and concentration Husing learns all there is to know about any job that interests him. Announcing interested him from the start and it still does. Within six months after entering radio he was intro- ducing the President of the United-States to 50,000,000 peo- ple. Two weeks before the In- ternational Matches at Meadow- brook last summer he had never seen a polo match. He spent every free afternoon watching practice sessions, spent nights in the public library studying, and later was able to astonish Her- bert Reed, who worked with him during the International Matches, with his sound knowledge of the game. Ted Husing is as much a part of Broadway as Times Square. He wears the most astonishing clothes, including a blue tuxedo — clothes that would make a ma- tinee idol look shoddy. If nec- essary, he can talk at the rate of 300 words a minute. Mme. Valia Valentinova one of the featured artists • "Around the Samovar," a G lumbia program that WKRC has booked for 8 o'clock Sunda> night (July 12.) Mme. Valen- tinova, former prima donna of the Petrograd Grand Opera Company, escaped from Russia disguised in an old suit of h father's. Our Dialy Doxen By DON BECKER Ramona Ramona of the deep blue voice and the syncopating fingers will sing "Make Yourself at Home and "Without That Man" with the King Edward Cigar Band at WLW next Saturday night (July 18) at 9 o'clock. When asked how his Bavarian Peasant Band developed its unique style, Karl Weiss, who leads this group in the NBC studios, replied that they had "trained on good German beer." Jean Paul King, NBC Chicago mike-man, always manages to get into the studio for the Clara. Lou and Em skit several min- utes early to go through a piano duet with the staff pianist before the program goes on the air. The Boswell Sisters, Connie, Vet, and Martha, will sing the following songs in their broad- cast Sunday (July 12) at 6:45 p. m. on the Columbia network and WKRC: Singin' River; What'd Ya Do to Me ; Parade of the Blues ; Without that Man. Arlington Gup Race is Moved to Sat., July 18 The Arlington Cup Race, which was scheduled to be run this Saturday (July 11) has been postponed one week. The race is definitely sched- uled for Saturday, July 18, and will be described over the Columbia network and WKRC at 4 :30 p. m. on that day. All aspects of this Chicago turf classic will be presented over microphones placed at vantage points atop the roof of the grandstand, in the pad- dock and at the side of the track at Arlington Park. Pat Flanagan, WBBM, sports an- nouncer, will be assisted by several leading turf experts in presenting a word-picture of the race and the ceremonies incidental to it. Either WLW or WSAI probably will carry the National Broadcasting Company's account of the running. Senator Needs Two Radio Sets to Stay Within Law U. S. Senator Arthur Capper of Kansas requires two radio re- ceiving sets to keep within the law. He keeps one in his office and one at home. The necessity re- vealed itself when he was hurry- ing home from his office at the nation's capitol. Anxious to hear the six o'clock Amos 'n' Andy program, the Senator's foot became a little too heavy on the accelerator. One of Wash- ington's efficient officers stopped Senator Capper, and addressed him with the usual "What's the big idea?" "Hurrying home to hear Amos 'n' Andy," the Senator replied. Convinced that this was a new alibi, the officer released the Sen- ator, who promptly, in his desire to obey the traffic laws, ordered a receiver installed in his office so he can now hear the broadcast of his favorite program without "speeding" home when official business keeps him until late afternoon. Salt— of the "PEANUTS" vari- ety — and I went a-golfing the other day. We're both consistent golfers. Consistently Lousey. However, through some incon- ceivable impulse, probably due to the adversity of inanimate objects, Salt's ball wended its way to the hole soon enough for him to chalk up a "BIRDIE" (pronounced "one under par"). "WHEE!" yelled Salt. " — That's the first Birdie I've had since I played the Paramount in Brooklyn." George Lloyd of WLW is suf- fering from severe wounds, in- flicted by blunt instruments. Cause: He actually told this: "They had to put Stribling in packed ice the other night — to keep him from SCHMELLING!" A poor old musician (ha! ha! ha!) walked into WCKY the other evening and said to Jerry Akers: "Would you please give me fifty cents to help bury a poor ukulele player?" Jerry pondered. Then he spoke! "Here my good man. Here's a dollar. GO BURY TWO UKU- LELE PLAYERS!" WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT ROBERT BURDETTE AND MURRAY HORTON WKRC will carry a Lewisohn concert July 10 at 9 p. m. Wdlem von Hoogstraten if conducting the Lewisohn Sta> dium concerts the coming three weeks with WKRC taking the music on Sunday nights at 8:30 rom the Columbia Broadcasting System. The orchestra is the New York Philharmonic except for two or three new members. Fritz Reiner will conduct the or- chestra for two weeks beginning the week of July 26. Richard Strauss (Continued from page 1) ["Blue Danube"] Strauss fam- ily) tells the story of "Till Owl- glass," a traditional bad boy in medieval German folk lore. Witty and audacious he is the darling of the people but his rogueries are their despair. The music depicts him riding through the market place, scattering mer- chandise to the four winds ; dis- guised as a monk ; making love to the village belles; and taunt- ing a group of professors. He goes from bad to worse until he is hailed before a court and is sentenced to death with every detail of the trail plainly under- standable in the music. The Hall Johnson choir, a group that strives at preserving the emotional content of tradi- tional negro tunes rather than nolished musical perfection will sing "Dis Ole Hammer Killed John Henry," "Water Boy," "Eastman," and "St. James In- firmary Blues." Many questions come to this department asking if Bob Burdette and Murray Horton are married. We don't know, but they've been going around together long enough. People are talking. Murray Horton, commonly called the "WALRUS OF JAZZ," has a wonderful band— AFTER ALL. After all the other bands. Favorite expressions of Murray Horton: Leave that part out, it's too hard." "Lend me ten dollars." Robert Burdette has several eccentricities. He will not go on the air unless he has a microphone in the studio. Mr. Burdette is very seldom ab- sent from the studio. Only once during four years was he away for an entire week. He tried his own exercises one morning! Favorite sports of Mr. Burdette: Blowing up rubber frogs and caring little girls. Sucking lollypops, which listen- ers send him. Next week: EAST LYNNE. Speaking of questions, we've one on our desk right now asking the "Politics" of Amos n'Andy. We won't say for sure, but we'll wager they'll both be candidates for the next "Pepsodential election." Dialaughingly yours, DON BECKER. The "rumba" craze is gently laughed at in a new song written by Muriel Pollock and Peter Dixon. The title is "Play An- otha' Rumba Numba' "and tells of the yen of a roving sailor for a Cuban melody. Miss Pollock is the author of a number of popular melodies. Dixon, who writes "Raising Junior" tor NBC, tries lyric writing from time to time. Charles ("Broadway Melody") King is master of ceremonies of Club Valspar (WSAI at 8 30 Saturday nights.) Watch the pro- gram for guest stars from stage and screen. RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1931. Here Are Only Complete Programs FRIDAY July 10 WCKY (202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— The Crooning Guitarist. 7 :15— Morning Devotions (NBC) 7:30— Cheerio (NBC) 8:00— Early Morning Dance. 9 : I5 — My New Kentucky Home, 9:45 — Dance Melodies 10:30— Classic Hour 11:00— Musical Novelties 11 :30— Mountain Melodies Noon — Popular Dance Tunes 12 :30— Norris Brock Live Stock Reports 12:35 — Luncheon Concert P. M.— 1 :00— Sign off 5:45 — Blue Ridge Shindiggers 5 :55 — Avers News Sport Flash 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC) 6:15 — Eilcrman's Serenaders 6:45 — Charlenc and Kathlcnc. 7 :00 — Italian Serenaders. 7:15 — Mountain Red. 7:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House 8 :00— Interwoven Pair (NBC) 8:30— Duke, His Ukc and His Sis- ters. 8 :45— Kentucky Belle. 9 :00 — Beachcombers. f):15_Wa!ly. the Radio Clown. 9:30 — Molly Moore, Maurice Thomp- son and Tommy Ott. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn 7:30 — Classified Directory 8:00 — Shopper's Hour 8:15 — Mountain Vallev Greetings 8:30— Starr Freeze (E. T.) 8 :45— Variety 9 :15 — Brocring Musicale 9 :45 — Klceman Furniture Program 10:05 — Bacca Coal & Iron Program 10:20 — Morning Musicale 10:35 — Kelvinator ProgTam 10 :50 — Mrs. Evans' Questions and Answers 10 :59 — Simper Time Announcement 11:00 — Acme Awning Program 11 :I5— Down South 11:45 — Studcbaker Champions (E. T.) P. M.— 12:01— Serenade 12:45 — Bellonby Luncheon Musicale 1 :00 — S tarr Freeze Afternoon Melodies 1 :15 — Kroness Brothers 1 :30— Vaudeville 1 :45 — Matinee Musicale 2:15— Vaudeville 2 :30— Ralph and Harlan 2:45 — "The Parents' Forum" 3:00— Dav Dreams 3:30— Vocal Varieties 3:45— World Series Contest 4 :15 — R eds vs. St. Louis at St. Louis 6:15— Lyric Hour 6 :45 — Travelogue 7:00— The Post Question Box 7:15 — Dinner Dance Music 7:30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Review 7:45 — Nu-co Painters 8:00— Luckev Bovs 8:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints 8:30 — Colonial Stages Program 8:45 — Coney Island Dance Frolic 9:00 — Wrestling Matches at Music Hall 11 :00 — Mountain Valley Varieties 11 :1"' — Slumber Music WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6:45 — God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7:59 — Gruen Time Signal 8:00— Starr-Freeze Melodies 8:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Sweetheart s of the Air (CBS) 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS) 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS 9:15 — Studio Feature. Friday. July 10 Pro- 9:30— Consolidated Merchants' gram ]0:00— Rhythem Kings (CBS). i;j_Floraline Talk jr) — Rythm Kings (CBS). 30 — Charles W. Reaume Studio. 11:00— Time and Weather. 11 :03— Woman's H o u r — Tremlctte Tully 11:30— What's Happening. 11 :45 — Drinkmor Program. Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue P. M.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pre gram 1 : 00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS) 1 : 15 — Art Dry Cleaning Program 1 :30— Studio Feature. 1 :45 — Full Measure Gas 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 2 :15— Race Result from Latonia, Ky. 2:20— Studio Feature. 2:45 — Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- gram 3:00— Organ Recital. 4:00— Jewish Art Program (CBS). 4 :15 — Children's Quarter Hour. 4:30— A. L. Fink Program 5 :00 — Earl Carpenters Orchestra (CBS). 5:15 — Cincinnati Trade School 5:30— Brooks and Ross (CBS). 5:45— Studio 5:50 — Eureka Baseball Scores 5 :55 — Sports Review 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast 6:00— Kate Smith and Her Swanee Music (CBS). — Home Furni- ture Company. 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree 6 :13 — Time and weather 6:15 — Linit Program, with Dennis King (CBS) 6 :30 — Red Goose Adventures (CBS) 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS) 7 :15— Barbasol Program (CBS) 7:30— Dutch Masters (CBS) 8 :00 — Liberty Magazine Hour (CBS). 8:45— Pyol Blackberry Dudes 9 :00 — Lewishohn Starium Concert (CBS). 9:30— What's Happening. 9:45— Poet's Gold (CBS). 10:00 — Confessions of a Racketeer (E. T.) 10:15 — Gruen Answer Man 10 :25— Happy Feet 10 :30 — Arlie Simmonds Orchestra Conev Island. 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports 11:08— Ben Bernie and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11:30 — Nocturne — Ann Leaf, Ben Alley (CBS) WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6 :00 — International Fiddlers 6:30— Gvm Classes 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 8:00— Morning Devotions 8:15—. Jim and Walt. 8:30 — Montgomery Ward Program (NBC) 8:45— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC) 9:00— Rav Perkins (NBC) 9:15— "The Hostess," Mrs. Lutye Sohngen 9:30— Book News 9 :45 — Premium Man 10:00 — Island Serenaders 10:30— Live Stock Reports 10:40— Scger Ellis. 11 ;00 — Organ with Instrumentalist 11:15— Swift Program (NBC) H;30_\VLW Stars 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals Noon — Tuxedo Fiddlers P. M.— 12 :15— Bulova Time 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:50— Live Stock Reports 1 ;00 — National Farm and Home (NBC) 1 : 30— Jim and Walt. 1 :40— Market Reports 1 : 45 — Netherland Plaza Orchestra 2:15 — National Garden Bureau. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC) 3:00— Harriet Wellen. vocal solos. 3:15— Radio Guild (NBC) 4:lo — Ramona. 4:20— Ramona 4:30— Raymond Mitchem; Mills Brothers 5:00 — Words and Music "And look, Joan, we'll make a million dollars!" So speaks Kenneth Lee, but his wife, Joan, is more con- cerned with her baby, asleep in the next room. The Lee's do- estic problems and the adven- ires which always are the se- quel to Ken's wonderful schemes are heard every Tuesday and Friday at 5 p. m. in Raising Junior." No local NBC station arries it. Hear the serial from WJZ (760 kc. 394.5 m.) In real life. Ken and Joan Lee are Peter and Aline Dixon. Friday, July 10 5:30— Seger Ellis. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) 6:15— Madame Alda (NBC) 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC) 6:45— The Chatter. 7 :00— Baseball Scores 7 :05 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona 7:15— Elliott Brock and His Mili- tary Band. 7:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 7:45 — Sterling Jack 8:00— "In Romany" 8:15 — Icyeast Jamboree 8:30— Hoosier Editor 8:45— Armour Program (NBC) 9:00— Paul Whiteman's Paint Men 9:30— Clara, Lu and Em (NBC) 9:45— Wilderson's Wildcats 10 :00— Encores. 10 :30— Variety 10:45— Bob Newhall Sport Slices 11:00— Vox Celeste 11 :30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm (NBC-Blue) Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra A. M.— 12 :30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 1 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M— 8:00 — Gene and Glenn, the Quaker Early Bird (NBC) 8:15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC) 8 :4 5— Records 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9 :15— Records 9 :30— National Home Hour (NBC) :45— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 10:00 — Hawaiian Serenaders (NBC) 10 :30— Realities of Romance (NBC) 11 :00— The Hellman Troubadors (NBC). 11:15— Sign Off. Friday, July 10 P. M.— 12 :50 — Livestock Reports 1:00— Sign Off 2:00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC) 3 ;00— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC) 3:15 — Records 3:45 — Ramona 4 :00— Records 4 :30— Moore Paint Program (NBC) 4 :45 — Records 5;00 — Poems by Harry Holcombc 5:15— Don Becker, Ukelele. 5:30— The Gossipers (E. T.) 5 :45 — Records. 6:30— Alice Richards 6 :45— Records 7:00— Cities Service Concert (NBC) 8 :00— Clicquot Club (NBC) 8:30— Pond's Dance (NBC) 9:00— Kodak Week End (NBC) 9:30— RKO Theater of the Air (NBC) 10 :00 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC) 10:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 11:00— Sign Off. SATURDAY July 11 WCKY (202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15— Morning Devotion (NBC) 7:30— Cheerio (NBC) 8:00 — Early Morning Dance, 9:15 — My New Kentucky Home, 9 :45— Kentucky Belle's Kiddie Club 10 :30— Classic Hour 11 :00— Musical Novelties 11:30 — Mountain Melodies 12 :00 — Popular Dance Melodies P. M.— 12 :30 — Norris Brock live stock quo- tations 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert 1 P. M.— SIGN OFF 5 :45— Blue Ridge Shindiggers 5 :55 — Ayers Sport Flash 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) 6:15— Tastycast Jesters (NBC) 6:30 — Lucille Fox. 6:45 — Italian Serenaders. 7:00— Rudy Vallce (NBC) 7 :30 — Medley Five. 8:00— "Skillet Lickers" 8:30 — Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. 9:00— Cuckoo Club (NBC) 9:30 — Lawson's Hawaiians. RADIO TUBE SPECIALISTS WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00 — Voices at Dawn 7:30— Classified Directory 8 :00 — Shopper's Hour 8 :15 — Mountain Valley Varieties 8:30— Starr Freeze Program (E.T.) 8:45 — To be announced 9 :00 — Home Heating Program 9 :15 — Variety 9 :45 — Klceman Home Chats Saturday, July \\ 10 :00— Brevities 10:20— Nu-Co Painters 10 :35 — Kelvinator Program 10:50— Interlude 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement 11:00 — Acme Awning Special 11:15 — The Islanders 11:30— Variety 11:45 — Studebaker Champions (E. T.) 12 :00— Serenade P. M.— 12:45 — Bellonby Luncheon Musicale 1:00 — Starr Freeze Afternoon Melodies 1:15 — Matinee Musicale 2:15— Ralph and Harlan 2:30— Dance Frolic 3:00— Organ Recital 3:30— Novelty Notes 3 ;45— Catholic Telegraph 4:00 — Tea Time Tunes 5:00 — Lyric Hour 5 :30— World Series Contest 6 :00— Musical Interlude 6:15— World Series Contest 6 :45 — Berning Ford Travelogue 7:00— The Post Question Box 7:15 — Dinner Dance Music 7:30— Harry Hartman's Spor( Review 7:45 — Barker's News Notes S :00— Luckey Boys 8:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints 8:30 — Land o' Sky Gypsies 8:45 — Coney Island Dance Frolic 9:00— The Islanders 9:15— Meyer's Hot Tunes 9 :30— Mountain Valley Varieties 9 :45 — Slumber Music WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 0:45— God's Bible School— Sunrise Worship 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7:59 — Gruen Time Signal 8:00— Madam Flor-enz 8:15 — What's Happening 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS) 8:45 — Full Measure Gas 9 ;00— Charles W. Reaume Studio 9 :30— Consolidated Merchants Pro- gam 10 :00— Adventures of Helen and Mary (CBS). 10:15— Time; Weather 10 :20— Woman's Hour — Tremlctte Tully 10:45— Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 11 :00— Don Bigelow and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11:30— Hotel Taft Orchestra (CBS). Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue P. M-— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants Pro- (CBS) 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 2:15— Race Result from Latonia, Ky. 2:20 — Studio Feature. 2:30— A. L. Fink Song Recital, Louie Johnson, tenor 3 :00— National Professional Tennis Tournament (CBS). 4:00— Luna Park Orchestra (CBS) 4:30— Children's Quarter Hour. 4:45 — Jack Mueller, piano (CBS) Open Evenings — PArkway 6415 RADIO REPAIRING— ANY MAKE IF YOU NEED MONEY For taxes, insurance, repairs, old bills or any other purposes, we have a Household-Loan Plan whereby you can borrow what you need and repay it in small monthly amounts arranged conveniently for you. You have a year or more in which to repay it. Open 8:30 to 5:00 The Central Acceptance Corporation 26 East Sixth St., between Vine and Walnut Cincinnati, Ohio. PArkway 6280. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, IULY 10, 1931. >f Greater Cincinnati Radio Stations Saturday, July 11 5 :00 — Don Bigelow Orchestra (CBS). 5 :15 — Cincinnati Trade School 5:30— Don Bigclow's Orchestra (CBS) 5:45— Studio 5:50 — Eureka Baseball Scores 5:55 — Sports Review 5:59— Burke Weather Forecast 6:00— St. Montr Orchestra (CBS) Home Furniture Co. 6:15— Studio 6:25 — Stocks, Cohle and Tyrcc 6:28— Time and weather 6:30— Pyol Blackberry Dudes 6:45— Camel Quarter Hour (CBS) 7:00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS) 7:15— What's Happening 7 :25— Happy Feet 7:30 — Junior Chamber of Commerce 8:00— Hernandez Brothers (CBS) 8:15 — Studio Feature. 8:30 — Tacoma Park Orchestra, 9 :00 — Hank Simmons' Show Boat (CBS) 9:45 — Studio Feature 10:00 — Arlie Simmond's Orchestra, Coney Island 10:30— To Be Announced 10:46— Will Osborne and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports 11:08 — Guv Lombardo and His Or- chestra (CBS) 11:30 — Nocturne — Ann Leaf, Ben Alley (CBS) WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6:00 — International Fiddlers. — Bulova Time. 6:30— Gym Classes. 7:45— A'. & P. Food News (NBC) 8:00 — Morning Devotions 8:15— Jim and Walt. 8 :30 — Montgomery Ward Program (NBC) 8:45— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC). 9:00— Dance Miniatures (NBC) 9:30— Art Talks, Cherry Greve 9:45— WLW Mail Bag 10:00— Organ and Vocal. 10 :80— Livestock Reports. 10:40— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 11:00— Elliot Brock, violin. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC) 11:30— Livestock Reports. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals Noon — Governmental Glimpses, At- torney General Gilbert Bcttman P. M.— 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:45 — National Farm and Home Period (NBC). 1 :45— Ncthcrland Plaza Orchestra. 2:16— Jim and Walt. 2 :30 — Cincinnati Zoo Symphony Con- certs. 3:00 — Ramona and Don Becker 3:15— Pacific Feature Hour (NBC) 4:00— Maze of Melody (NBC). 4 :30— Crosley Dealers' Hour 5:00 — Seckatory Hawkins. 5:30— Doctors of Melody 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos W Andv (NBC) 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC) 6:30— The Chatter. 6:45 — Los Ramos Baseball Scores. 6:50— Scger Ellis. 7:00— Croslev Theater 7:30— R. F. D. Hour 8:00— Croslev Saturday Knights. 8:30— Domit\o Orchestra (NBC) 9:00— King Edward Cigar Band. 9:30— Clara. Lu and Em (NBC) 9 :45 — Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 10:00-Club Sohio 10:30— Variety 10:15— Bob Newhall Sport Slices 11:00 — The Sinciin; Violin 11:30— Doodlesockers. (Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 13 :30— Castle Farm Orchestra. 1 :00— Ncthcrland Plaza Orchestra. 1 :30 — H e n r y Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M«— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC) 8:15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC) 8:45 — Records Here is Geraldine Farrar as she looked a week ago when sh< made her radio debut on the Packard program (WLW at 9:30 p.m. Monday). Todays Farrar has bright eyes and the pretti- ness of the young girl who 30 years ago made her debut at the Royal Opera House in Berlin. After her broadcast, she closed her Park Avenue apartment and went to her Ridgefield, Connecti- ut farm home where she and her 70-year-old father spend their summers with their many pets — dogs, birds and chickens. Saturday, July 1 1 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9:15— Hits and Bits (NBC). 10:15 — McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 10:30— Keys to Happiness (NBC) 11 :00— Records 11:30 — Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop. Comm. Assn. 11:45— Records Noon— Sign off P. M.— 3:00— Classic Gems (NBC) 3 :30— Records 3 :45 — Crosley Dealers Salute 4 :00— Records 5 :00 — Southern Singers & Mitchem 5:30— The Gossipers (E. T.) 5 :45— B lack and Gold Orchestra (NBC) 6:00— Records 0:45— Mrs. Bones & Co. (NBC). 7 :00— Records 7:15 — Bavarian Peasant Band (NBC) 7:30— The Silver Flute (NBC) 8:00— General Electric Hour (NBC) 8:30— Club Valspar (NBC) 9:00— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC) 10 :00— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 10 :30— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 11:00— Sign off Sunday, July 12 P. M.— 12:15— Skillet Lickers. 12:45— Men About Town. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45 — Lucille Fox, Blues. 6 :00 — Lawson's Hawiians 0:30 — Maurice Thompson, Baritone. (i :45 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7 : 00— Columbia Recording Skillet Lickers. 7:30— College of Music. 8:00 — The Italian Serenaders. 8 :30— Mountain Red. 8:45— Willard Robison and His Deep River Orchestra (NBC) 9:15— Floyd Gibbons (NBC). 9:30 — Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. SUNDAY July 12 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. AL- IO .no— Nomads (NBC). 10:30— Jewels of Destiny (NBC). 11:00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 11 :15— Echoes of the Orient (NBC). 11 ;30— Charlene and Kathleen, Ladies • of Melody. 11:45 — Waikiki Beach Combers. Noon— Jack Moore. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc. A. M.— 8:00— Voices at Dawn. 9:00 — Morning Concert. 9:15— Invitation to the Waltz. 9:45 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 10:00— Kelvinator Program. 10:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints, 10:30 — Echoes from Germany. 10:45 — Berning Ford Travelogue. 11:00 — Morning Musicale. 11:30 — Excerpts from the Opera. 11:45— Tile Way Fire-Proof Home Program. P. M.— [2:15 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 12:30— Galvano & Cortez. 12:45 — Organ Recital. 1 :00 — To be announced. 2 :00 — S tarr Freeze A f ternoon Melodies. 2:15 — Matinee. 2 :30 — Hawaiian Bluebirds. 2:45— Harlan and Ralph. 3:00 — Afternoon Musicale. 4 :00— Vocal Varieties. .( ;10— Post. 4 :30 — Sundown Serenadcr. 4 :45 — Symphony Hour. 5 :45 — Tea Time Tunes. 6:15 — Musical Interlude. 6:30 — Church Federation Hour. 7:00— The Post Question Box. Sunday, July 12 7:1-5 — Dinner Dance Music. 7 :30 — Harrv Hartman's Sport Review. 8:00— Dance Frolic. 8:30— The Orioles. 8:45— Twilight Reveries. 9:00— Scotland Yard. 10:15— Mountain Valley Varieties. 10:30— Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. m.— fi :45-7 : 45— God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship. 9:00— God's Bible School. 10:00— Watchtower Program (e. t.) 10:15— Jim Lightficld— Veteran's Civic Hour. Noon — American Legion Program. P. M.— 1 :00 — Jewish Community Program. 1:30— Gypsy Trail (CBS). 2:00— Grueii Old-Fashioned Garden. 3 : 00— Cathedral Hour (CBS) 4:00— French Trio (CBS). 4:15— Pastorale (CBS). 4:45— Thco Karle (CBS). 5:00— Chicago Knights (CBS). 5:30— Twilight Reveries. 5 :58— Burke Weather Forecast. (1:00— The World's Business (CBS). 6:15— Studio. 6:20— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6:25 — Sports Review. 6:30— Daddv and Rollo (CBS). 6:45— The Boswell Sisters (CBS). 6 :58— Time and weather. 7:00 — Devils, Drugs and Doctors (CBS). 7 : 15— Kate Smith, Swanee Music CBS). 7:30— Tony Parent! and His Singing Saxophone (CBS). 7:45 — Studio Feature. 8:00— Around the Samovar (CBS) 8:30 — Lewisohn Stadium Concert (CBS). 9:00 — Tacoma Dance Orchestra. 9 :30— Fortune Builders (CBS). 9:45— Star Reveries (CBS). 10:00 — Arlie Simmond's Orchestra at Coney Island 10:30— Chic Variety Program (CBS) 11:00— Time and weather. 11:03— Sports Review. 11 :07— Chic Variety Program (CBS). II :30— Artists Invitation Program. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 8:59— Bulova Time. 9 :00 — Church Forum. 9 : 30— Fiddlers Three (NBC). 9:45— Pollack and Lawnhurst (NBC). 10:00— Bulova Time. 10:05— Organ, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 10:25— River Reports. 10:29— Bulova Time. 10:30— Rochester Concert Orchestra (NBC). II : 30— Metropolitan Echoes (NBC) Noon — Midday Jewels. P. M.— 12:29— Bulova Time. 12:30— Music of the Ages (NBC). 1 :30— Yeast Foamers (NBC). 2:00— Crosley Theater. 2:30— Henry Thies' Orchestra. 3:00 — Ravinia Opera Concerts (NBC). Sunday, July 12 :00— Sabbath Reveries (NBC). :00— The Roamios. :30— Plantation Days. :00— The Chatter. :30— College of Music Concert (NBC). :55 — Baseball Scores. : 00— Enna Jcttick Mclodics(NBC). : 16— Blow the Man Down (NBC). :30— Harbor Lights (NBC). : 00 — Heel Hugger Harmonies (NBC). :15— Bayuk Stag Party (NBC). : 40 — Ncthcrland Plaza Orchestra. :15— Variety. :30— Kellogg Slumber Music ( NBC) . :00 — Crosley Concert. : 45 — Murray Horton's Orchestra at Horseshoe Gardens. :00— Henry Thies and His WLW Orchestra (to NBC "Blue" Network). :30— Moon River. idnight— Henry Busse's Orchestra, at Castle Farm. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) P. M.— 2:00 — Scrmonette and Hymn Time. 2:30— Balkan Mountain Men (NBC) 3:00 — National Sunday Forum (NBC). 4:00— Gilbert & Sullivan Gems (NBC). 5:00— Catholic Services (NBC). 6:00— Gav Vienna (NBC). 6:30— RCA Victor (NBC). 7:00— Chase and Sanborn (NBC). 8:00— "Our Government," David Lawrence (NBC). 8:15— Atwater Kent (NBC). 8:45— Iodcnt Big Brother (NBC). 9 :15— G oldman Band Concert (NBC). MONDAY July 13 WCKY(202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15 — Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Mountain Red. 8:15 — Early morning dance program. 9 :16— My New Kentucky Home, Jetta Crane. 9 :45 — Dance Records. 10 :30— Classic Hour. 11:00— Musical Novelties. 11:30— Skillet Lickers. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— 12:30— Norris Brock Live Stock. 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45 — Mountain Red. 5 :55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). G :30— Kentucky Belle. 6:45— Steve Bates. 7 :00— Columbia Recording "Skillet Lickers." 7 :S0 — Charlene and Catherine. 7 :45 — Beach Combers. 8:00— Wally, the Radio Clown. KEEP COOL ELECTRIC FANS Enjoy Your Radio R. C. A. LICENSED TUBES 39c ONE WEEK ONLY FOLLOWING TYPES Inductive type. No interference when placed on radio CHECKER STORE °5£k N T A * T R A c E co - 201-A 226 227 224 280 171 112 245 6 RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1931. Monday, July 13 R:15— "The Man Who Could Not Die," mystery thriller. 8 :45— Male Quartette. 9:00— Stromberg Carlson (NBC). 0:30— Blue Ridge Shindiggcrs. 0:45 — Italian Serenaders. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. At.— 7:00 — Voices at Dawn. 7:30— Classified Directory. 8:00— Shopper's Hour. 8:15— Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30— Starr Freeze Program (E.T.) 8:45 — Morning Melodies. 9:00— Hyde Park Community Pro- gram. 9 :15 — Sunshine Special. 9 : 45_ Klecman Furniture Program. 10:00— Brevities. 10 :05— Home Heating Program. 10 :20— Variety. 10:35— Kclvinator Program. 10 :50— Mrs. Evans' Questions and Answers. 10:59 — Simper Time. 11:00— Acme Awning Special. 11:15 — Morning Musicale. 11 :45— Studcbaker Champions (E. T.). Noon — Serenade. P. M.- 12:15— Song Hit Time. 12 :45 — Ecllonby Luncheon Musicale. 1 :00— S tarr Freeze Afternoon Melodies. 1:15 — Kroness Brothers. 1 :30— Down South. 2:00— The Islanders. 2:15— Voca IVaricties. 2 :30 — Matinee Musicale. 2 :45 — Novelty Notes. 3:00— Novelty Notes. 3:15 — Memory Lane. 3 : 15 — Dance Frolic. 4:15— Organ Recital. 4:45 — Ralph and Harlan. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30— World Series Contest. (i;00— Musical Interlude. 6:15— World Series Contest. 6:45— Berning Ford Travelogue. 7 : 00— Post Question Box. 7:15 — Dinner Dance Music. 7 ;30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7 :45— Nu-Co Painters. 8:00— Luckcy Boys. 8:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints. 8 :80— Land o' Sky Gypsies. 8:45— Coney Island Dance Frolic. 9:00— Boxing Bouts at Red land Field. 10:30— Mountain Valley Varieties 10:45— Slumber Music. WKRG {545 m.— 550 kc.) A.M.— 6 :45— God's Bible School— Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Hill Billv Kid. 7:59— Gnien Time. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9:00— Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 9 :30— Full Measure Gas. 9:45— Charles W. Reaume. studio. 10:15— The Madison Singers (CBS) 10:30— Bruce Chapman (CBS). 10:45 — Time and weather. 10:48— Woman's Hour — Tremlettc Tnlly. 11:15— Don Bigclow and His Orches- tra (CBS) 1 1 :30— Enric Madrigucra's Cuban Or- chestra (CBS) 11 :45— Drink-Mor Program. Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12:30 — Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram. 1 :00— A. L. Fink Program. 1 :30— Farm Network Program fCBS). 1:45— Madam Flor-cnz Beauty Pro- gram. S:00Charles W. Reaume Studio 2:15 — Race Result from L a t o n i a, Ky. 2 :20 — Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS) 2:30— Three Doctors (CBS). 2:15— Starr-Frcczc Melodies (E.T.) 3:00— U. S. Army Band (CBS). 3:20— H. G. Wells from London (CBS). 3:50— Interlude (CBS). 4:00— Dancing by the Sea (CBS) 4:30 — Hoosier Photographer — Tramp Starr. 1:45— Jolly Tugclers (CBS). 5 :Q0— Winegar's Barn Orchestra (CBS). Monday. July 13 :15 — Cincinnati Trade School Program. :30— Ross and Brooks (CBS). :45 — Studio. :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. :55 — Sports Review. :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. : 00 — Home Furniture Program. :10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. :13— Time and weather. ;I5 — Linit Program, with Dennis King (CBS). :30 — Evangeline Adams. "Astrolo ger" (CBS). :45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) :00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). :15 — The Barbasol Program (CBS). :30— The Bon Bons (CBS). :45— Old Wurzburg Malt Program :00— Eno Crime Club (CBS) :30— An Evening in Paris (CBS). :45 — Noxema Program (CBS). :00— Robt. Burns Panatella Pro- gram (CBS). :30— Arabesque (CBS). :00— Pyrol Blackberry Dudes 15 — Gruen Answer Man ;25— Happy Feet. 30— Arlie Simmond's and His Or chestra, Coney Island :00 — Time and weather. :03 — Sports Review. ;08— Ben Bcrnie and His Orchestra (CBS). :30— Nocturne (CBS). WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6:00 — International Fiddlers. 6:29— Bulova Time. 6:30 — Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 8:00 — Morning Devotions. 8:15 — Ball Brothers Canning Time. 8 :30 — Montgomery Ward Program (NBC). 8 :44 — Bulova Time. 8:45— Miracles of Magnolia (NBC). 9 :00 — Housekeeper Chats. 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9:30— Musical Portrait. 9:45— The Potter's Art. 10 :00— Syncopaters (NBC). 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10 :40— Salt and Peanuts. 11:00— Mills Brothers Quartet, 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals. Noon — Scger Ellis. P. M.— 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:45— Market Reports. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1:00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Nctherland Plaza Orchestra. 2:00— Organ Matinee. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 3:00— More Truth Than Poetry (NBC). 3:15 — Charles Schcuerman Brown Palace Hotel Orchestra (NBC). 4:00— Chats with Peggy Winthrop (NBC). 4:15— Jim and Walt. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4:40 — Afternoon Revelers. 5 :00 — Salt and . Peanuts. 5:15 — Mormon Tabernacle Choir. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15 — Los Ramos Baseball Scores. 6:25— The Chatter. 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC). G :45 — Affiliated Products Program (NBC). 7:00Roxy's Gang. (NBC). 7 :30 — Musical Dreams. 8:00— Mavtag Orchestra (NBC). 8:30— Real Folks (NBC). 9:00— Gold Medal Express (NBC) 9:30 — Packard Concert, with Marian Talley (NBC). 10:00— Canada Dry- 10:30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 10:50— Estate Weather Man. 11:00— Chime Reveries. Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra, 12:30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. 1 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. Letter Box Radio Dial is interested in the opinions of its readers. It will endeavor to answer questions. Unsigned letters will not he con- sidered but signatures will be with- held when the request is made. Radio Dial: I believe a number of your read- ers would be interested in knowing that there is in existence through- out the world a very interesting Rudy Vallee Club, called the Vallee Krusaders. There are 2000 of us, including one member in London and several in France, where Rudy played in 1926. The club was organized a year ago by Helen M. Kruse of Woodridge, N. J., who is president and treasurer of the Krusaders and editor of its monthly magazine. The purpose of the club is to keep Rudy's admirers informed of all his activities and to kill false publicity about him. The magazine is a 12 or 15-page paper and always con- tains pictures of Rudy as well as reviews of his Paramount appear- ances and stories about him, Miss Marion Curley, 4946 Western Hills Ave., Price Hill, Cincinnati. Radio Dial welcomes news of radio enthusiasms of its readers. Vallee admirers might get in touch ith Miss Curley for further in- formation. * * * Sirs: We have received the Dial paper for the last five weeks and think it is fine, so am sending you $1.00 for six months subscription. Have enjoyed having the programs. Best wishes for all the stations in Cincinnati. Mrs. C. B., Wilmington, O. Best wishes from out of town. Dear Sirs: I do not know if the five weeks' offer is still open for The Radio Dial, but I am enjoying mine so much am anxious for a friend of mine to receive it. I am enclosing her address, but if I am too late, please just forget my request. Gratefully, Mrs. H. C. H., Mt. Sterling, Ky. Trial offer of five weeks for 10 cents still stands. Dear Editor: Congratulations on your Radio Dial! I liked it as soon as I saw it, and everyone to whom I have talked concerning it agrees that it fills a long-felt need. J. S., Dayton, O. Need in Dayton. * * * Dear Sirs: Am on my vacation now and my Julia Hayes Helpful Hints to Housewives will not be on WKRC until the first part of August. When I return I plan to have many new and interesting things to tell my listeners. Julia Hayes. Vacation from Housewives. Monday, July 13 !>:15— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 9:30— Jean Carroll, please tell me (NBC). 9:45 — Jcrrv Foy. 10:00— Blue Streaks (NBC). 10:15— Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10 :30— Records. 1 1 : iin_The Hellimm Troubadors (NBC). 11 :15— Sign Off. P. M.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— Sign off. 2 : 00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 3 :45 — Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4:00 — Crosley Singers. 4:30— Records. ' 4 :45 — MinabcIIe and Chick. 5 :00— Records. 5:15 — Cccy Gordon; Gene Perazzo. 5*30— The Gossipcrs (e. t.) 5:45 — Records. 6:15 — "The World Today," James G. McDonald (NBC). 6:30 — Mrs. Lee Ach, poems. (i:45 — Vocal Solos. 7:00 — "How's Business?", Merle Thorpe (NBC.) 7:15— Webster Program (NBC). 7:30— A. & P. Orchestra (NBC). 8 :30— General Motors Program (NBC). 0:00— True Story Hour (NBC. 9:45 — Simonize Program (NBC). 10 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10:30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC).. 8:15 — Campbell Soup Orchestra (NBC). 8:45— Records. 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). I think we ought to have a lot more of Rudy Vallee and Paul Whiteman and such people and less of Amos and Andy, for their jokes are "punk." We don't tune in on them. Miss R. C. N., Covington, Ky. Mutiny. Tuesday, J„l y l4 10 :00— Brevities. 10 :05 — Home Heating Program 10:20— Nu-Co Painters. 10 :35 — Kelvinator Program. 10:50 — Sister Marv's Kitchen. 10:59— Simper Time. 11:00 — Acme Awning Special. 11 :15 — Serenade. 11 :45— Stud ebakc r Champions Noon — Organ Recital. P. M.— TUESDAY July 14 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) 7:00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15 — Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8 :00— Mountain Red. 8:15 — Early morning dance program. 9 :15 — My New Kentucky Home, Jetta Crane. 9 :45 — Dance Program. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:15 — Classic Hour. 10 : 15 — Musical Novelties. 11 :30— Skillet Lickers. Noon — Dance Program. P. M.— 12:30— Live Stock Quotations. 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert. 1 :00— Sign off. 5 :45 — Blue Ridge Shindiggers. 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 0:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 6:15— Gus Van (NBC). fi:30— Men About Town. d :45 — Mountain Red. 7:00— Glenyce Chambers, blues. 7:15 — Tri-State Entertainers, with Burger Bros., Ham and Lim. 7 :45 — Crooning Guitarist. 8:00— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. 8:30— Death Valley Davs (NBC). 9:00— Happy-Go-Lucky Girls. 9:15— Little Red Riding Hood. 9 :30— Skillet Lickers. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc. A. M.— 7:00 — Voices at Dawn. 7:30 — Classified Directory. 8:00— Shopper's Hour. 8:15 — Mountain Valley Greetings. 8:30— Starr Freeze (E. T.) 8:45 — Morning Musicale. 9:15 — Sunshine Special. 9 :45— Home Chats. FLORENCE FREY BEAUTY EXPERT Every Wednesday 9:15 A. M. WLW ■J . PERMANENT WAVE $5.00 Positively Harm le is — Painless — Quirk FLORENCE FREY STUDIO 631 Walnut Street CHcrry G10S :30— Variety. :45 — Bellonby Luncheon Musicale. :00~S tarr Freeze Afternoon Melodies. -.15 — Matinee Musicale. :45 — Vaudeville. :00 — Marion Clark, soprano. :15 — Dance Frolic. :45 — Reds vs. Boston at Redland Field. :45 — Ralph and Harlan. :00— Lyric Hour. :30— World Series Contest. :00 — Musical Interlude, :15 — World Series Contest. :45 — Berning Ford Travelogue. :00 — Dance Frolic. :30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. :45 — Barker News Notes. iC 1 -Luckey Boys. :15— Dry Ridge Health Hints. :30— Twilight Reveries. :45— Concv Island Dance Frolic. :00 — I ndependent Oil Station Program. :30— Meyer's Hot Tunes. :45— Licking River Fiddlers. :00— Mountain Valley Varieties. :15 — Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. frt.— 6:45— God's Bible School, Sunrise Worship. 7 :45— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Gruen Time. 8:00— Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 8:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS. 8:45 — Madam Flor-enz. 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS). 9:15— Melody Parade (CBS). 9 :30— Consolidated Mercliants' Pro- gram. 1(1 :00— Fashion Facts o( 1931 (CBS). 10 :15— Charles W. Reaume Studio, 10:45— Time and Weather. 10 :48— Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tully. 11:15 — Full Measure Gas. 11 :30— Enric Madriguera's Cuban Or- chestra (CBS) 11 :45— Drinkmor Program (CBS) Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12 :30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS). 1 :15— Art Dry Cleaning Program, 1 :30— Studio feature. 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio 2:15— Race Result from Latonia, Ky. 2 :20— Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS) 2:30— (A. L. Fink)— The Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45— (A. L. Fink)— The Capilava- tors (CBS). 3 :00Rochcster Civic Orchestra .Con- ducted by Guy Harris (CBS). 4:00— Frank Ross. Songs (CBS) 4:15 — Adventures in Words (CBS) 4:30— Gypsy Music Makers (CBS). 4:415 — Sweethearts of the Air (CBS). A Laugh a Second with HyRye and Willie Winsum Radio's biggest 15 minutes ol good cheer and snappy music. Every Tuesday and Thursday 7:1S P. M. WKRC Tone in ... . enjoy yourself Sponsored by The Rube) Baking Co- RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY. JULY 10. 1931. Tuesday, July 14 13 00 — Winegar's Barn Orchestra (CBS). 5 : 1 5 — C i n c i n n a t i Trade School Program. 9:30— Winegar's Barn Orchestra i Believe it or not. This picture purports to be a broadcast from WLW's roof as a way to keep broadcasters cool in the summer. Just why WLW with air-cooled studios should need to put its entertainers on the roof, deponent sayeth not. Anyway, the picture gives you a chance to see Ramona (with the uke) and the singing Glenn Sisters (Katherine and Ruth in that order) before the microphone and in pajamas. Th thing. hat s some- WSAI Will Garry Radio Music From England This Week Two programs originating with the British Broadcasting Corporation in England will be picked up anil rehroadcast this week by NBC on a net- work including WSAI. Fri- day afternoon (July 17) at SO tin. \\ irehsc Mititir/ Band will be broadcast. On Tuesday afternoon (July 21) the Gersho m Parkin-ii >n Quintet will be on the air. News Veteran to Give Inside Dope on Famous Scoops Peter Stone, veteran news photographer, now editor of In- ternational Xews Photos, will tell tin* inside story of how many famous picture "scoops" have been made by news photo agen- cies when he talks in Bill Schudt's Going to Press through WKRC at 5 o'clock Wednesday afternoon {July 22). King George V of England Will Broadcast Saturday Through Local Stations Cupid Takes Over Vallee Management In Quiet Ceremony Rudy Vallee and Fay Webb were married last week with a quiet ceremony in West Or- ange, New lersev. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Webb of Santa Monica, Cab, where Webb is the chief of police. Vallee met his bride while in Los Angeles two years ago to "The Vagabond Lover." She arrived in Ne wYork a week ago and visited quietly with friends in New Jersey until the day of the ceremony. They are at home in Vallee's new apart- ment at 35 Central Park YVest, New York City. Proud benedict, Vallee him- self mentioned the news last Thursday in his Fleischman Yeast program after Graham MacNamee had made the an- nouncement. Greatore's Band Will Be Heard Through WCKY Giuseppe Creatore will direct his orchestra, including its cele- brated saxaphone octet, in a se- ries of six Interwoven concerts through WCKY and an NEC network at £ o'clock Friday nights beginning next week ( July 24). The Interwoven Pair, Billy Jones and Ernie Hare, will re- turn from their vacation Septem- ber 4. Creatore at the age of 17 was named conductor of the Naples (Italy) Municipal Rand which he directed for eight years. At 35 he recruited a band of 50 musi- cians who have since played con- tinuously in America as one of this country's most celebrated bands. King George V of England will be heard in the United States for the first time this year on Saturday morning (July 18) at 9:45 when he opens the new II ford Hospital near London. He will speak for a half hour with WKRC relaying the CBS account. It is probable that WLW < j i V\ S A I a ij>o wil i em ry t! le broadcast. This will he the first broadcast by King George at a time con venient to listeners throughout the United States. His two pre- vious international radio ad dresses have been heard in Cin cinnati at (i a. m. John McCormick Sings for Packard in Final Concert John McCormick, Irish tenor, will broadcast from Los Angeles Monday night (July 20} at 9:30 in the final concert in the Packard series which WLW and the Na- tional Broadcasting Company have been broadcasting. For a quarter of a century, McCormick has been one of the foremost singers of the world. Phonograph records, and now talking pictures have made him known probably to more Amer- icans than any other singer. Mahler Symphony is Included in Lewisohn Music Part of Gustav Mahler's "Sev- enth Symphony" will he broad- cast through WKRC from the Lewisohn Stadium at 8:30 Sun- day night with Willem van Hoog- stralen conducting. Mahler's "Symphony of a Thousand" was performed at the May Festival in Cincinnati this year. Few of his works ever are played in the Lhiited States in spite of his eminence among composers. KFI Dedicates 50 Kilowatt Transmitter KFI, Los Angeles, dedicated its 50,000-watt transmitter last Sunday and should come into Cincirwati .i .'.-■>; ail} r ■ cciver. Its frequency is (J40 kilocycles (468. S meters), which is far enough from WLW to keep the local 50- kilowatter from interfering with its reception. Little Jack Little, ex-Cincm- nati radio star, will be guest 1st with Rudy Vallee and his Connecticut Yankees in the Fleischmann Yeast Hour through WSAI at 7 o'clock Thursday night (July 23.) Two of his three songs will be brand new ones : "There's a Time and a Place for Every- thing," ana "I'm Superstitious About Delicious You." The third "Without That Gal." A s ual. Jack will announce his own numbers. Complete Radio Programs Begin on Page 4 RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1931. Weekly RADIO DIAL Published every Thursday by the Radio Dial Publishing Co., 22 East 12th St., Cincinnati, Ohio. Contents copyrighted. NATALIE GIDD1NGS, Editor VOL. I JULY 17, 1931 No. 9 Don't Wait for Television Cincinnati soon may have its first television station. The Crosley Corporation has asked the Federal Radio Commission to license an experimental picture transmitter to be located at the Arlington Street building. If authorized, this will have the effect of stimulating considerably Queen City interest in visual broadcasting. But it does not mean that the purchase of new receivers can or should therefore be put off until they have "television attachments." There is no such thing as a "television attachment." Though they both fall under the head of radio, television and sound broadcasting are entirely separate and different, from the aerial down. That is, to see as well as hear a program you must have two receivers: one of the present-day type for sound, and another special outfit for sight. At the risk of appearing to throw cold water, it seems necessary to point that out at once. Wherever television has been introduced, people have jumped to the conclusion that they may as well wait to buy re- ceivers that will incorporate the new development. The wait promises to be a long one indeed. Several years at least. Radio simply hase reversed the evolusion of the movies by bringing out the sound side first. Nobody put off seeing silent films merely because talkies were on the way. And we should be as sensible about sight and sound broadcasting. Television may come. But there is no point in sacrificing full audible enjoyment of programs meantime, because they can be seen, too, one of these days. When television arrives, you will have to have a sound receiver anyway. It may as well be one that will give you complete satisfaction now as well as then. Joseph A. Chambers, technical supervisor of WLW and WSAI, says the radio company does not expect for one minute to give any satisfaction to those who would both look and listen. His purpose in applying for the license is to experiment with television with the idea of contributing something, perhaps, to the practical perfection of the development. Unlike phonograph and radio combination machines in which the phonograph and radio use the same amplifying equipment, television equipment and the radio receiver have no possible connection except that they might possibly be put in the same box, he says, further emphasizing Radio Dial's attitude that radio listeners must have a good radio receiver first, when, or if television ever does become practical for home enjoyment. Around the Dial By THE DIAL TWISTER All is forgiven. Those irrepres- sible and irresistible Nit-Wits are back on the air again (Wednesday at 9:30 p. m. over WKRC). The only thing funnier than one of their outbursts is the next one. Tommy Ott, Molly Moore, and Maurice Thompson, under the label of the Classic Trio, do a satisfying program over WCKY way, Friday at 9:30 p. m. They do works of one well-known composer a week, and do them well. * * * They're still talking about Floyd Gibbons' bit in the General Elec- tric Fourth of July program (WSAI), and with plenty of reason. It was just about Floyd's master- piece; the story of independence, served up in a way that made those old historical characters all but live again. Gibbons is through? Yes, like Babe Ruth. The Eno Crime Club wasn't released through WKRC as billed. But if you yearn for a hangup thriller, try WOWO Monday and Wednesday at 8:30 p. m. (1160 kc. 258.5 m.). The piece comes in two installments, which makes the sus- penders still tighter. One of the finest mixed choruses in the country is the Mormon Tab- ernacle Choir which airs an unsur- passed program every Mondav (WLW, at 5:15 p. in.). The voices balance and blend perfectly, and that Tabernacle organ is as good. WLW is being thanked these days for carrying the whole program. True Story Hour fans are find ing their favorite doing business in much the same way, if at a new stand since it switched to NBC (WSAI at 9 p. m. Monday). The time has been pared down to 45 minutes. But the cut comes in the introduction which doesn't hurt the story. Three-quarter hour shows seem to be breaking into the picture, Enter also the Liberty program (WKRC, Friday at 8 p. m.). It's an entertaining mixture of drama, music, and comment. "Mr, Vox Pop" is something novel. Mightn't be a bad idea to let him into s eral other programs. That crown prince of story- tellers, "Seckatary Hawkins," keeping the young of about every age squirming on the edges of their chairs (Saturday at 5 p. m., WLW). What's more, he's crowd- ing Phil Cook for the voice- changing honors. * * * Those Beach-combers put on a diverting Hawaiian program (WCKY, Sunday, at 10:4. r > a. m.). Guess Hawaiian stuff isn't out after all. Their tunes are well varied, too Kate Smith (Sunday at 7:15 and week days at 6 p. m.., WKRC) won't start an argument over whether it's a he or she. Her voice is smooth and pleasing and femi- nine. She's got real microphone personality, too. Ought to bear watching. * * * Real organ numbers by a real organist could be the sub-title of the program by Arthur Chandler, Jr. (WLW, Sunday, at 10 a. m.). Here's a good break for those of us who like the organ, but think dance music ought to be left to dance bands. Maybe Francis X. Bushman can't find a wife to his liking. But he's making a good start toward becoming as much of a radio idol as he was in the pictures (WLW, Friday, at 8:45 p. m.). Plenty to talk about, and he talks well. Watch the fair hands flutter to dial him in. Louis Johnen Will Be Heard on WLW Again JOHNEN Louis John J oh n e n, who left Cincinnati and WLW two years ago to study voice in Europe, has re- turned to the city and will sing again at WLW in the Los Amigos programs at 11 o'clock o n This Tuesday ■ Grieg's Tuesday nights (July 31 ) he will " lohnnesnachl." Resides his popularity as a baritone, Johnen also had a wide- spread radio following as an an- nouncer some live years ago when he was musical director and announcer for the station. Star Reveries Give Miniature of "Robin Hood" Reginald de Koven's operetta, "Robin Hood." will he presented in miniature in the Star Reveries over the Columbia network ami WKRC Sunday night (July 1°) at 9:45. Helen Gilligan, soprano, and Milton Watson, tenor, will be heard in the leading roles. Roy Smeck, known to vaude- ville, radio and sound pictures as the "Wizard of the Strings," will play three numbers with as many different instruments as guest artist with the Nestle Choco- lateers Friday night (July 7) at 7 o'clock through WLW. "The Wickersham Wail," first echo in music of the much dis- cussed report on prohibition, will be put on the air for the first time by Leo Reisman and his orchestra during the food's eve- ning program next Friday (July 24) at 8:30 p. m. through WLW. You Should Know -- Morton D Morton Downey, the Camel Quarter-Hour tenor (WKRC). punctuates almost every senience by knocking wood. . . Favors a slouch hat and a turned-up tup- coat collar. . .Raises police dogs Raspberry ice is his favorite dessert . . . Fears old age ... Is five feet, 10 inches tall, and weighs 170 pounds. . .Carries good-luck charms on both ends of a watch- less watch chain . . . When nerv- ous or agitated bites the nails of only the thumb or forefinger of his right hand. Is very ticklish. . .Loves to tell funny Irish stories. . .Calls a waiter with a loud "Pst-pst"... Continually jingles coins in his pockets. . .Reads a newspaper between songs. . .Has luxuriant lashes and blue-grey eyes. . . Fans his friends to their faces, and when they depart in chagrin. lauds them to the skies. . .Has an inquisitive nature. . .Labors un- der no "success" illusions. . . Continually combs his hair with ilver-backed pocket-comb that he has had in bis possession for eight years. . .Hales to be tagged a crooner; says he "just sings." Calls his wife (the former Barbara Bennett) "Lover". . . tares at the ceiling when broad- casting. . .His cheeks are always a deep pink. . .Hates to be alone, even when riding down the ele- vator... Buys his hats in half- dozen lots from a wholesaler. Was born in Wailingford. Conn . . . was the fourth child . . . Began singing at the age of three .At 1 .*> he became a "news- butcher" abroad a New York- New Haven train. .. Instead of shouting his wares to prosjective customers, he would sing... Later he attended donkey engines in a freight yard, but was fired for speeding. . .Was a failure as an insurance peddler. ..Sold phonographs and records for a weekly salary of $15; he was paid only eight. .. First theater appearances in New York were on the Sheridan Square stage where he sang "When Irish F.yes Are Smiling" in a cowboy suit ...A Bronx vaudeville engage- ment was terminated suddenly when he sang a program of Irish songs to a Jewish audience; the management gave him ten min- utes notice... In 101!) Paul Whiteman's manager signed him at a weekly figure of $70. . . Toured with Paul for four years . . . Held a French horn for effect when not singing. ..People thought he sang quite well for a musician . . . Ziegfeld engaged him for a show at Palm Beach . . .After which he appeared in a Havana supper club... Then he got the job at the Cafe de Paris. Under the sponsorship of Lady Mountebatten in 1927 he was a hit in London. . .One night he repeated the singing of "You Took Advantage of Me" eleven times for the Prince of Wales. .. At the invitation of Cole Porter he entertained at the Ambassador in Paris. . .In Hollywood he made three pictures. .. He was a good singer, but not a good actor. . .At the opening of ' Mother's Boy," he got up and walked quickly out of the theater . . .The bright spot 51 Fus movie career was his marriage to Bar- bara Bennett, his leading lady, after a three-week courtship. The breaks began to go against him ; he went into comparative obscurity . . . Broadway column- ists said he was "all washed up" . . . Back in London he went, again became a success ... Then he cabled William S. Paley. President of the Columbia Broad- casting System, for a niche in radio. . .He opened his Club Del- monico and sang over the radio . . . Fan mail and favorable com- ments poured in . . . He was given a nightly 7 o'clock period.. -He was a tremendous hit. . .He was paid $"),000 every seven days for stage appearances ... At the height of his success laryngitis got him by the throat for two weeks... On his return the mi- crophone people said he sounded better than e v e r. . .Sponsors dickered for his services. . .He relinquished his sustaining pr°" grams to become an artist with the Camel Quarter-Hour exclu- sively. Murder — mystery — gang' land have a lure for Gertrude Hitz, who starred m "Broadws when it ran in New York. Now she appears in the Eno Crime Club at 8 p. m. Monday and 8 :30 p, m. Wednesday on the Columbia network, taking the part of a woman criminal. WKRC is the local outlet for the detective story program. The death of General Ulysses S. Grant, July 23, 1S.S5, will he commemorated by WLW Thurs- day afternoon (July 23) at 2 o'clock with an organ recital by Arthur Chandler, Jr. Grant's favorite hymns and lullabies will be included. Hank Simmon's Show Boat will present an adaptation of Al- exander Dumas' "Camille" Sat- urday night (July IS) in the broadcast over WKRC at 9 o'clock. Latonia race results can be heard at 5 :50 p. m. daily at WCKY. Nothing But the Truth Alexander McQueen, who for some time has been do- ing the Stearns and Foster program at WKRC, has shifted to WCKY and is ap- pearing every night except Saturday and Sunday with a Nothing But the Truth period such as he did on WLW RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY. JULY 17, 1931. Pat Gillick is Now Heard Through WKRC Pat Gillick, long associated with the noon organ programs at WLW, has opened his own organ studio in the Wurlitzer building and is broadcasting two 15-niin- ute programs every day except Sunday through WKRC. The periods are at 5:1") p. m. and 11 :^"> p. m. Music from "Band Wagon" Makes Up Next Pond's Dance Music by Arthur Schwartz, from "The Band Wagon," cur- rent Broadway musical show, will make up tiie whole of Pond's Dance Friday night (July 17) at 8:30 through WSAl, with Schwartz at the piano. The tunes include "I Love Louisa," "Dancing in the Dark," 1 New Sun in the Sky," and "Beggar Waltz" and others. Al- though a lawyer by profession, and unable to read music except with difficulty, the 30-year-old Schwartz has turned a three- month course in harmony to writing such successes as "Give Me Something To Remember You By." "Song of the Riveter," "Lucky Seven" from the "Sec- ond Little Show" and other hits from the first edition of that re- Singers Known Here Make Chain Debut Friday The premiere performance of the Ptllsbury Pageant, featuring Toscha Seidel. noted concert violinist ; Theo. Karle, tenor who was the star of "Fioretta ;" the Songbirds Mixed Quartet and a thirty-two-piece string orches- tra directed by Sam Lanin, will be broadcast over WKRC and a coast-to-coast Columbia network Friday (July 17) at !) p. m. The Songbirds who will sing "Croon a Tune" as their prin- cipal part in this gala opening broadcast, include Mabel Jack- son, soprano, and Mary Alice Cheney, contralto, former WLW soloists; Royal Halee. tenor, featured in the Greenwich village Follies in l!>2(i-2? ; and Vernon Jay son, baritone, who has ap- peared extensively in musical comedy, opera, having served SO weeks in the "Student Prince." "Through the Opera Glass," a series of grand opera broadcasts on the NBS network, are on WS.-U's Sunday schedule at 7 p. ni. Cesare Sodero directs the concert orchestra with vocal so- loists. Molly Moore, Maurice Thomp- son and Tommy Olt, the Classic Trio of WCKY, will present an all-MacDowell concert Friday night (July 17) at 9:30. Till' Coral, a young Spanish baritone discovered by Guy Lom- hardo. will sing in the Robert Bums Panatela h a 1 f - h o u r through WKRC at 9 o'clock Monday night (July '^<0. Coral began his singing in the Seville Cathedral. His voice has been likened to that of John Charle: Thomas. Letter Box Helen Board is the latest radio songster to win popularity among listeners. She is a soprano and is featured on Hits and Bits" broadcast each Monday and Thursday morning at 9:15 o'clock over an NBC network which sometimes includes WSAl. Winnie Mae Will Make National Tour Under NBC A nation-wide tour by the Winnie Mac, plane in which Wiley Post and Harold Gatty recently smashed all world cir- cumnavigating records, will be made under contract with the NBC Artists Service. The tour will last six vveeks or longer. Post and Gatty will cover the east, south, middle west and Pacific coast. Most of the principal air- ports will be visited and the two fliers will be feted by avia- tion enthusiasts, municipal and state officials in many states and towns. Local Orchestras Do Jumping Bean Stunt On Radio Earl Fuller's orchestra now is broadcasting through stations WLW and WSAl instead of through WFBE where Fuller was for some time managing di- rector. Harry Wilsey's orches- tra at the Cincinnati Zoo also is being put on the air from WLW and WSAl. The Xetherland- Plaza has discontinued its supper dance session so the stations get no late music there. An orches- tra of WLW musicians under Virginio Marucci is playing the luncheon and dinner concerts. William C. Stoess, musical di- rector of WLW, has gone to New York to hire a trvosy or- chestra that will play at the hotel and the radio station. The Jewish Community Pro- gram, inaugurated last Sunday at WKRC, under the direction of Samuel M. Schmidt, editor of Every Friday, will be continued every Sunday afternoon at 1 o'clock. The Stromberg-Carlson pro gram has been shifted to 7:30 p. ni. to 9 o'clock on Mondays. WCKY still broadcasts the con cert. Al and Pete Are On WSAl Daily Al and Pete ( Cameron and Bontsema), who four years ago ,ang through WSAl and WLW, vill be heard this week in the Ward Radio Research program WSAl is broadcasting al 8:30 every morning except Sunday. The feature this week is a re- vival of the minstrel shows of 25 years ago. The audience has olready been tested with an or- chestra and a series of dramatic shows to see what kind of radio entertainment is most favored. One more experiment will be tried. What Peter Zorn describes as the first popular moving picture theme song "dot vas efer wrote" —"On the Trail of the Lone- some Pine" by John Fox, Jr.— will be featured during the Dutch Masters Musicale on WKRC and the Columbia Broadcasting Sys- tem Friday night (July 17) at 7:30. It will be played by the orchestra directed by Eugene Ormandv. The Crosley Theater at WLW has been taken off the air at least until some time in August. It is announced that its return to the air will be somewhat influenced by public interest. The bill this week is a corking good railroad play by Robert Brown with Walter Maher and Harry Holcomb in the leading roles. Last chance to hear it is 7 o'clock Saturday night (July IS). Radio Dial is interested in the opinions of its readers. It will endeavor to answer questions. Unsigned letters will not be con- sidered but signatures will be with- held when the request is made. Dear Editor: We'll probably be slapped in the face for this! BUT! Slap in the face or no slap in the face, I think the "VALLEE KRU- SADERS" is without a doubt the silliest thing that has happened in this decade. I just can't imagine Rudy liking this sort of thing, be- cause from what I've heard, he's a regular fellow! It seems the purpose of this club is to keep Rudy's admirers in- formed of all his activities and to kill false publicity about him. How inane! Doesn't the "Vallee Krusaders" know the minute one becomes as popular and famous as "The Rudy" that false statements spring up over night? Look at Michael Angelo! If this "Vallee Krusaders" can point out to us why an Orchestra Leader and "Crooner" (and a good one at that!) should be put in the same light at "The Holy Grail," by having an army of Crusaders watching over him, we'll give up, and hasten to the Holy See to effect the canonization of Saints Amos and Andy! Don Becker. Dear Sir: If you, Mr. Radio Dial, are not circumscribed by any commercial or other limitations, we wouldn't mind having your unbiased opinion as to the all-around best radio on the market. We read everything we can get to that end. We covet distant and near stations, tone and all else for efficiency. C. S., Loveland, O. Mr. Radio Dial is not circum- scribed by commercial limitations but also is not determined upon the best all-around radio; suggest; trial of many. * * * Radio Dial: Does the Chicago Serenade (NBC) at 2:30 p. m. on WLW originate at WENR, and isn't same announced by Bill Kephart? Mr. and Mrs. G. C. T. WENR studios have been aban doned since NBC took charge of the station recently. Its programs all come from NBC studios in Men chandise Mart, Chicago. An nouncers are shifted about on pro^ grams so frequently one can be sure of their identity only by catch- ing the closing announcement of the program. Ida Blackson, soprano, who ha- been singing for the oast year on die Gruen programs al WKRC. will start on her vaca lion next week tn he gone three weeks. She will visit hir sister at Lake Hopatcong, New Jersey. This sextet sings every Sunday at 2 o'clock through WKRC in the Gruen Old Fashioned Garden of Melodies, a program now in its second year as a regular weekly feature. This week (July 19) their program includes the Bridal Chorus from "The Rose Maiden,"' and the old ballad, "Ever of Thee I m Fondly Dreaming. Howard Hafford, left, musical director of WKRC also directs the sextet. The other members, reading left to right, are Howard Chaffee, Nadelle Schuping, Wilma Schuping, Milton Sachs, and Herbert Schatz. We alto. :ome Lewis, cont Harry Salter's orchestra are to appear each week in a program called "The Coty Melody Girl" which WKRC will broadcast from the Columbia network every Thursday at 8:15 p.m. The sponsors promise an inno- vation in the fact that commer- cial announcements will b e limited to the mention of Miss Lewis as "The Cotv Melodv Girl. Miss Lewis, billed in vaude- ville as a "female baritone" and whose deep voice belies her di- minutive stature, was last fea- tured in the Radiotron Varieties over NBC stations. Salter con- ducts the Tompkins Carners band in Real Folks, another NBC program, but is not to be misjudged by the "sour notes that program calls for. Chopin Waltz is to Be Heard in College Concert Alberta Goff, Thomasville (Ga.) sopranu, and Lydia Grant, pianist, will present the College of Music student program at WCKY Sunday nighl I July ID | at - 50. Mi'- ( IT will sing "Little Star" (La Forge), "The Blue Pigeon" CHadley), 'To a Hill-top" (Cox), "A Spirit Flower" ( Campbell T i p t o n ) , "Spring's a Lovable Lady" (El- liott), and "The Rosy Morn" (Ronald). Miss Grant's piano solos will include Chopin's "Waltz E Minor." the Rachman- inoff "Humoresque," and the Brahms "Rhapsody B Minor." Mrs. Hoover Will Christen Navy Dirigible Aug. 8 Mrs. Herbert Hoover will christen the U. S. Navy diri- gible "Akron" on August 8 with ceremonies that will be broadcast On nation-wide hook-ups. The ceremony will he signalized when Mrs. Hoo- ver opens a cage to release white pigeons. At previous ceremonies bottles of com- pressed air have been broken over the craft with the spon- sors heavily gloved to prevent freezing of their hands. The pigeons were substituted to avoid the remote possibility of injury to the President's wife. Radio Dial will carry details in a future issue. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1931. Here Are Only Complete Programs FRIDAY July 17 WGKY (202m.— 1490 kc.) A. At.— 7:00 — Tlie Crooning Guitarist. 7:15— Morning Devotions (NBC) 7 :30— Cheerio (NBC) 8:00— Mountain Red. 8:15 — Early Morning Dance. 9:15 — My New Kentuckv Home, 9:45 — Dance Melodies 10:30— Classic Hour 11:00— Musical Novelties 11:30— Skillet Lickers. Noon— Popular Dance Tunes 12 :30— Norris Brock Live Stock Reports 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert p. m.— 1 :00— Sign off 5 :45 — Dance Records. 5:50— Ibold Race Results. 5 :55— Ayers News Sport Flash 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC) 6:15 — Eilerman's Serenaders 6:45 — Beach Combers. 7 :00— Charlene and Kathlene. 7:15 — Italian Serenaders. 7:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra Lookout House 8:00— Interwoven Pair (NBC) 8:30— Duke, His Uke and His Sis- ters. 8:43— Little Red Riding Hood. 0:00— Kentucky Belle. 9: 15— Crooning Guitarist. 9:30— Molly Moore. Maurice Thomp- son and Tommy Ott. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. At.— 7:00 — Voices at Dawn 7:30 — Classified Directory 8:00 — Shopper's Hour 8:15 — Morning- Melodies 8:45— Post Baby Beauty Contest 9:15 — Sunshine Special 9 :45 — Kleeman Furniture Program 10:00 — Zoo-ettes 10:05— Home Heating Program 10:20— Variety 10:35 — Kelvinator Program 10:50— Mrs. Evans" Questions and Answers !! :5 n H iraiier Time Announcement 11:00— Acme Awning Program 1 1 :15 — Concert Hour 11 :45— Garden of Melody P. M.— 12:15 — Serenade 12 :45— Bellonby Luncheon Musicale I :00— Matinee 1 :15— Kroness Brothers 1 :30— post Baby Beauty Contest 2:00 — Memory Lane 2:30— Ralph and Harlan 2:45— Reds vs. Boston, at Redland Field I :45 — Larrv Oaks 5:00— Lyric Hour 5:30 — World Series Contest 6:00— Musical Interlude 6:15 — World Series Contest 6:46— Berning Ford Travelogue 7:00— The Post Question Box 7:15 — Dinner Dance Music 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Review 7:45— Nu-co Painters 8:00— Luckey Bovs 8:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints 8 :30— Colonial Stages Program 8:45 — Coney Island Dance Frolic 9:00— Wrestling Matches at Music Hall II :00— Slumber Music WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— (! :45 — God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship 7.45— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Gruen Time Signal 8:00— Starr-Freeze Melodies 8:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— S wee thea rt s of the Air (CBS) 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS) 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS 9:15— Studio Ftature. 9:30— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram Friday, July 17 10 :00— Rhvthem Kings (CBS). 10:15— Floraline Talk 10:20— Rythm Kings (CBS). 10:30— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 11:00— Time and Weather. 11:03 — Woman's Hour — Tremlette Tully 11:30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11 :45 — Driukmor Program. Noon — Wurliuer Music Box Revue P. At 12 :30 — Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS) 1:15 — Art Dry Cleaning Program 1 :30 — Columbia Farm Network Pro- gram (CBS). 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 2:15— Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2:20— Race Result from Latonia, Kv. 2:30— The Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45 — Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- gram 3:00— Light Opera Gems (CBS). 3 :45— Edna Thomas (CBS). 4:00— Jewish Art Program (CBS). 4:30— A. L. Fink Program 5 :00 — Earl Carpenters Orchestra (CBS). 5:15 — Jos. R. Deins Program, Pat Gillick, Organist. 5:30— Cincinnati Trade School. 5 :45 — Studio 5:50 — Eureka Baseball Scores 5 :55 — Sports Review 5:59 — Burke Weather Forecast (i:00 — Kate Smith and Her Swanee Music (CBS). — Home Furni ture Company. 10— Stocks, Coble & Tyree 13 — Time and weather 15 — Linit Program, with Dennis King (CBS) 6 :30 — Red Goose Adventures (CBS) 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7 :00— Pryor's Crenio Militarv Band (CBS) 7 :15— Barbasol Program (CBS) 7:30— Dutch Masters (CBS) S :00 — Liberty Magazine Hour (CBS). 8:45— Cincinnati & Lake Erie Pro- gram. 9:00— Pillsbury Pageant (CBS). 9:30— What's Happening, Geo. Mul- vihill. 9:45— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 10 :00 — Confessions of a Racketeer (E. T.) 10:15 — Gruen Answer Man 10:25— Happy Feet 10 :30 — Arlic Simmouds Orchestra Coney Island. 11:00— Time: Weather; Sports 11:08 — Ben Bcrnie and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11:30— To Be Announced. 11:45— Jos. R, Deins Program, Pat Gillick, Organist. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. 1W.— 6:00 — International Fiddlers 6 :30 — Gym Classes 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 8 :00 — Morning Devotions 8:15 — Bradley Kincaid 8 :30 — Montgomery Ward Program (NBC) 8:45— Three Mnstaehios (NBC) 9 :00— Ray Perkins (NBC) :15 — "The Hostess," Mrs. Lutye Sohngen .'1:30— Book News 9:45 — Premium Man 10:00 — Island Serenaders 10:30— Live Stock Reports 10:40 — Southern Singers; Raymond Mitchem 11:00 — Organ with Instrumentalist 11:15— Swift Program (NBC) 11:30— WLW Stars 11:45 — River Reports: Time Signals Noon — Tuxedo Fiddlers P. M.— 2 :15— Bulova Time 2:10 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra 2:45— Market Reports 2:50— Live Stock Reports 1 :00 — National Farm and Home (NBC) 1 :30 — Netherland Plaza Orchestra 2 :00 — Organ Matinee 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC) ):00 — Harriet Wellen, vocal solos. 3:15— Radio Guild (NBC) 4:15 — Ramona. 4:30— The Hottentots 5 :00 — Words and Music Miller and Lyles, whom the theatrical world generally regards as the outstanding duo of colored comedians, will bring their famihar controversies to the microphone at 6:30 p.m. Monday and Wednesday beginning' with the Wednesday of this week (July 22). WKRC will carry their premier on the Columbia Broadcasting System but may not continue to broadcast the fea- ture. Friday, July 17 5 :30— Seger Ellis. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) 6:15— Madame Alda (NBC) 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC). 6:45— The Chatter. 7 :00 — Los Ramos Basebell Scores 7 :(>.->— WLW Fanfares 7 :30 — Fuller's Orchestra 7:45— Sisters of the Skillet (NBC) 8 :00 — "In Romany" 8:15 — Icycast Jamboree 8 :30— Hoosier' Editor 8:45— Armour Program (NBC) 0:00— Paul Whiteman's Paint Men 9:30— Clara, Lu and Em (NBC) .0 :45 — Wildeson's Wildcats. 10 :00— Encores. 10:30— Variety 10:45— Bob Newhall Sport Slices 10:58— Estate Weather Man 1 1 :00— Vox Celeste 1 1 :30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm (NBC-Blue) Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra A. m.— 12 :30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 1 :00— Sign off. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M._ 8:00— Gene and Glenn, the Quaker Early Bird (NBC) 8:15— Teddy Black's Orchestra (NBC) 8:45 — Records 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9:15— Records 9 :30— National Home Hour (NBC) 0:45— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 10 :00— Hawaiian Serenaders (NBC) 10 :30— Realities of Romance (NBC) 1 1 :00— The Hellman T r o u b a d o r s (NBC). 1 1 :15— Sign Off. 12 :50 — Livestock Reports 1 :00— Sign Off 2 :00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC) P. M.— 3:00— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC) 3:15 — Records 3 :35— Military Band Concert (NBC) 1 :00— Records Friday, July 17 4 :30 — Moore Paint Program (NBC) 4 :45 — Records 5:00 — Poems by Harry Holcombc 5 :15— Don Becker, Ukelele. 5:30— The Gossipers (E. T.) 5 :45 — Records. 6 ;00— Harrv Willscv's Orchestra 6:30— Alice Richards 0:45— The Goldbergs (NBC) 7:00— Cities Service Concert (NBC) 8:00— Clicquot Club (NBC) 8:30— Pond's Dance (NBC) 9 :00— Kodak Week End (NBC) 9:30— RKO Theater of the Air (NBC) 10:00— Seger Ellis 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC) 10:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 11:00— Sign Off. SATURDAY July 18 WCKY (202m.— 1490 kc.) A. Al.— 7:00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15— Morning Devotion (NBC) 7:30— Cheerio (NBC) 8 :00-— Mountain Red. 8:15— Early Morning Dance. 9 :15— My New Kentucky Home, :45— Kentucky Belle's Kiddie Club 10:30— Classic Hour 11:00 — Musical Novelties 11:30 — Mountain Melodies 12:00— Popular Dance Melodies P. Al- lS :30— Norris Brock live stock quo- tations 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert IP. M.— SIGN OFF 5:45 — Dance Records. 5:50— Ibold Race Results. 5:55— Ayers Sport Flash 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC) 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC) 6 :30— Lucille Fox. ii :4'i — Italian Serenaders. 7:00— Rudy Vallee (NBC) 7 :30 — Crossroads Quartette. 7:45 — Crooning Guitarist. 8:00— "Skillet Lickers" 8:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. 9:00— Cuckoo Club (NBC) !i : 30 — I.awson's Hawaiinns, Saturday, J u ] y J8 WFBE (250 m.-1200kc.) A. M.— 7 :00— Voices at Dawn 7 :30 — Classified Directory 8:00— Shopper's Hour 8:15 — Morning Melodies 8:45 — Sunshine Special 0:15— Post Baby Beautv Contest 9 :45 — Kleeman Home Chats 10:00— Zoo-ettes. 10:05 — Home Heating Procram 10:20— Nu-Co Painters 10 :35 — Kelvinator Program 10:50 — Women and the News 10 :59— Simper Time Announcement 11:00 — Acme Awning Special 11:1.5 — Gems from the Operas 11 :45 — Dance Frolic P. M.— 12:15 — Serenade 12:45— Bellonby Luncheon Musicale 1 :00 — Afternoon Melodies 1 :30— Post Baby Beauty Contest 2:00 — Tilda and Mary Lou 2:15— Ralph and Harlan 2:30— Dance Frolic 3:00— Organ Recital 3:15 — Anne and Bubs 3:30— Novelty Notes 3 :45 — Catholic Telegraph 4 :00 — Tea Time Tunes 4:4.5— Larry Oaks 5:00— Lyric Hour 5 :30— World Series Contest 6 :00 — Musical Interlude 6 :15 — World Series Contest 6:45— Berning Ford Travelogue 7:00— The Post Question Box 7 :15 — Dinner Dance Music 7 :30— H a r r y Hartman's Sport Review 7:45 — Barker's News Notes 8:00— Luckey Boys 8:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints 8:30 — Land o' Sky Gypsies 8 :45 — Coney Island Dance Frolic 9:00 — Independent Oil Stations 9 :30 — Meyer's Hot Tunes 9 :45 — Slumber Music WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— :45 — God's Bible School— Sunrise Worship 7:46— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Gruen Time Signal 8:00— Madam Flor-enz 8:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS) 8:45 — Charles W. Reaume Studio. 9:15— Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 9 :45— King George Speech from London, England (CBS). 10:15— Time; Weather 10:20— Woman's H o u r — Tremlette Tully 10 :45— Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 11:00— Don Bigelow and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11 :30— Hotel Taft Orchestra (CBS). Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Rem' P. M.— 12 :30— Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram 1 :00— Columbia Farm Program (CBS) 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 2:15— The Four Clubmen (CBS). 2 :28— Race Result from Latonia, Ky. 2:30— A. L. Fink Song Recital, Louie Johnson, tenor 3:00— Ann Leaf at the Organ (CBSI 3:30 — Spanish Serenade (CBS). 4:00— Luna Park Orchestra (CBS) 4 :30 — Studio Feature. 5:15— Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert. Pat Gillick. 5:30— Cincinnati Trade School Pro- gram. 5 :45— Studio 5:50— Eureka Baseball Scores 5 :55 — Sports Review 5:59— Burke Weather Forecast 6:00— St. Moritz Orchestra (CBS) Home Furniture Co. 6:15— Studio 6:25— Stocks, Cohle and Tyree 6:28— Time and weather 6 :30 — Happy Feet. 6:35 — Studio Feature. c . 6:45— Camel Quarter Hour (CB5J 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS) 7:15— Kate Smith and Her SwanK Music (CBS). 7:30— Junior Chamber of Commerce 8 :00— Unifed Spanish War Veteran s RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY. JULY 17, 1931. )f Greater Cincinnati Radio Stations Saturday, July 18 8:30 — Tacoma Park Orchestra. 9 :00 — Hank Simmons' Show Boat (CBS) 3:45 — Studio Feature 10:00— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 10:15 — Cliic Scroggin Orchestra al Coney Island. 10:45— Will Osborne and His Orches Ira (CBS). 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports 11:08— Guv Lombardo and His Or- chestra (CBS) 1 1 :80 — To Be Announced. 11:45 — l"S. R. Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M\— :00 — International Fiddlers. 0:20— Bulova Time. 11:30— Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 8 :00 — Morning Devotions 8:15 — Bradley Kincaid. 8 :30— Montgomery Ward Program (NBC) 8 :45 — Kashmiri Trio. 0:00— Dance Miniatures (NBC) 0:30— Art Talks, Cherry Greve 9:45— WLW Mail Bag 10:00— Organ and Vocal. 10:30 — Livestock Reports. 10:40— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 11:00— Elliot Brock, violin. 11:15— Swill Program (NBC) 1 1 :30— Livestock Reports. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals Noon — Governmental Glimpses, At- torney General Gilbert Bettman P. M.— 12:16 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:45— National Farm and Home Period (NBC). I :30 — Netherlaud Plaza Orchestra. 2 :00— Organ Matinee. 2:30— Cincinnati Zoo Symphony Con- certs. 3:00 — Ramona and Don Becker 3:15— Pacific Feature Hour (NBC) 4:00— Maze of Melody (NBC). 4 :30— Crosley Dealers' Hour 5 :00— Seckalorv Hawkins. 5:30— Doctors of Melody 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) 6:15— Taslyeasl Jesters (NBC) :30— The Chatter. 0:45— Los Ramos Baseball Scores. 0:511— Seger Ellis. 7:00 — Rudv Vallec, Connecticut Yankees (NBC) 7:30— R. F. D. Hour 8:00 — Croslev Saturday Knights. 8:30— Domino Orchestra (NBC) 0:00 — King Edward Cigar Band. 9:30— Clara, Lit and Em (NBC) 9 :45 — Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 10:00— Club Sohio 10 :30— Variety 10:45— Bob Newhall Sport Slices 10:68— Estate Weather Man. 11:00— The Singing Violin 1 1 :30— Doodle sockers. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 13:30— Castle Farm Orchestra. 1 :00— Fuller's Orchestra. 1:30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC) 8:15— Teddv Black's Orchestra (NBC) 8 :45 — Records 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9:15— Hits and Bits (NBC). 10:15— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 10:30— Kevs to Happiness (NBC) ll:00-Records 1 1 :30— Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop. Comm. Assn. 11:4.5— Records Noon— Sign off P. M.— 8:00— Classic Gems (NBC) 3 :30— Records 3:45 — Croslev Dealers Salute 4 :00— Records 5:00 — Southern Singers & Mitchem 5:80- The Gossipers (E. T.) 5:45— Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC) Saturday, July 18 li :00— Harry Willsev's Orchestra :30— Records 6:45— The Goldbergs (NBC) 7:00— Records 7:15 — Bavarian Peasant Band (NBC) 7:30— The Silver Flute (NBC) 8 :00— G e n e r a I Electric Hour (NBC) 8:30— Club Valspar (NBC) 9:00— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC) 10:00— Fuller's Orchestra 10:30— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 11:00— Sign off SUNDAY July 19 WCKY(202m.— 1490 kc.) a. m.— 10:00— Nomads (NBC). 10:30— Jewels of Destiny (NBC). 1 1 :00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 11:15— Echoes of the Orient (NBC). 1 1 :30 — Charlene and Kathleen. Ladies of Melody. 1 1 : 45— Waikiki Beach Combers. Noon— Jack Moore. p. m.— 12:15— Skillet Lickers. 12 :45— Men About Town. 1 :00— Sign off. 5 :45 — Lucille Fox, Blues. G :00 — Lawson's Hawiians 6:30 — Maurice Thompson, Baritone. 6 :45 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7 :00— Columbia Recording Skillet Lickers. 7:30— College of Music. 8:00— The Italian Sercnaders. 8:15 — Something for Everybody. 8:45— Willard Robison and His Deep River Orchestra (NBC) 0:15— Floyd Gibbons (NBC). 9 :30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. WFBE {250 m.— 1200 kc v A. M.— 8:00— Voices at Dawn. 9:00 — Morning Concert. [) : 30 — Inviiation to the Waltz. 10:00 — Kelvinator Program. 10:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints. 10 :30 — Eclioes from Germany. 10:45 — Berning Ford Travelogue. II -.00— Post Baby Beauty Contest. 11:30 — Excerpts from the Opera. 1 1 :45 — Tile Way Fire-Proof Home Program. P. M.— 12:15 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 12:30— Galvano & Cortez. 12:43— Organ Recital. 1 :00— Jewish Hour. 2:00— Garden of Melody. 2:30 — Hawaiian Bluebirds. 2:45— Harlan and Ralph. .'1 :00 — Moment Musicale. 3:15 — Brand Brothers, Banjo and Pian. 3:30 — Mary Tribble, soprano. 4:00— Vocal Varieties. 4 :30 — Sundown Serenader. 1 : 1.1 — Post Symphony Hour. 5:45 — Tea Time Tunes. 0:15— Musical Interlude. 0:30 — Church Federation Hour. 7:00— With the Scouts. 7:15 — Dinner Dance Music. 7 :30 — HarrvHartman's Sport Review. R:"ii— Dance Frolic. S:30— The Orioles. 8:45 — Twilight Reveries. 9 :00— Scotland Yard. 10:15 — Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6:45-7:45— God's Bible School- Sunrise Worship. 9:00— God's Bible School. 10:00— Watchtower Program (e. t.) 10:15— Jim Lightfield — Veteran's Civic Hour. 11 :00— Services from First Church of Christ Scientist. Noon — American Legion Program. It will be worth doing a little >ut-of-town fishing Monday morning (July 20) at 10 o'clock to hear Nan Blaclcstone. musical comedy player, introduced to the Columbia Broadcasting System's networks by Hey wood Broun, New York columnist, in whose new co-operative show, "Shoot the Works," she will star. WKRC won't carry the pro- gram on account of local con- flicts. Trv WABC (860 kilocy- cles— 348.6 meters) ; WAIU (640 kc— 468.5 m.) ; or WOWO (1160 kc— 258.5 m.) Sunday, July 19 P. M.— 1:00— Jewish Community Pru R ram. 1:30— Gypsv Trail (CBS). 2:00— Gruen Old-Fashioned Garden. :i :0U-C.uhedral Hour (CBS) 4:00-French Trio (CBS). 4:15— Pastorale (CBS). 4:45— Theo Karle (CBS). 5:00— Chicago Knights (CBS). 5:30 — Twilight Reveries. 5:58— Burke Weather Forecast. H: :4."> — Dance Records. ii : o0 — Peter Ibold Race Results. 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 6:15— Gus Van (NBC). G:30— Men About Town. (i :45 — Blue Ridge Shindiggcrs. 7 : 00 — Glenyce Chambers, blues. 7:15— Tri-State Entertainers, with Burger Bros., Ham and Lim. 7:45 — Crooning Guitarist. 8:00— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. 8:30— Death Valley Davs (NBC). «) :00— Nothing But the Truth. Alex- ander McQueen. 0:15— Little Red Riding Hood. ft : 30— Skillet Lickers. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — Voices at Dawn, 7 :30— Classified Directory. 8:00 — Morning Concert. 8-:-'10— Variety. 8:4." — Post Baby Beauty Contest. 9:15 — Sunshine Special. 9 :45— Home Chats. 10 ; 0u— Zoo- ettes. 10 :05 — Home Heating Program. 10 :20— Nu-Co Painters. 10:35 — Kelvinator Program. 10:50— Sister Mary's Kitchen. 10:59 — Simper Time. 11 :00 — Acme Awning Special. 11 :15 — Garden of Melody. 11 :45 — The Islanders. Noon — Organ Recital. P. M.— 12 :30— Variety. 12 :45 — Bellonby Luncheon Musicale 1 :00 — Afternoon Melodies. I :30— Post Baby Beauty Contest. Tue.day, J„l, .,. :00— Accordion Joe. :15 — Marion Clark. :30 — Dance Frolic. :45— Reds vs. Philadelphia, at M land Field. :45 — Ralph and Harlan. :00— Lyric Hour. :30— World Series Contest. :00 — Musical Interlude. .15 — World Series Contest. :45— Berning Ford Travelogue. :00 — Dance Frolic. :30— Harry Hartman's Sport R t - view. :45 — Barker News Notes. :0^ -Luckev Boys. :15— Dry Ridge Health Hints. :30— Twilight Reveries. :45 — Conev Island Dance Frolic. :00—I n d e p e n d e n t Oil Station Program. :30 — Meyer's Hot Tunes. : 45 — Licking River Fiddlers. :00 — Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6 :45 — God's Bible School, Sunrist Worship. 7 :45— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Gruen Time. 8:00 — Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 8:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS. 8 :45 — Madam Flor-enz. 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS). 9:16— Melody Parade (CBS). 9 :30— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10 00— Fashion Facts o( 1931 (CBS). 10 :15— Charles W. Reaume Studio, 10:45— Time and Weather. 10 : 48— Woman's Hour. Tremltlle Tully. 11 15— Don Bigelow and His Orches- tra (CBS). II -30— Enric Madriguera's Cuban Or- chestra (CBS) 1 1 :I5— Drinkmor Program (CBS) Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Rtvut. P. At.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS). 1 :15— Art Dry Cleaning Program. 1 :30 — Studio feature. 2-00— Charles W. Reaume Studio 2:15— Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS) . „ 2 :28— Race Result (rom Latonia, Ky. 2:30— (A. L. Fink)— The Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45— (A. L. Fink)— The Capitava- tors (CBS). 3:00Italian Idvl (CBS). 3:30— Four Clubmen (CBS). 4:00— Frank Ross, Songs (CBS) 4:15— Adventures in Words (CBb) 4:30— Gypsv Music Makers (CBS). 4 :45— Sweethearts of the Air (CBS). 3:110— National Security Lcagu< Broadcast (CBS). 5:15— Jor. R. Deins Organ Concert. Pat Gillick. , 11:30— Cincinnati Trade School Program. 5 :45 — Studio. 5:50— Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. 5 :59— Burke Weather Forecast. (1:00— Home Furniture Co., P-aie Smith (CBS) 0:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 0:13— Time and weather. 0:15-Linit Program, with Dennis King (CBS). „ ncl 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS)- 6:45— Camel Quartet hour (LHoJ- FLORENCE FREY BEAUTY EXPERT Every Wednesday 9:15 A. M. WLW -Aj PERMANENT WAVE $5.00 Positively Harmless — Painless — Quick FLORENCE FRET STUDIO S3] Wnlmit Slroel CHorry filOS CLAR-A-T0NE Brings In the distant sta- -* -^ i Ions clear as a bell. QQa Eliminates Interference. J1 frl r Reft. J3.00 value. Special w w w GEM-TONE CONTROL Gives you the highest and lowest tones at a nice even pitch. Easily in- stalled. Reg. $3.00 Value CUVr'VTfD CTf\DC oricinaltireW. V^rlE.L-JVt,K O 1 UKL COURT & RACE RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY. JULY 17, 1931. Tuciday. July 21 7:00 — Pryor's Crenio Military Band (CBS). T:15 — Rubcl Baking Co. Program. 7:30— The Bon Rons (CBS). 7 • l"> — Studio Feature. B:00 -Henry George (CBS) B:80— The Bristolcers (CBS) 9 -00— Ben Bcrnie and His Blue Ribbon Orchestra (CBS). 0:15— Tito Guizar (CBS). 0:30— Chic Scroggin Orcliestra at Coney Island. 10 :00— Pyol' Blackberry Dudes. 10:15— Studio. hi ;>b— Sports Review. 10:25— Hanpv Feet. J0 :30— Bridge Lessons bv Tom Col- lins Jr. 10:45 — Taconia Dance Orcliestra. 11:00— Gruen Witching Hour. 11:30— Time and weather. 11 :32— Tacoma Park Dance Orcliestra 11:45- I"-. R. Deins, Organ Concert, Pal Gillick. n WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. At.— 0:00— International Fiddlers. 6:29— Bulova Time. 6:30— Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 7:59 — Bulova Time. 8 :00 — Morning Devotions. 8:15— Bradley Kincaid. 8:30— Montgomery Ward (NBC). 6:45— Ford and Wallace (NBC). !) :00— Morning Ballads. 0:15 — Frances Ingram (NBC). :30— Fashionette. 9:45 — Premium Man. 10:00 — Murray Horton's Orchestra. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. (0:40 — Organ and Vocal Solos. 11:00 — Island Serenaders. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals. Noon— Tuxedo Trio. P. M.— 12:15 — Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:45 — Market Reports. 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1 :00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 .30— Netherland Plaza Orchest 2:00 -Organ Matinee. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 8:45— Kiss Proof (NBC). 8:00— Mary Steele, vocal solos. 3:15— U. S. Navy Band (NBC). 4:00— Seger Ellis. 4:15 — Eumer Refik. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4:40 — Mitchem and Quartet. 5:00— The Hottentots, 6:30— Jim and Walt. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— The Chatter. 6:30 — Southern Singers. 6:45— Mail Pouch (e. t.L 7:00— Armstrong Quakers (NBC). 7:30 — Los Ramos Baseball Scores. 7 ;35— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 7 : 15— Sisters of the Skillet (NBC). 8:00— Fuller's Orchestra. 8:15— Icvcast Jamboree. 8:30— W'erk Bubble- Blowers. 9:00— Crimelights. 9 :30— Chevrolet Chronicles (e. t.). 10:00— Cotton Queen Minstrels. 10:30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sports Slices. 10:58— Estate Weather. 11 :00 — Los Amigos. U:30— Moon River. Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra A. M-— 18:30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra. Cas- tle Farm. 1 :00— Sign off. Baby Rose Marie, youngest tar of the stage, screen and ra- dio, will sing' three popular songs when she stands on her tip-toes reach the microphone, as guest artist on the Nestle "Chocolateers" program next Friday (July 24) at 7 p. m. ovei station WLW. "I Want To Sing About You,' "I Can't Write the Words" and "What Are You Thinking About, Baby?" are the numbers to bi presented by the darling' or th< studios, who "looks the wa; Helen Kane sings." Although still an infant. Baby Rose Mane has made a six-months tour in vaudeville of which 13 weeks was spent on Broadway, at the Winter Garden. She has been a stellar attraction at such well- known places as the Ambassa- Hotel Grill, the Silver Slipper and the Earle Theatre in Atlan- tic City. Tuesday, July 21 0:00— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC). 10:00 — Fuller's Orchestra. 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 11:00— Sign Off. WEDNESDAY July 22 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A.M.— 7 : 00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15— Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8 :00— Mountain Red. 8:15— Early morning dance program. 9:15— My New Kentucky Home, 0:45 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Gotidiss (NBC). 1 : 15 — Classic Hour. 1(1:45— Musical Novelties. 11 :30— Skillet Lickers. Noon— Little Red Riding Hood. John R. Coppin Co. P. M.— 1->:I5— Popular Dance Melodies. 12:30— Live Stock Reports. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. I :00— Sign off. 5:45 — Dance Records. 5:50— Peter Ibold Race Results. 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 0:00— Amos 'n" Andy (NBC). 6:15 Charlene and Catherine. 0:30— Crooning Guitarist. 0:45— Tommy Ott. 7 :00— Lawson's Hawaiians, 7 :30— Christian Glee Club. 8:00— Skillet Lickers. 8:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra Lookout House. !> :00 — Steve Bates. 9:15 — Lucille Fox, Blues. 10 — Men About Town. 15— Nothing But the Truth. Alex ander McQueen. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) Wednesday, July 22 7:15 — Dinner Dance Music. 7 :30~Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7:45— Nu-Co Painters. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints. 8:30— Colonial Stages. 8:45— Coney Island Dance Frolic. 9 :00— Tile- Way Fire-Proof Home Program. 9:30— Jewish Commercial Program. 10:30— Slumber Music WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M-— il:45— Sunrise Worship, God's Bible School. 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7:59 — Gruen Time. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 0:00— Oxol Feature (CBS) 9:15 — Madam Flor-enz Beauty Pro- gram. 9 :30 — Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:011— Learn to Swim. (CBS). 10:15— Floraline Talk. 10:20 — Time and weather. 10 :23— Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tulley. 10 :45— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 11:15— Don Bigclow Orchestra (CBS). 11:30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11 :45 — Drink-Mor Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue Wednesday, July 22 P. M.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. Wednesday. July 22 1:00— Farm Program (CBS). 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio 2:15— Salon Orchestra (CBSi. 2:28— Race Result from Latoiiia, Ky. •2:30— The Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45— Dancing by the Sea (CBS) ;t:15— Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.J 3 :30— Columbia Camp Concert (CBS). 4-00— Asbury Park Casino Orchestra (CBS). 4 15— A. L. Fink, Luna Park Or- chestra (CBS). 4:45— Edna Wallace Hopper's Youth Matinee (CBS). 5:00— Bill Schudt's Going to Press (CBS). 5:15— Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert. Pat Gillick. .-, ; 30— C i ii c i n n a t i Trade School Program. 5 :45 — Studio. 5:50— Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55— Sports Review. 5 :59— Burke Weather Forecast. 0:00— Kate Smith Swanee Music Home Furniture Co. (CBS). 6:10— Stocks, Coble & Tyree. 6:13— Time and weather. 6:15— Linit Program, with Kennis King (CBS). 0:30— Miller and Lyle (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS). 7 : 00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15— The Barbasol Program (CBS). M.- 8:45- WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 6:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15— Teddy Black'- Orchestra (NBC). Tuesday, July H :45 — Records. n:00— Mrs. Blake's Raldo Coin NBC). 0:15— Records. 10:00— Talks by Dr. Ella Oppen- heimer (NBC). 10 15— R a d i o Household Institute (NBC). 10:30— U. S. Army Baud (NBC). 1 1 ;00— The Hellman T r o u b a d o r s (NBC), 11:15— Sign Off. P. M.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop. Comm. Assn. 1 :00— Sign off. •2:00— Women's Radio Review (NBC). 3:00— Records. 3:40— Gershoni Parking-ton Quintet from London (NBC). 4-00— Lady Next Door (NBC). 4:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4 :45 — Records. 5:15 — Vocal Solos. 5:30— The Gossipers (e. L). 5 :45 — Records, (j : 00— Midweek Federation Hymn Sing (NBC). 0:30 — Jerry Foy. 0:45— Larry Grueter, Accordion. 7 :00— Blackstone Plantation (NBC) 7 :30— National Dairy Virtuoso (NBC). 8:00— Nash Parade (NBC). 8:30— Fuller Brush Man (NBC). and Voices at Dawn. Classified Directory. Morning Musicalc. ■Variety. -Post Baby Beauty Contest 0:15 — Sunshine Special. 9:45— Kleeinan Home Chats. 10 :00— Zoo-ettes. 10:05— Home Heating Program. 10:2(1— Variety. H):3. r i— Kelviuator Program, 10:50— Mrs. Evans Question! Answers. 10:59— Simper Time. 11:00— Acme Awning Special. 11:15— Garden of Melody. 1 1 :45— Song Hit Time. Noon — Organ Recital. P. M.— 12 :30— Vaudeville. 12 ;45— Bellonby Luncheon Musicale. 1 :00— Pauline Ungar, contralto. 1 :15— Kroness Brothers. 1 ;30— Post Baby Beauty Contest. 1 :45— Ralph and Harlan. 2:15 — Galvano & Cortez. 2:30— Frank Stewart, vocal recital. 2:15— Reds vs. New York, at Red- land Field. 4:30— Paul & Gene, "The Miniature Kings of Jazz." 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:45— World Series Contest. Ij : 00— Musical Interlude. 6:15— World Series Contest. 6:45— Berning Ford Travelogue. 7:00— The Post Question Box. Out Of Its Swaddling Clothes! Radio broadcasting is now recognized as the power- fully effective advertising medium it has proved itself to be. But it still needs at the helm the guiding power of experience. And that is what the CHARLES W. REAUME organization supplies. We Know Radio. CHARLES W. REAUME RADIO ADVERTISING 622 Broadway CHerry 2440 A Laugh a Second with HyRye and Willie Winsum Radio's biggest 15 minutes of good cheer and snappy music. Every Tuesday and Thursday 7:15 P. M. WKRC Tune in ... . enjoy yourself Sponsored by The Rubel Baking Co. Don't Miss — These Wonderful Programs To be without RADIO DIAL in your home is like touring the country without a road map and guide. You may "get there," sure but if you're missing all the high spots, you are not getting your money's worth. RADIO DIAL puts you in intimate touch with "What's What" in Radio entertainment. Mailed to you weekly with one week's complete program. Clip off and mail the coupon below with one dollar attached, and we will enter your subscription for 6 months. RADIO DIAL 6 months for $1-00 RADIO DIAL 22 E. 12th Street Cincinnati, Ohio Gentlemen: Enclosed for 6 month: find One Dollar (SI) ( ] New Suh«criher Send RADIO DIAL | 1 Renewal Nome . . . Addreti City II I. V W.dn..d. r . J»W " US). irr Man. i.if Io Vie»V 1 I ... Pal G ttl W (42K m. 700 ke.) \ M lal Fiddler*, old- I i.nr I lasses. (NBC) lions. i : . I ■: ■ . I Idl« Will ... ■ u . I ram i li ■III Progi n u-WLV N,...ir . , P M 18:15— Bui ii and Home i i Poreca Winthrop .. | i, ■. R Mitchem -n,.l Qua NBC) «:»' I «n Ca> tie I \ .nelv Man Orchestra 1 MiJm k -hi V M 18 SO— Hiiiii Heme'. Orchestra. Castle Farm W.d...d.j. July 22 i P M un's Kadi" He view dm Walla.-. Hoppei I I i:, .sain Wilson, banH.nr mi bj II."'. I; , , ddlers. . ii... ipcrs (e t i ■ i ii. Madame ri i.. in Wasll n.ri BI ■■ . . •• | | I . . 10 Mi biloil Con, I IB! 8.00—Haliey Stuart (NBI ... .1 i i lei '■ 10 '" ii. 1. 1 Gib 'i I , . M Mary and Bob. the principle; characters of the new scries o True Story hours heard Monday at 9 p.m. on WSAI. Mary il pl.yed by Nor» Sterling, well known radio actress, and Bob is played by Cecil Secrest. THURSDAY .lulv 23 \\S\I 225 m. 1330 kc] V M * and Glenn \ • c h e > t r a .orda, I o H.xir Ion Hour (XBO Records. loosehoH Institute ;. -cords. \Y( :K Y( 202 m. 1490 kc.) A. M. el luitarisl ; t;. Mo ii.- i lam Rftl - I . I 1,1 H |. Gun CNBC) Warren I BI Houi eeltic! Noon I ittl ' ! -I lolm | o P. M. . I 18:48 — Ret indenmrelen 1:00— Si. ....I. (NBI 0:15— Ta-i NBI 7:00— Di x ie Spin In illi Uc* 1 luceli rothen - I \\l I.I- 2S0m. laxikc.l V M DklWII ■ - K 'ctman Homf I ■ me Heating Pn .inters - c Ani>xincttT>i-.ii - peeiaL ■ rimes. N.s.n Organ ReduL P. M- : looby Lunchto Ired ExrWer. I lV-Urrr Oak*. MaliDcc ■ Thursday, July 23 ,-s, New Vork, ai Red land I'"ii Id IS Ralph ami Harlan. Hour, 10 World Scries Contesi :00— Musical Interlude. i . -World Series I onti it, ■ .1 Travelogue mi |] K Posi i }w »Uon Box. 1.". Dinner Dance Music Ifl Harri i 1- :ni. m' Spori Re- \ Eew \'i— Marker Ni WS. :()0— Luckey Boys. Ifi— Dry Kidyc Healtll Hum-. ;80— Land o' Sk) Gypsies. : ■ i ..... j Island Dance Frolic :00— Independent Oil Program, ;. yer's M". Tunes. 13 Sluntbei Music WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) \ m. .'. .1 [hiji i 1 i Mill Billj Kul , ■■* | ,un ii rime Signal. Bi ■ i ■ . Pro 'I. Ill, . i onunutci I I i : 8:30 I'M' S< rap B. ' , i ■,. , U< lodii [1 I l . If ,1'v ■ n olidati d M n liants' Pro I ■ uld Beauts l*alk i I harles W. Resume Studio Womei i Bi 10:45 — Time and weather. 10 is Woman's Hour, i r. ml. ttc Tully. .it, . 1 i :45 Sin ii Program Noon \\ urtitzei Music Bi P W. uls' Pro 1:00 — Columbia Farm Pi ■ rles W. Rcaun ■ : itonia, K\ i Fink— The i 9 15 A L Fink- Ben and Helen Thuriday, July 23 i mi Mclodj Magi< (( BS) : 10 Hotel Tafl Orchestr I I I I, ,i ish Arl Program (CBS). i ,.i Kalhryn Parsons (CBS). 1:45— Mccl th, VrtisU [I B I 5:00— Frank Ross, Songs (CBS I i i i los R. Dcins Organ Concert, Pal Gillick. 5 :u i i it . i ii ii a t i Trade School Program. 6:45 — Studio. 5:50— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6 55 Spurts Review. 5:59 Burke Weather Forecast. 6 00— Kate Smith and her Swanee Musii (CBS) Home Furni- ture Co, 6 [0- Stocks, Collie & ryree. i, 13 i ime and weathei 0:15 I urn Program, with Dennis Kins (CBS) 30 Daddy and Roll.. (CBS). ., (5 ( amel Quarter-Hour (CBS) ; 00 It in'-. Cremo Military Band i. BS) T-13 il R i V, illii Winsnm, Rubcl, i io i lu 1 olumbians (CBS). : r, The Old Wurtiburj Mall Pro ii 8 :00 I In- Premier Salad Dressers ,i q: i i [5 i hi I ols Melod) Girl (CBS) 8 :80— Detective S t O r y Program (CBS). una I (ana ' In hestra 10 Barbara Maurel (CBS) I ; i Peter's Parade Ml i Pyol Blackbcrrj Dudes 10 i." Studio sports Review 10 5 Happy Feet. 1" 10 i. in. Scroggin ' irchi stra al Com , Island. 11 00 -< .nun Witching Hour. 1 1 80 -Time and weather. II '■: Poet's Corner. Organ < Pat Gillick. Thursday, July 23 dl< rs merj Ward Program B i i Bulova Time. 8:45—1 ord and Wallac I g 00 Raj Perkins (NB( I 9 15 -Beatric. Mabii (NBC) i ommunits Heali Wilibach. ■ i ;-, ii. usekeepi r ( hats I Murray Horton Orchestra in io i ivi Stock Reports 10:40— Jim and Wall 1 1 00 1 1- \ enetian I liri i il I,-, -swm Program I MBl I 11 30— Wl W Mars ii [5 -River Reports . I imi Signals Noon S Ellis P. M.— 12 16— Bulova Time. i h. Hotel Gibson Orchestra, 12 15— Market Reports 12 "in -Live Stock Reports. I -00— National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Nethcrland Plaza Orchestra, 2:00— Organ Matini i 2:30 Chicago Serenadi (NBC). 2:45— Kiss Prool I NBI I 8 :00— Afternoon Mclodii - 3:30— Maze of Melody (NBC). i mi -Segcr Ellis 4:15— Gems of Melody (NB( I -1:30— Live Stock Reports. I 10 -Hat in i Wcllcn and Don Becker .In.. Wallace ll.>]ifei i NIK I 5 I.". Wildeson'B Wildcats. 5 :29 Bulova Time. 5 :30— Mm and Walt, 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 0:15— Taslyeast Jesters (NBC). 6:30— Glenn Adams, Dog Talks. 8:45 News Flashes From Hollywood ,ii) , 00 Baseball Scores. 7 05- -The Chatter. 7:15— Rin-Tin-Tin Thriller (NB( i 7:30 -Nctlierland Plaza i Irchc ;t« 7 1.-, Sisters ..( the Skillet (NBC). 8:00- -Varsity Four. 8:15— Horseshoe Gardens Orchestra 30 1 astilian Nights. • —Fuller's Orchestra. 9;30_ Clara, Lou and Em (NBC) n is ., ;jcnn Sisters and Rai n i aim. la Dr\ Program. 10 :80— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 10:58— Estate Weather Man. I I mi -Grcal Composers. ii 10 M i River. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. A. M— 12:30— Henry Busse' Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. I mi Sign of) WLW 1428 m.— 700 kc.) A. Mo- ral Fiddlers i nne. buses. 7 15— A .V P. Food \"< ws NBC) Bulova Time. B ■•»•— Morning Devotions WE CALL and DELIVER SUITS, Men's 3-Pc 75c Plain 60c Fur Collar .... 80c Fur Collar and Cuffs, $1.00 CLEANED AND PRESSED Phone AVon 9030 City Office, 628 Walnut THE TEASDALE COMPANY COATS WSAI (22S in.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC1 8 13 l , .l.l-. l:l.„r Orclu " ■■ (NBC) 15 Records 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio ' olumn I .in 9 IB Record! 9 : r. ' Irgan Program, 10:00— Mccormick's Old Time Fid.ll. i 10 16 R a .1 1 o Household Institute i eorrls. 11 00—1 he Hellman 1 roubadon II :18— Sigi ' . P. M.— 12 1 i Stock Reports. :00— Sign off. .n's Radio Review :00— Records. :45 — Crosley Dealers' Salute. :O0 — Mona Motor Organ Recital. :30 — Rinso Talkie I .1 Talk. J„sc|.li K.e- :1S — Ramona. Gossipers (c, t.) ■a— Ri :00 — Harry Willacy's Orchotra. :2.a— Better Business Bureau Talk. :'Kl— Records. G— Goldman Band (N'BCl. ■ :00— LucW Strike Dance Orchestra (NBC). :l-.>— The Slebbins >' — Murray Hortoo's Orchestra, at Horseshoe Gardens. ("—Sign off. Volume I, No. 10 FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1931 Price 5c Reception to World Filers, Seven Foreign Broadcasts Fill Week With Entertainment Two Programs are Booked from Paris Jean Patou, designer, will speak Sunday Morning In an attempted rebroadcast from Paris next Sunday (Aug- ust 2) direct descendants of the Lafayette, Rochambeau and De- Grasse families will be heard over an NBC network and WSAI when they speak in the hall of the Colonial Exposition replica of Mount Vernon, at a dinner given in their honor. The program is scheduled from -1:00 to 5 :00 p. m. Many unusual aspects are ex- pected in the transoceanic broad- cast, which will be introduced by a Paris announcer in the Mount Vernun banquet hall. The pro- gram is also expected to include incidental music by a French orchestra. Five English programs of va- ried character will be relayed by the British Broadcasting Com- pany thrcugh NEC stations this week including WSAI. The Wireless Military Band, conducted by B. Walton O'Don- ald, which has been featured be- fore in rebroadcast- from Eng- land, will play Monday (July 27 | at ;l :3.j p. m. From Queen's Hall on Tues- day (July 28), at 3:20 p. m., the concert of the International So- ciety of Contemporary Music will he broadcast. A symphony concert under die direction of Sir Scherchen will lie offered next Friday (July 31) .# a ia&s«,j::-,a Anne Butler, known to vaude- ville followers as "The Hum- ming Bird," will be starred in the Radio Roundup on the Co- lumbia network Thursday night (June 30) at 10:30. Dial it on WABC (860 kc— 348.6 m.) In private life. Miss Butler is the wife of Art Landry whose band has played in Cincinnati at the Albee and at Castle Farm. She has visited in the city several times with him. at 3:35, An orchestra concert under direction of Percy Pitt will follow on August ;? at 3:35 p. m. The final program will consist of excerpts from Tidworth's "Tattoo" on Tuesday (Augusl 4t at 3:25 p. m. lean Patou, noted couturier of Paris, will speak from the French capital over the Colum- bia network in the regular inter- national broadcast hour on Sun- day (July 26) at 11 :30 a. m. The topic will be "Fads and Fashions." WBBM is the near- est outlet i TTO kc). GOOD PROGRAMS ON OUT-OF-TOWN RADIO STATIONS THIS WEEK Mm STATION GUIDE KMOX- -10B0 kc— 275-1 m. WABC— SOOkc— 3JB.0 in. WBBM— 770 kc— 389.4 m. Wr'UM— 1230 kc— 243.8 m. WGN - 720 kc— 410.4 ni. Wl.S - 670V. x - 4fm A % Mary Steele, WLW contralto, is to sing as Canovetta in the Canova Musicale Novelesque every Wednesday at 9:30 p.m., beginning tkis week: (July 29). She has just returned from Cleveland where she was fea- tured guest soloist at the dedi- cation of the new studios of sta- tion WGAR. She also sings her own program of songs at WLW at 3 o'clock Tuesday afternoons, is soloist with the Matinee Play- ers on Wednesdays at 3 p. m,, with the Crosley Dealers* or- chestra on Saturday afternoons at 4:30, and in Club Sohio Fri- day nights at 10 o'clock. For several years on both WSAI and WLW, Miss Steele sang only classic music. She even went to Pans to study for a year under French masters. Last winter, substituting for a "blue" singer who failed to ap- pear for a program. Miss Steele revealed a "blue" voice full of color and personality. Now she sings both types of songs w equal success and with a grow- ing following for her "blue numbers. Although she retains her mat (Continued on page 3) Post, Gatty to Broadcast on August 2 Reception, banquet for round-the-world flyers will be reported by WLW Wiley Post and Harold Gatty, round-the-world fliers, will talk through WLW next Sunday { August 2 ) at approximately 3 p. ni. when Cincinnati's official welcome to them is broadcast. The banquet at ? :30 p. in. the same day, at which '.2, .500 Cincin- natians are expected to greel them, also will be broadcast by WLW. Post and Gatty will stop in Cincinnati on their national radio tour which will give people all over the United States an oppor- tunity to see them and their ship, the Winnie Mae. The broadcast- ing in the afternoon will he at Watson Airport where they will land. Rudy Vallee's Mother Dies Last week's congratulations to Rudy Vallee on account of Ins narriage, this week were turned to expressions of sympathies at the loss of his mother, who died last Wednesday at her home in Westhrook Lane, Conn. Rudy and his younger brother, William, rushed to their mother's bedside by plane in time to talk to her before she sank into a coma from which she did nol n cover. Complete Radio Programs Begin on Page 4 RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY, JULY 34. 1931. Weekly RADIO DIAL Published every Thursday by the Radio Dial Publishing Co., 22 East 12th St., Cincinnati, Ohio. Contents copyrighted. NATALIE GIDDINGS, Editor VOL. I JULY 24, 1931 No. in There's No Accounting For Tastes "There's no accounting for tastes," we say with a complacent shrug when another's cultural standards are inferior to our own. But every now and then the pat phrase kicks back in an unexpected twist. We are thinking of an acquaintance: a mechanic, from a family of mechanics and farmers. His musical studies — if they can be dignified by that term — have been limited to a "little red schoolhouse." Accord- ing to accepted Hoyle, his program preferences should consist of jazz or old-time tunes, nothing more meaty than military marches or simple waltzes at best. Yet the fact is that he is an even more ardent devotee of the classics than many music-school graduates, jazz he loathes; fiddling, ditto. But let a symphony orchestra or opera performance get on the air, and he sits entranced. Why such tastes in such an individual? (By the way, he is not an Italian.) Interesting as that question may be to the analyst, his case raises another more important for broadcasting:, it seems to us. Can musical tastes be charted accurately according to occupation education, or financial rating? The obvious answer of the studios is "yes." A majority of the people do the work of the world, hold no scholastic degrees, and pay no income taxes. Therefore, their tastes run to what the average program provides. And maybe this neat theory is right. But again, it may be wrong. Neat theories often crack up in landing on the facts. Perhaps there are more listeners like our acquaintance than the broadcasters assume. If there are, the old saw about no accounting for tastes is a tight shoe on the other foot, viewing programs from the standpoint of these listeners. Around the Dial By THE DIAL TWISTER N'dw 1 In- < iotdbergs can be heard in Cincinnati (WSAI at fi:45 p.m., daily except Tuesday and Sunday). I 'Inn's good news. This interesting family lias piled up a big following in (lie East, and ought to do as much here, The Goldbergs arc human, and this is what makes radio characters live. But Amos and Andy fans needn't be uneasy because the Pepsodent people are also sponsoring this new feature. The Fresh Air Taxi boys will go on doing business at the same old stand, at least as long as they "click." By the way, Andy's fish-fry for Mr. Van Porter seems to have taken the prize among their recent enisodes. It deserved I lie Eno Crime Club, mentioned lust week as not being released locally, now is being aired by VVKRC (Monday at s p, m, and Wednesday at 8:30 p.m.). It's a satisfying earful for those who like '''in daring and desperate. Here's more evidence that this is a banner summer for the broad- easting of good music. NBC is car- rying the Chicago Symphony Or- chestra's series of outdoor con- certs (WCKY, Sunday at 8:45 p.m.). It's almost gilding the lily to add that the program is fine. \nothcr program of as high cali- ber is ili-,i of the Rove Symphony t U LW, Monday at 6:50 p. inA Larito Rapee's slu.es are being filled, and mighty well, by Maurice Baron, th enew conductor. Mark Twain's famous wisecrack about the exaggerated reports of his death goes for Dr. Arthur Tor- rance. A while back the newspa- pers carried a story that this former Columbia headliner had been drowned while exploring in Africa. But the other evening he broke into one of Lowell Thomas' broadcasts, as alive as ever. Hope he gets on the air regularly, and soon. * » * if you like to lop off the eve- ning wilh something restful, try ["he Singing Violin i\\ LW", Sat- urday al 11 p. m.). Besides splen- did violin solos, the program in- cludes pleasing poetry. Henry and George still leave a trail of laughs in their wake (WKRC, Tuesday at 8 p. m.). Some time ago the sponsors thought about changing the style of the program. Listeners must have let 'em know pronto that the blackouts get over in a big way. Looks like the dance music mo- no pol.y in the late evening hours may be breaking. More evidence is the Great Composer's program (WLW, Thursday at 11 p.m.). The orchestra is as good as the music. If this keeps up, hot tunes or nothing won't be the rule after ten or half past. Which will be good news at a lot of dials, too. * * * Many a Cincinnati ear is hearken- ing to the new Pillsbury Pageant (WKRC, Friday at 9 p.m.) be- cause Mabel Jackson and Mary Alice Cheney are half the mixed quartet. Yes, these former local favorites are making good in the "big town." * * * They're just like people evcry- hoilv knows, meaning Clara Lu, and Em (WLW. Thursday. Friday and Saturday at «):;io p.m.). And that, of course, is why these girls put on such a good show. The Dial Twister picks Km as the most individual of the three. But Clara and Lu aren't far behind. The Bristoleers are replacing the Philco Hour (WKRC, Tuesday at 8:30 p.m.). However, it's a con- solation to find the new feature is something off the beaten track, in fact, a mighty satisfying program. Mozart Serenade Will Be Part of Lewisohn Music Music Mozart wrote lo be played by live musicians under the window of any fair lady whose h>ver might hire (he quin- tet is "Eine Kleine Nachtmttsik" which the entire string section of the New York Philharmonic symphony orchestra will play from the Lewisohn stadium through WKRC ai 8:30 Sundav night (July 86 i Station Jottings WCKY Saturday night at the General Store, all the sports dolled Up in their round-toed hut ton shoes. That's the picture the ( v Roads Quartet paints at ', :'.'u Saturday night (July 25). No "boop-oop-a-doop" is allowed. Raymond Knight and his Cuckoo aides will gather al !' o'clock Saturday night (July 25) for a half hour of uproarious comedy in their burlesque skit. The plot thickens in WCKY' mystery play, "The Man Who Could 'Not Die." More thrills and chills at 8:15 p. m. Monday (July T, ). Frank Crumit will sing "It's a Girl Like You," and Julia San- derson will sing "Tell Me, Little Gypsy," during the Blackstone Plantation program at 7 o'clock Thursday night (July 30). To- gether they will sing "Blue Room." Tommy and Willie, who sang 3(i weeks' at WKRC on the Kop- per's Coke program, now sing every night except Saturday and Sunday at WCKY. Radio Dial programs give their schedule. Dorothy Swan, pianist, and Elizabeth Williams Huber, vo- calist, will present the College of Music program al WCKY ( fitly 86) at 1 :30 p. m. WFBE Robert Bentley, former lead- ing man wilh the National Play- ers, conducts the Story Telling Time for children every day at 1 :15 ]i. m., except Sunday, at WFBE. Julius Stein, Avondale hoy who has just finished a vaude- ville tour with Gus Edwards' Review, is appearing at 7 :15 every evening except Sunday at WFBE. Songs and impersona- tions are his specialty. Pastels in Prose at WFBE at -1 o'clock Sunday afternoon in- chtdes the reading of prose and poetry bits worthy of thought interspersed with melody. WLW Tu the Los Amigos program at 1 1 o'clock Tuesday night ( July 2S), Mme. Alys Miehot will sing "La Mori D'une Rose," and Lacalle's "Amapola." Louis John fohnen will sing Pessard's "Requiem du Cour." Joseph A. Chambers, technical supervisor, is spending every spare moment in the air in hi- new Great Lakes biplane. He leaves it at Lunken Airport so he can fly to the transmitter at Ma- son for emergencies there. . . Grace Raine, vocal director, i: spending a vacation in the Alle- gheny Mountains. . . . Henry Thies is fishing in northern Wis- consin. . . . Charlie Dameron is recuperating from a brief illness al another northern resort. John G. Kidd of Stuart Kidd's Book Shop is writing Book News read Friday mornings at f) :30 on the Homemakers' pro- gram. WSAI Lois Bennett, star of the Arm strong Quakers program, will he guest artist on the General Mo- tors program Monday nighj (July 27) at 8:30. Our Dialy Dozen By DON BECKER Celebrated Bari- tone Soloist Will Sing for Maxwell John Charles Thomas, celebra- ted American baritone, will sing on the Maxwell House concert at 8 :30 Thursday nights through NBC stations for eight weeks be- ginning this Thursday (July 30). WHAS is the closest outlet for the programs ( 8 2 k c — 365.G m.) The Life of Riley We are back! This is not the idle ramblings of an old namby-pamby, but the state- ment of one who knows when he is back. We were back at Latonia the other day too! About $40.00. My typewriter had a few domes- tic troubles last week. Hence "Our Dialy Dozen" was neglected. The "o" and the "i" had another falling out and everytime I'd write the word "Lover" it would turn out — "Liver." How embarrassing! Frank Salt, of "Salt and Peanuts* 1 deserves another mention. He was waitinc patiently for ;i check from the Artist's Bureau, "Was the check from Eaton?" asked Ralph Haburton, the Artist's Bureau's King. "Naw," boomed Salt. "Hunger!" And then Richard Pavey added his name to the long list by sign- ing off Bradley Kincaid in the fol- lowing manner : .."You have just heard Bradley Kincaid, the Kentucky Mountain Dog and his Hound Boy Guitar!" Veterinarians please copy. Cliff Adams is back too! He was away for several days. Some time ago. Cliff left VVKRC's Studios at a late hour. On the corner stood noine dirty old meany-meanies. They made a scurrilous {pronounced smart- aleck) remark about announcers. Mr. Adams bravely talked back. The Honor of Announcers must be upheld. It was and Cliff received a broken arm! Now lie announces with one arm! How difficult! WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT DON BECKER By Don Bkckkk ft ® '^Br-^A ^f %. Seger Ellis, popular WLW crooner, stage star, and recording irtist, appeared a bit non-plussed when this attractive bevy of Miami University co-eds caught him unawares during their re- :ent inspection tour of WLW. From left to right, the university- girls are: Helen Corson, Middletown; Lillian Greenfield, Day- ton; Anne Bradney. Panama Canal Zone; Eleanor Cumberland Columbus; Marian Root, Cleveland ; Jean Montgomery, Toledo ] id Annette Ashman, Coshocton, O. Incidentally, Miss Ashman was recently selected by John Held, Jr., as the 1931 Miami University "Personality Girl."' When we walked into his studio (Mother Becker's Kitchen) he was sitting down. By this we knew he was normal. All normal persons sit down. "Are you a Neurotic, Mr. Beck- r?" asked us. "No," retorted the former, "an Elkl" |Here are some of the statistics of his life: Age,- Not quoted. Eyes: Mostly black. Sometimes blue. Then again, black and blue. Doesn't like girls— MUCH! Doesn't like publicity— MUCH! Has only one father and one mother. He is an incurable ukulele player, and as we walked away we shook our head — such a young man, doomed to such a terrible Tate for the rest of his days! Playing a ukulele! And by the by, have you heard "The Song of the Guillotine?" -I'M B 1 D !> I X' M Y B<> DY GOi u>BYE!" DIALAUGHINGLY YOURS, DON BECKER. Herbert Newman, Fenton Pugh Will Share Recital Fenton Pugh, tenor, a n d Herbert L. Newman, pianist, both faculty members of the College of Music, share the program of that school which WLW will broadcast at G:30 p. in., Sunday (July 2G). Newman's piano solos include the difficult Liszt number. "La Campanella," and two Chopin numbers: "Berceuse," and "Etude F Major." RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JULY 2i, 1931. Singin' Sam Is Barbasol Man Singin' Sam is back on tke air again, this time as Sin gin* Sam, the Barbasol Man, in a Colum- bia network program which WKRC Will carry at 7:15 p.m. every Monday. Before he went on WLW a year or more ago as Singin Sam, the Great States Lawn- mower Man, he was Harry Frankel of the vaudeville team of Frankel and Dunlevy which for several years toured RKO and other circuits. Before that, he was a featured comedian with Al G. Fields' Minstrels. He spent some time at WTAM last winter before returning to the Cincinnati station for a few weeks this spring. His radio "draw" has been to enormous that the Barbasol pro- gram sponsors have side-tracked their barber shop quartet for the bass voice of Singin Sam who will have the whole program to himself, talking and singing as his sense of showmanship dic- tates. Names of New Hotel Bandmen Are Jaw-breakers It takes a good drink of vodka to pronounce the names that have sprung up at Cincinnati hotels to torment radio listeners who hate to break their jaws to talk about orchestras they like. Hotel Gibson has imported Joseph Cherniavsky from Holly- wood to direct its orchestra and Cherniavsky has put the same kind of enthusiasm into it that made a success of his scores for such musical talking pictures as "Show Boat." Netherland Plaza has Col. Constant in Poliansky and his Imperial Balalaika orchestra, playing its first engagement out- side of New York where they have been making records since they came to America only a few months ago. Their music is authentically Russian and is played on balalaikas, the native Russian plectrum instrument Several titled Russians are said to be members of the group, which is reported to have been recruited from the staff officers of the late Imperial Russian army. William C. Stoess, musical director of WLW and WSAI through which both orchestras broadcast daily, selected the bala- laika orchestra on a recent trip to New York for that purpose "I lived on Russian food for a week visiting all the places where the Russian orchestras played." he said. "If my stomach badn' held out, we never would have got an orchestra." Don Becker and his brain child, the Lavender Network, lr action. Becker is shown in the inset. The Irrational Broadcast ..jg Company players are, left to right: George Lloyd, Charle: Eggleston, Betty Baxter, Jack Zoller, and Walter Maher. You Should Know— - Don Becker and the Lavender Network Three Home Games To Be Aired for Reds During Week Three home games are sla- ted for broadcast from Red- land Field by WFBE this week. Friday (July 2-1) the Reds play New York. Tuesday and Wednesday (July 28 and 2<)) they meet Brooklyn. The three broadcasts will begin at 2 :45 p. m. Harry Hartman will broadcast the play-by- play account. Don Becker will bear watch- ing ! Some one of these days when he is even more nationally known as a radio humorist, as a composer, and perhaps as a writer, you can tell your children (not your grandchildren — they're too far off) that you knew Don Becker when he was a ukulele player at WLW and columnist for Radio Dial. Not "just a ukulele player." however, for a young man who writes such side- splitting comedy as the Laven- der Network sketches on the Buddy Boy programs (WLW Friday nights at 8 o'clock) can't be referred to as "just" any- thing. BURLESQUE Of course you appreciate the fact that the IBC and the Lav- ender Network are glorious bur- lesques of chain broadcasting. Before Becker turned them over to the Buddy Boys as vehicles for his Famous Anachronisms of History (such as "Treasure Island" or "Oh You Kidd ;" "Doctor Jeckle and Mrs. Hyde;" "Helen of Troy" or "A Horse on You") the Lavender Network carried programs for such "com- mercial clients" as the Pansy School for Discontented Cows, I h c Razzle-Dazzle Doughnut Hole Converting Corporation, the Dolly Dimple Steam Roller Corporation of Podunk, and others too humorous to mention. DIFFICULTIES 1 1 was hard to gel thi s in- terview with Don Becker for Radio Dial, He kept turning it into a burlesque as he does every- thing he says or writes. "To start off with, tell my public I'm awfully bard to get along with when I first gel up," he insisted on saying. "It takes me from one hour. to three hours to get dressed in the morning al- though I always get up at 8 o'clock no matter what time I go to bed the evening (I mean morning) before. My mother has been known to pass a grape fruit under my nose to see if I would kick the windows out at the men- tion of breakfast." Seizing our interviews from him with main force, we man- Station Jottings Jessica Left Stage to Heed Radio's Call aged to find out a few vital sta- tistics between gales of laugh- ter. At the age of 14 he was as- sistant manager of a sizable de- partment store in Covington. He insists he called up the sister of the manager and asked for a good job and she had to get it for him because he was sing- ing for her at Tom Thumb weddings. ("And years later my early training made me a Tom Thumb golf champion," he stuck in while we weren't watch ing him.) FIRED At 1? he left home two day: before New Year's with four dollars and a ticket to Chicago. He got a job at the Club Ala- bam and made a success as a ukulele player. But he got home- sick and finally landed back at WSAI. He's been fired from more jobs than most men know about. Entertaining is the only thing he can get paid for. . . . He has worn a beret for six years instead of a hat. ( Not the same beret.) . . . He is 24 years old, is five feet ten inches tall and weighs only 100 pounds . . . He is brown as an Hawaiian and often is taken for one. His eyes are coal black, deep set, and nar- row. His eyebrows are a straight black line across his forehead. He always takes some con- servative person with him to buy clothes. Otherwise he goes home with atrocities. He once had a black-and-white golf suit so ter- rible he was discovered borrow- ing taxi -fare because he didn't dare ride home on the street car. FAME People make jokes abmil uku- lele players to his face, and rave about his expertness behind his hack. He is the only ukulele player ever to have written a composition for ukulele and sym- phony orchestra. He played it with Hugo Mariani's orchestra on the NBC "red network" a few months ago. Vincent Lopez gave it its premier, and Paul Whiteman also played it with Becker as soloist. He is most entertaining com- pany . . - He says he has WKRC A tabloid version of "Finni- t an's Fortune" will be enacted ' .hoard Hank Simmons' Show . Boat at !' p. m. Saturday ( July I 25). | A Viennese fantasy based on j The Blue Danube," "Tales j From the Vienna Wood s," ! Wiener Blut" and "The Bat," all by Johann Strauss, will be played on the program of Vien- ; nese music in the Bristoleers ' period Tuesday night ( Tuly 28), at 8:30. 'Xndre Verssen will talk aboiu the Cincinnati Zoo Opera at 7 :30 Saturday night (July 25) in the Junior Chamber of Commerce period. Phil Plant, millionaire sports- man, has collaborated in writing the musical signature Miller and Lysles use in their Columbia broadcast (Wednesday at 7 :30 p. m.). Plant is the ex-husband of Constance Bennett, film star. Columbia network has a new circuit that will improve trans- mission of its programs to WKRC. It increases the fre- quency range from between 100 to 5,000 cycles to from 30 to 8,000 cycles. The faster tempo of music of yesteryear will be in evidence when Peter Zorn and his Dutch Masters gather to play and sin; "Oh By Jingo," "Oh Johnny, Oh Johnny, How You Can Love" and other old favorites Friday (July 24) at 7:30 p. m. Al C h a n c e, impersonating some of radio's most famous an- nouncers, will be featured on the Gold Medal Fast Freight Wed- nesday (July 2°) at 8 p. m. Miss Ruby A. Black, one of the best known newspaper cor- respondents in Washington, will be the speaker in Bill Schudt's "Going to Press" program at 5 p. m. Wednesday (July 20) Miss Black, operating her own news service, acts as Washington corespondent for nine publica- tions, six of which are in Wis- consin and the others scattered from Maine to Texas. Dance music on the NBC net work has dropped from 6(5.1 per cent of all programs as of last r to 55 per cent this year. taught more girls how to play ukulele than anyone else in the world and never has been paid . . . He always is on time . . . He works 36 hours at a stretch when he has plays or burlesques to finish. He writes the continuity for these WLW programs: Buddy Buys. King Edward Cigar Band (■'.I p. m. Saturday) Canova ( Wednesday at 9:30 p. m.) : Heatrolotown (Friday at 9 p.m. beginning July 31) ; the WLW Chatter (every evening); and plays for the Croslcy Theatre in eluding the Yellow Peril series about Bradley Haines and his Chinese servant. He is irrepressible. p .... .... ,,,...,.,,. , .... ....... Jessica Dragonette, soprano star of the National Broadcast- ing Company, sings on the Cities Service program every Friday at 7 o'clock through sta- ton WSAI. Just out of a convent. Miss Dragonette was only another young soprano looking for a job when Max Reinhardt hired her from among a hundred others for the only solo part in "The Miracle." Hearing' her, Chab- apin, the Russian basso, said she had "a beautiful voice, a superb voice." After "The Miracle." the lead- ing role of Kathie in "The Stu- dent Prince" was easy for her to land. In the "1926 Grand Street Follies" she was soprano ingenue. Then radio lured her away from the stage to her suc- cess in the Philco Musical Com- edy Memories a year or more ago. Born in Calcutta, Ind., she traveled with her parents all over the world until she was sent to convent at the age of Chicago Phil- harmonic Plays Concert Sunday Six more of the Chicago Phil- harmonic Orchestra concerts will be broadcast through WCKY and an NBC network from Loy- ola University stadium at 8 :4"> Sunday nights. The SO-piece group is directed by Adolphe Dumonl. Mary Steele {Continued from page 1) den name professionally, she is the wife of Robert Brown. Their marriage last November was the result of one of WLW's many studio romances. As a house- keeper and cook, she is as tal- ented as she is gifted as a singer. In appearance she is most at- tractive: a little above medium height and extremely slender. She never quite makes up her mind whether to wear her red- brown curly hair long or short and is forever letting it grow and having it bobbed. Her eyes are large and brown; her com- plexion pink and white. Her soft southern-flavored speaking j voice reveals her Kentucky an- I ccstry. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JULY U, 1931. Here Are Only Complete Programsl FR I DAY July 24 WCKY (202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7:00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15— Morning Devotions (NBC) 7 :30— Cheerio (NBC) 8:00— Mountain Red. 8:15— Early Morning Dance. 9 : 15 — My New Kentucky Home, 9:4G— Dance Melodies 10:30— Classic Hour 11 :0(i— Musical Novelties 11:30— Skillet Lickers. ■ Noon — Popular Dance Tunes P. M.- 12:30— Norris Brock Live Stock Reports 12 :3S — Luncheon Concert 12 :45 — Randall Fryer, tenor. 1 :00— Sign off 5:45 — Dance Records, 5:55 — Ayers News Sport Flash 6:00— Amos 'n* Andy (NBC) G :15 — Eilerman's Screnaders 6:45 — Original Ibold Race Results. 6:50— Tommy and Willie. 7:00 — Charlene and Kathlene. 7:15 — Italian Sercnaders. 7:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House 8:00— Interwoven Pair (NBC) 8:30— Duke, His Uke and His Sis- ters. 8:15— Little Red Riding Hood. 0:00— Nothing But The Truth, Al- exander McQueen. 0:15 — Crooning Guitarist. 0:30— Skillet Lickers. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — Voices at Dawn 7 :30— Classified Directory S :00 — Morning Concert 0:00— Variety 0:15— Post Baby Beauty Contest 0:45 — Ktceman Home Chats 10:00— Zoo-ettes 10:05 — Sunshine Special 10:35— Musical Brevities 10 :50— Mrs, Evans' Questions and Answers 10 ;59 — Simper Time Announcement 11:00— Garden of Melody 1 1 :30— Dance Frolic Noon — Serenade P. M.— 12:30— Vaudeville 12:45— Bellonby Luncheon Musicale 1 :00— Krontss Brothers 1:15— Story Telling Time 1 :30— Post Babv Bcautv Contest 2:00— Vocal Recital— Frank Stewart 2:15— Song Hit Time 2:4,5— Reds vs. New York at Red- land Field 4:45— Ralph and Harlan 5:00— Lyric Hour 5:30— World Series Contest 6:00— Musical Interlude : 1 5— World Series Contest 6:45 — Berning Ford Travelogue 7:00— The Post Question Box 7:15 — Julius Sein 7:30— Harry Hart man's Sport Review 7 :45— Novelty Notes 8:00— Luckev Boys 8:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints 8:30— Colonial Stages Program 8:45— Conev Island Dance Frolic 0:00— Evening Chimes !>:15— Firrsidc Melodies 0:45— Slumber Music WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6:45— God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship 7:15 -Hill Billy Kid. 7:50— Gnien Time Signal 8:00— Starr-Freeze Melodies 8:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Sweethearts of the Air (CBS) 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS) 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS 0:15— Studio Feature. 0:30— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram 10:00— Rhvthem Kings {CRSi. I0:15-Floraline Talk Friday, July 24 10:20— Rvthm Kings (CBS). 10 :30— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 11:00— Time and Weather. 11 : 03— Woman's H o u r — Tremlettc Tully 1 1 :30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 1 1 :4"i— Drinkmor Program. Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue P. M.— 12 :30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS) 1 :J5— Art Dry Cleaning Program 1 :30— Columbia Farm Network Pro- gram (CBS). 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 2:15— Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2 :28 — Race Result from Latonia, Ky. •J : 30— The Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45 — Educational Features (CBS). 3:00— Light Opera Gems (CBS). 3 : 45— Edna Thomas (CBS). 4 :00 — Asbury Park Casino Orches- tra (CBS). 4 :15 — A. L. Fink Program. 4:45 — Edna Wallace Hopper's Youth Matinee (CBS). 5 :00 — Earl Carpenters Orchestra (CBS). 5:15 — Jos. R. Deins Program, Pat Gillick, Organist. 5 :30 — Cincinnati Trade School. 5 :45 — Studio 5:50 — Eureka Baseball Scores 5 :55 — Sports Review 5:59 — Burke Weather Forecast 6:00-— Kate Smith and Her Swanee Music (CBS). — Home Furni- ture Company. 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree 6:13 — Time and weather 6:15 — Linit Program, with Dennis King (CBS) 6:30 — Red Goose Adventures (CBS) 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS) 7:15— Barbasol Program (CBS) 7:30— Dutch Masters (CBS) 8:00— Liberty Magazine Hour (CBS). 8 :45— Cincinnati & Lake Erie Pro- gram. :00— Pillsbtiry Pageant (CBS). 0:30 — What's Happening, Geo. Mul- vihill — Full Measure Gas. ;45— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 10 :00— Confessions , of a Racketeer (E. T.) 10:15 — Grucn Answer Man 10:25— Happy Feet 10:30— Chic Scroggin Orchestra at Conev Island. 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports 11:08— Ben Bernie and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11:30— Hill Billv Kid. 11:45— Jos. R. Deins Program, Pat Gillick, Organist. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. At.— 6:00 — International Fiddlers 6:30— Gym Classes 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 8:00 — Morning Devotions 8:15— Jim and Walt 8 :30 — Montgomery Ward Program (NBC) 8:15— Ford and Wallace (NBC) 9:00— Rav Perkins (NBC) 9:15— "The Hostess," Mrs. Lutyc Sohngen 9:30— Book News 9 :45 — Premium Man 10:00 — Island Serenaders 10:30— Live Stock Reports 10:10 — Southern Singers; Ravmond Mitchem 11:00— Organ with Instrumentalist 11:15— Swift Program (NBC) 11:30— WLW Stars 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals Noon— Tuxedo Fiddlers P. M.— 12 :15 — Bulova Time 12:10— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:46— Market Reports 12:50— Live Stock Reports 1 :00 — National Farm and H a in (NBC) 1 :30 — Netherland Plaza Orchestra 2 :00 — Organ Matinee •2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC) 3:00— Harriet Wcllcn, vocal solos. 3:15— Radio Guild (NBC) 4:15 — Ramoiia. Hy Rye and Willie Winsum Hy Rye anfl Willie Winsum tell the adventures of a couple I loaves of bread in their programs at 7:15 Tuesday and Thurs- day nights through WKRC. Before coming to Cincinnati, they broadcast through stations in Chicago, Cleveland, and Milwaukee. Friday, July 24 4:30— The Hottentots 5 :00 — Words and Music 5:30— Salt and Peanuts 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 0:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) 6:15— Madame Alda (NBC) 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC) 6:45— The Chatter. 7:00 — Los Ramos Basebcll Scores 7 :05— WLW Fanfares 7 :30— Fuller's Orchestra 7 :-l5— Sisters o[ the Skillet (NBC) 8 :00— "In Romany" 8:15 — Icyeast Jamboree 8:30— Hoosier Editor 8:45— Armour Program (NBC) 9:00— Paul Whiteman's Paint Men 9:30— Clara, Lu and Em (NBC) 9 :45— Wilcleson's Wildcats. 10:00— Encores. 10 :30— Variety 10:45— Bob Newhall Sport Slices 10 :58— Estate Weather Man 11 :00— Vox Celeste 11 :30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm (NBC-Blue) Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra a. M.- ia :30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 1 :00— Sign off. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.; A. M— 8:00 — Gene and Glenn, the Quake: Early Bird (NBC) 8:15— Teddy Black's Orchestra (NBC) 8 :45— Records 9:00_Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9 :15— Records 9 :30— National Home Hour (NBC) 9 :45— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 10 :00— Hawaiian Sercnaders (NBC) 10:30— Realities of Romance (NBC) 1 1 :00_The Hellman Troiibidors (NBC). 11:15— Sandy Vallcv Fiddlers 11:30— Sign Off P. M— 12 :50 — Livestock Reports 1:00— Sign Off 2 :00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC) 3:00— Gems of Melodv (NBC) 3 :15— Records 3:45— Croslev Dealers' Salute 1 :00— Records Friday, July 24 :30 — Moore Paint Program (NBC) :45 — Records 00 — Poems by Harry Holcombc 15 — Don Becker, Ukelele. 30— The Gossipers (E. T.) 45 — Records. ;00— Harrv Willsey's Orchestra :30— Alice Richards :45— The Goldbergs (NBC) 00— Cities Service Concert (NBC) :00— Clicquot Club (NBC) :30— Pond's Dance (NBC) :00— Kodak Week End (NBC) :30— RKO Theater of the Air (NBC) :00— Seger Ellis :15— The Stehbins Boys (NBC) :30 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra :00_Sign Off. SATURDAY July 25 WCKY (202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7 :15— Morning Devotion (NBC) 7:30— Cheerio (NBC) 8:00— Mountain Red. 8:15 — Early Morning Dance. 9 :15 — My New Kentucky Home, 9:45— Little Red Riding Hood's Kid- die Club. 10:30— Classic Hour 11 :00 — Musical Novelties 11 :30 — Skillet Lickers. 12:00— Popular Dance Melodies p. m.— 12:30 — Norris Brock live stock quo- tations 12:35 — Luncheon Concert 12:45— Randall Fryer, tenor. IP. M.— SIGN OFF 5 :45 — Dance Records. 5:55— Ayers Sport Flash 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC) 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC) :3(l — Original Ibold Race Results. 0:35— Lucile Fox. 0:45— Italian Serenaders. 7:00— Rudy Vallec (NBC) 7 :30 — Crossroads Quartette. 7 :45 — Crooning Guitarist. 8 :00— "Skillet Lickers" 8:30 — Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. 9:00— Cuckoo Club (NBC) 9 :.'10 — 1 .awson's Hawaiians. Saturday, July 25 WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00— Voices at Dawn 7 :30— Classified Directory 8 :00 — Morning Concert 9 :00— Varietv 0:15— Post B'aby Beauty Contest 9 :45 — Kleeman Home Chats 10 :00— Zoo-ettes 10:05 — Sunshine Special 10:35 — Musical Brevities 10:50 — Women and the News 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement 11 :00— Dance Frolic 11 :30— Vaudeville 11 :45 — Violinist and Accordian Noon — Organ Recital P. M.— 12 :15 — Serenade 12 :45 — Bellonby Luncheon Musicale 1 :00 — Two Irish Boys and Chas. Schaeffer 1:15 — Story Telling Time 1 :30— Post Baby Beautv Contest 2:00— Tilda and Mary Lou 2:15 — Ralph and Harlan 2:30 — Afternoon Musicale 3 :00— Matinee 3:15 — Anne and Bubs 3:30— Novelty Notes 4:00 — Mary Tribble, soprano 4 :15 — Tea Time Tunes 4:45 — Thelma Lehman, blues singer 5 :00 — Lyric Hour 5:30— World Series Contest 6:00 — Musical Interlude 6:15 — World Series Contest 6:45 — Berning Ford Travelogue 7:00— The Post Question Box 7 :14 — Julius Sein 7:30— Harry Hart man's Sport Review :45 — Evening Melodies 00 — Luckev Boys 15— Dry Ridge Health Hints 30 — Twilight Reveries 45 — Coney Island Dance Frolic 00 — Independent Oil Stations 30 — Meyer's Hot Tunes 45 — Slumber Music WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. IM.— 6 :45 — God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship 45— Hill Billy Kid. 59 — Gruen Time Signal 00— Commuters (CBS). 45— Morning Minstrels (CBS). 30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS) 00 — Charles W. Reaume Studio. -Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 10 :00— Adventures of Helen anil Mary (CBS). 10:15— Time; Weather 10 :20— Woman's Hour — Tremlette Tullv 10 :45— Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 11:00— Don Bigelow and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11:30— Hotel Taft Orchestra (CBS). 11:45 — Drinkmor Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue P. M.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram 1:00 — Columbia Farm Program (CBS) 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 2:15— The Four Clubmen (CBS). 2 :28 — Race Result from Latonia, Kv. 2:30— A. L. Fink Song Recital. Louie Johnson, tenor 3:00— Ann Leaf at the Organ (CBS) 3:30— Spanish Serenade (CBS). 4 :00— Dancing by the Sea (CBS). 4:45— Jack Miller, pianist (CBS). 5 :00 — Winegar's Barn O r c h e s tr a (CBS). 5:15— Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. 5 :30— Cincinnati Trade School Pro- gram. 5 :45— Studio 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores 5 :55 — Sports Review 5:59— Burke Weather Forecast 6:00— St. Moritz Orchestra (CBS) Home Furniture Co. 6:15 — Studio 6:25— Stocks, Cohle and Tyrec 6:28 — Time and weather 6:30— Happy Feet. 6 :35 — Studio Feature. 6:45— Camel Quarter Hour (CBS) 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS) 7:15 — Kate Smith and Her Swanee Music (CBS). RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY, JULY 84, 1981. if Greater Cincinnati Radio Stations Saturday, July 25 7-30— Junior Chamber of Commerce 8-0O— Hermandez Brothers (CBS). g -15— Studio Feature. g'30—Tacoma Park Orchestra. o-OO— Hank Simmons' Show Boat (CBS) 9-45— Studio Feature J0O0— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 10:16— Chic Scroggin Orchestra at Coney Island. |,i.|,-,_\Vill Osborne and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports II '08— Guv Lombardo and His Or- chestra (CBS) H -mt— Hill Billy Kid, II |o Jos. R. Dcins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick, Midnight-Jos. R. Deins Midmtc Frolic Request Program. Pat Gillick. Saturday, July 25 30— The Gossipers (E. T.) 45— Black and Gold Orchestra (NBC) :00— Harry Willsey's Orchestra :30— Records :15— The Goldbergs (NBC) :00— Records • 15 — Bavarian Peasant Band (NBC) :30— The Silver Flute (NBC) :00— G cncral Electric Hour (NBC) :30— Club Valspar (NBC) :00— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC) 10 :00— Fuller's Orchestra 10:30— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 11 :00— Sign off Sunday, July 26 Get Up Early to Hear These Three WSAI (225 m.-1330 kc.) WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.- 6 :00 — International Fiddlers. (', :20— Bulova Time. 6:30— Gym Classes. .,„,-, 7:46— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 8:00— Morning Devotions S :15 — Salt and Peanuts X no— Montgomery Ward Program (NBC) 8;15-Forcl and Wallace (NBC) 9:00— Dance Miniatures (NBC) 9:30— Art Talks, Cherry Grevc 9:46_WLW Mail Bag 10:00— Organ and Vocal. 10 itO— Livestock Reports. 10:40— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 11:00— Elliot Brock, violin. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC) 1 1 : :10— Livestock Reports. 11:45— River Reports; Time Signal* Noon— Governmental Glimpses. At- torney General Gilbert Bettman p. m.— 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12 ;45 — National Farm and Home Period (NBC). 1 :30— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 2:00— Organ Matinee. 2:30— Cincinnati Zoo Symphony Con- certs. 3:00— Ramona and Don Becker 3:15— Pacific Feature Hour (NBC) ■1:00— Maze of Melody (NBC). 4 :30— Crosley Dealers' Hour 5:00— Seckatory Hawkins. 5:30— Doctors of Melody 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) 6 :15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC) 6:30— The Chatter. 6:45— Los Ramos Baseball Scores. 6:50 — Ramona 7 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra 7:30— R. F. D. Hour 8:00— Crosley Saturday Knights. 8:30— Domino Orchestra (NBC) !l :00— King Edward Cigar Band. 9:30_Clara, I.u and Em (NBC) 9:45— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 10:00— Club Sohio 10:30— Variety 10 :45— Bob Newhall Sport Slices 10:58— Estate Weather Man. 11:00— The Singing Violin 11:30— Doodlesockcrs. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12 :30— Castle Farm Orchestra. 1 :00— Fuller's Orchestra. 1:30— Henry Busse's Orchestra. Castle Farm. SUNDAY July 26 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 10:00— Nomads (NBC). 10:30— Jewels of Destiny (NBC). 11:0ft— The Crooning Guitarist. 11:15— Echoes of the Orient (NBC). 11 -30— Charlene and Kathleen, Ladies nl Melody. 11 : 45— Tommy and Willie. Noon — Jack Moore. P. M.— 12:15— Blue Ridge Shindiggers. 12:45— Men About Town. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45— Lucille Fox, Blues. 0:00— Lawson's Hawiians 0:30— Little Red Riding Hood, 11:45— The Crooning Guitarist, 7 ;00— Blue Ridge Shindiggers. 7:30— College of Music. 8:00— The Italian Sercuaders. 8:15— Something for Everybody. 8 -45— Chicago Philharmonic Or- chestra. (NBC). 9:15— Flovd Gibbons (NBC). 9 .30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. P. M.— :00— Scrmoncttc and Hymn rime, ,30 Balkan Mountain Wen (NB( I •00— National Sunday Forum (NBC). ■00 -Gilbert & Sullivan 1 (NB. I ,„„ :00-Cntholic Services (NBC). :00-Thru the Opera Glass NIK ■ :00— Chase and Sanborn (N1U ). -00— "Our Government, ' D a v . ii Law CNBJ I :15_Tlie Russian Stngci (NBC) :45— Iodent nig Brother (NBI I lS-Goldman Band ( oncerl (NB( )■ ; l,-i -Fuller's Orchestra, WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M-- 8:00— Gene and Glenn :l.%_M c Cormick's Old Time hid dlers. ..,»„* 10:30— Kevs to Happiness (NBC) 11:00— Records 11:30— Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop- Comm. Assn. 11:4,^— Records Noon — Sign off P. M.— 3:00— Classic Gems (NBC) 3 :30— Records 3:45— Crosley Dealers Salute 4 :00— Records -. :0>O— Southern Singers & Mitchem WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 8.00— Voices at Dawn. 9:00— Morning Concert. :30— Invitation to the Waltz. 10:00— Kelvinator Program. 10:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints. 10:30— Echoes from Germany. 10 :45— Berning Ford Travelogue. 11:00— Post Baby Beauty Contest, 11 -30— Excerpts from the Opera. 11:45— Tile Way Fire-Proof Horn Program. P. M.— 12:15— Klccman Furniture Program. 12:30— Galvano & Cortez. 12:45— Organ Recital. 1 -00— Jewish Hour. 2:00— Garden of Melody, o :30— Hawaiian. Bluebirds. 2-45— Harlan and Ralph. 3:00— Mary Tribble, soprano. 3 : 15_TwO Irish Boys and Lhas. Schaeffer. . 3:30— Vocal and Piano Recital. 1:00— The Islanders. 4:15— Pastels in Prose. 4 :30— Sundown Serenades 4 45 — Post Svmphony Hour. 5:45— Tea Time Tunes, fi 15— Musical Interlude. 6:30— Church Federation Hour. 7-1,0 — With the Scouts. 7-15— Dinner Dance Music. _ 7 .30— Harry Hartman's Sport Review 8;00— Song Hit Time. 8-30— The Orioles. 8:45— Twilight Reveries. 9:00— Scotland Yard. [0 iv- Slumber Music. If you're an earlv riser, you can hear these three in A Song (or Today" which they broadcast at 6:30 every morning except Sunday on an NBC network. On Sunday they are on the a.r at 9:45 a.m. Dial their programs at WENR (870 kc-344.5 m.) Left to right, the entertainers are Fenwick Newell, tenor; Gloria Lavey, contralto; and Lowell Patton, pi anist and composer. Sunday, July 26 10 :25— River Reports. 10:29— Bulova Time. 10 "30— Rochester Concert Orchestra (NBC). 11 :,'»)— Troika Bells (NIK 1 Noon— Midday Jewels. P. M.— 12:29— Bulova Time. /v ,__. 12:30— Music of the Ages (NBC). 1 : 30— Yeast Foamers (NBC). 2:00— Henry Tliics' Orchestra 3:00— Ravinia Opera Cone erts (NBC). 4:00— Sabbath Reveries (NBC I. 5:00— The Roamios. 5:30— Plantation Days. G :00— The Chatter. G:30— College «f Music Conccrl (NBC). 6:55— Baseball Scores. 7:00— Enna Icttick Melodies! NBC ) 7:15— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 7 :30— Harbor Lights (NBC). 8:00— Heel Hugger Harmonies (NBC). 8:15— Bayuk Stag Party (NBC). 8 :45— Fuller's Orchestra 0:15— Variety. 0:30— KcIIork Slumber Music! NBC >. 1(1:00— Estate Weather Man. 10:02— Crosley Concert. 10:45— Murray Horton's Orchestra at I (orsi shoe Gardens. [1:00— Henry Thies and His WLW Orchestra (to NBC "Blue" Network). 1 1 :30— Moon River. Midnight— Henry Busse's Orchestra at Castle Farm. Sunday, July 26 P. M.— 1 .00— Jewish Community Program, 1:30— Gypsy Trial (CBS), 2:00— Gruen Old-Fashioned Garden, 3:00— Cathedral Hour (CBS) 4:00— French Trio (CBS). 4:15— Pastorale (CBS). 4:45— Theo Karle (CBS). 5:00— Chicago Knights (CBS). 5:30— Twilight Reveries. 5-58— Burke Weather Forecast. (1:00— The World's Business (CBS). 6:15— Studio. :20— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6:25— Sports Review. 6 '30— Dacldv and Rollo (CBS). 6:45— The Boswell Sisters (CBS). 0:58— Time and weather. 7 -00— Devils, Drugs and Doctors (CBS), . 7-15— Kate Smith, Swanec Music CBS). 7:30— Tony Parent! and His Singing Saxophone (CBS). 7 :l."i— Watchtowcr Program (E.T.) 8:00— Around the Samovar (CBS) 8-30— Lewisoltn Stadium Concert (CBS) 0:00— Tacoma Dance Orchestra. 9:30— The Gauchos (CBS). 9:45— Star Reveries (CBS). 10:00— Coney Island Dance Orchestra 10:30— Chic Variet) Program (CBS1 1 1 ;00— Time and weather. 11:30— Nocturne (CBS). H-07 Hollywood Gardens Orches- tra (CBS). 11:30— Artists Invitation Program MONDAY July 27 WCKY(202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M. 7;iiii -The Crooning Guitarist. 7. 15 Morning Devotions (N'l't I. 7:80 1 hcerio (NBC). 8 mi Mountain Red. 8-1B— Early morning dance program. 9:15— My New Kentucky Home, Jem Crane. 9 '-I!)— Dance Records. [0:80 Classic Hour. II -.00— Musical Novelties II :80— Blue Ridge Shindiggers. Noon I oil.' Keel Ki'loio 1 1 1. I" 1 '" R. Coppin Co. P. m. 12 :15— Popular Hon. Melodies. 12:30— Norris Brock Live Stock, 12 :85— Luncheon Concert, 12 : 45_ Randall Fryer, tenor. I ;on Sign off, :,:l."i n :c R 5:55-Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). (1:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NIIC) 30 Original [bold Race Results 0:35— Little Red Riclina 1 1 1 ill.", Steve Bates. 7:(iil—llhu' Ridge Shmdiggoi 7 :30— Slrouibcrg Card (NBC). 8 00 Wally, thi Radio Clown. 8-15 "The Man Who Could Nni Die " mystery thriller 8 15 Musical Mailers on Charlene and Kathleen. 9:15 Tomin) Bud Willie, 9:30~Nothing But the 'I ruth, Alex- .1,1,1,1 McQueen, 11 ■ 15 — Italian Sercnadi i WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M — G (5-7:45— God's Bible School- Sunrise Worship. 9 :00— God's Bible School. 10 -00— lulia Mahoney. Charles Carl isle (CBS). 10 :15— Jim Lightfield— Veteran s Civic Hour. 11:00 — Services from First Ctiurch ot Christ Scientist Noon— Watchtower Program Na- leidc Broadcast." WLW {428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 8 :59— Bulova Time. 9 -00— Church Forum. jl -30— Fiddlers Three (NBC). |->— Pollack and Lawnhurs 1 NBC) 10:00 — Bulova Time. 10:05— Orpan, Arthur Chandler, Jr. WFBE (250m.—1200kc.) A. M.- 7:00— Voices at Dawn. 7:30— Classified Directory. s 00— Morning ( rl 0:00— Hyde Park Community Pro- gram. -, I., I'm 1 lull,. H.'illlU < "Hi- I 0:46— Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00 Zoo ettw. in |05— Mu5ii ale Brei itu hi .:■, --. . -1.1 10:50— Mrs. Evans' Question- and Answer 1 .. RADIO TUBE SPECIALISTS Where Can We Obtain a Loan? imlliel »nd individual. answer to thU quet- ig many of their finan- through our helpful enablei you to obtain the omptly on your own iignalurc rity. and repay it >n imall .mount* arranged conveniently OPEN 8:30 TO 5:00 GO~7 WALNUT Open Eveninjs — PArkway 6415 RADIO REPAIRING— ANY MAKE The Central Acceptance Corporation 26 East Sixth St., between Vine and Walnut Cincinnati, Ohio. PArkway_ 6280^ _ RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1931. Sunday, July 26 10:53 — Simper Time. II -Soul- Mil Time. II .rdejt of Melody. 13:00— Serenade. P. m.— 12:45 — Hcllonby Luncheon Musicalc. 1 :00— Kroness Brothers. 1 :15 — Story Telling Time. 1 :30— Post Babv Beauty Contest. 2:00— The Islanders. 2:15 — Vocal Varieties, with Frank- Stewart. Jil" Malinee Musicalc. 8:00— Harmony Dun. 3 IV Memory Lane. ". I,V Ralph anil Harlan. 1 :00— Organ Recital. I 30— Dance Frolic. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30— World Scries Contest. :00— Musical Interlude. 0:15 — World Series Contest. :45 — Berning Ford Travelogue. 7:00— Post Question Box. 7:15 — Julius Scin. 7 :30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7 :45 — Byron Trio, 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints. 8:30— Twilight Reveries. 8 ;45 — Coney Island Dance Frolic. P :00— Evening Chimes. 8:15— Song Hit Time. 9 :45 — Slumber Music. 1(1:30— Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) a.m.— 6:46 — God's Bible School— Sunrise Worship. 7: la-Hill Billy Kid. 7:59— Gruen Time. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 0:110— Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 0:30— Mr. Fixit (CBS). 9:45— Charles W. Reaume, studio. 10:15— The Madison Singers (CBS) 10:80— Bruce Chapman (CBS). 10:45— Time and weather. 10 :I8— Woman's Hour — Tremlette Tully. 11:15— Don Bigelow and His Orches- tra (CBS) 11 :30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11 :45 — Driuk-Mor Program. Noon— Wurliuer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram. 1:00— A. L. Fink Program. 1:30 — Farm Network Program ii BS) 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio 2:16 — Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS) 2 :28— Race Result from Latonia. Kv. 2:30— Three Doctors (CBS). 2 :45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 3:00-U. S, Army Band (CBS). 3:30— St. George Hotel Orchestra (CBS). 4:00— Dancing bv (he Sea (CBS) 4:30— Hoosier Photographer- Tramp Starr. 4:45- Jolly Jugglers (CBS). n:00— A. O. Rust. Happy Feci. 5:11) — Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert. Pal Gillick. 3 :30— C i n c i n n a t i Trade School Program. 5 :45— Studio. 5:50— Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55— Sports Review. 5:50— Burke Weather Forecast. i' mi Home Furniture Program The Dictators (CBS) 6:10— Stocks, Cohle S: Tyree. 0:13 — Time and weather. 15— Unit Program, with Dennis King (CBS). " 30 - Miller and I >l. (CBS). 0:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15— The Barbasol Program (CBS). ■' u>::i Happenii:". Geo. Mul- _ vihill— Full Measure Ga<. 7: In— Old Wurzburg Malt Program. B 00 loo Crime Club (CBS) 8:30 -An Evening in Paris (CBS). S I". Summer Daze (CBS). Robt. Burns r.inatella Pro- gram (CBS). 0:30 Arabesque I CBS I 10:00— Pyrol Blackberry Dudes 10:15— Gruen Answer Man 10 25- Happy Feet. 10:30— Coney Island Dane. Orches- tra. 1 1 -.00— Time and weather. 11:03— Sports Review. il 08— Jan Garber and His Orches- tra (CBS) 11:30— Hill Billy Kid. 11:45— Jos R n. ins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. Monday, July 27 WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) a. m.— 6 :00— International Fiddlers. 0:29— Bulova Time. 0:30— Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 8:00— Morning Devotions. 8:15— Ball Brothers Canning Time. 8:30— Montgomery Ward Program (NBC). 8:46— Ford and Wallace (NBC). :00— Housekeeper Chats. 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9:30— Musical Portrait. 9:45— The Potter's Art. 10:00— Syncopaters (NBC). 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— McCormick Fiddlers. 11:00— Mills Brothers Quartet. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 1 1 :46 — River Reports ; Time Signals. Noon — Seger Ellis. P. M.— 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12 :45 — Market Reports. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 -.00 — N a t i o n a 1 Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 2 :00 — Organ Matinee. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 3:00— Bradley Kincaid. 3:15 — Charles Schcucrman Brown Palace Hotel Orchestra (NBC). 3:45— Matinee Melodies (NBC). 4:00— Chats with Peggy Winthrop (NBC). 4:15 — Gleen Sisters and Rainona. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4 :40 — Afternoon Revelers. 5:00— Salt and Peanuts. 5:15 — Mormon Tabernacle Choir. 5:45 — Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 0:15 — Los Ramos Baseball Scores. 0:25— The Chatter. 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC). 6 :45 — Affiliated Products Program (NBC). 7:00— Roxy's Gang (NBC). 7:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 8 :00— Maytag Orchestra (NBC). 8:30— Real Folks (NBC). 0:00— Gold Medal Express (NBC). 9 :30 — Musical Dreams. 10 :00— Canada Dry. 10:30— Variety. 10 :15— Bob Newhall. Sport Slices. 10:58— Estate Weather Man. 1 1 :00 — Chime Reveries. Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. 1 :00— Sign off. . . WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC).. 8:15— Teddv Black's Orchestra (NBC). 8:45— Records. 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9:15— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 9 :30 — Jean Carroll, please tell me (NBC). 9:45— Jerry Fov. 10:00— Records. 10:15— Blue Streaks (NBC). 10 :30— Records. 1 1 :00— The Hellman Troubadors (NBC). 11:15— Sign Off. P. M._ 12:50— Live Stock Reports, 1 :00— Sign off. 2 :00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 3:45— Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4 :00 — Crosley Singers. 4 :30— Records. 4 :45— Minabelle and Chick. 5:00 — Records. 5:115 — Cecy Gordon; Gene Perazzo. 5 :30 — Records. 6:00 — Lure of the Tropics (NBC). 6 :S0— Poems bv George E 1 1 i s t o n (NBC). 6:45— The Goldbergs (NBC). 7:00 — "How's Business?", Merle Thorpe (NBC.) 7:15— Webster Program (NBC). 7:30— A. & P. Orchestra (NBC). 8 :30 — General Motors Program (NBC). 9 — True Storv Hour (NBC. 9:45 — Simonize Program (NBC) 10 ;un_p an-Am erica n Concert (NBC). 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10:30 — Pan-American Concert (NBC) 11 — — Musical Novelties. 11:30— Blue Ridge Shindiggers. Noon — Dance Program. P. M.— 12:30 — Live Slock Quotations. 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert. 12:45 — Randall Fryer, tenor. 1 :00— Sign off. FLORENCE FREY BEAUTY EXPERT Every Wednesday 9:15 A. M. WLW PERMANENT WAVE $5.00 Positively Harmless — Painless — Quick FLORENCE FREY STUDIO 631 Walnut Stiret CHcrry 6105 Tuesday, July 28 5:45— Dance Records. T, : 55— Ayers Sport Flash. 0:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 6:15— Gus Van (NBC). 0:30— Original Ibold Race Results. 6:35— Little Red Riding Hood. (! :45 — Crinoline Girl. 7 :00— Glenyce Chambers, blues. 7 : 15— Tri-State Entertainers. 7 :45 — Crooning Guitarist. 8:00— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. 8:30— Death Valley Days (NBC), 0:00— Nothing But the Truth, Alex- ander McQueen. 0:15— Tommy and Willie. .0:30— Blue Ridge Shindiggers. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7.00— Voices at Dawn. 7 :30 — Classified Directory. 8:00 — Morning Concert. 9 :00— Variety. 9:15— Post aBby Beauty Contest. 9 :45 — Home Chats. 10:00— Zoo-ettes. 10:05 — Sunshine Special. 10:35 — Musical Brevities. 10:50— Sister Mary's Kitchen. 10 :59 — Simper Time. 1 1 :00— Dance Frolic. 11:30— Garden of Melody. 11 :45 — Accordian and Violin. Noon — Organ Recital. P. M.— 12:30— Serenade. 1:00— Two Irish Boys and Chas. Schaeffer. 1:15 — Story Telling Time. 1 :30— Post Baby Beauty Contest. 2:00 — Accordion Joe. 2:15 — Dance Frolic. 2:30— Marion Clark. 2:45— Reds vs. Brooklvn at Redland Field. 4:45 — Ralph and Harlan. 5:00-Lyric Hour. 5:30— World Series Contest. 6:00— Musical Interlude. 6:15 — World Series Contest. C :45 — Berning Ford Travelogue. 7:00— Post Question Box. 7:15— Julius Sein. 7 :3(t — Harry Hartman's Sport Re- 7:45 — Murdock Williams. 8 iO* -Luckey Boys. 8:15— Drv Ridge Health Hints. 8 :30— Twilight Reveries. 8:45 — Conev Island Dance Frolic. 9:00— Independent Oil Station Program. 9 :30 — Meyer's Hot Tunes. 9:45 — Licking River Fiddlers. 10:00— Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. AL— 6 :45— God's Bible School, Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Gruen Time. S :00— Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 8:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS. 8:45— Morning Minstrels (CBS). 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS). !>:15— Melody Parade (CBS). 9:30— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:00— Fashion Facts of 1931 (CBS) 10:15— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 10:45 — Time and Weather. 10 :48— Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tully. 11 : 1 5— Don Bigelow and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11 :30— Columbia Revue (CBS). Tuesday, July 25 11 :45— Drinkmor Program (CBS) Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12 :30 — Cincinnali Merchants' p ro . gram. 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS). 1:15 — Art Dry Cleaning Program 1 :30— Studio feature. 2:00 — Charles W. Reaume Studio 2 : 1 5 — Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS) 2 :28 — Race Result from Latonia Ky 2:30— (A. L. Fink)— The Thr« Doctors (CBS). 2:45— (A. L. Fink)— The Capitava- tors (CBS). 3:00Italian Idyl (CBS). 3:30— Four Clubmen (CBS). 4:00— Frank Ross. Songs (CBS) 4 :15 — Adventures in Words (CBS) 4:30— Gypsy Music Makers (CBS). 4:45 — Sweethearts of the Air (CBS). 5:00— A. O. Rust, Happy Feet. 5:15 — Jor. R. Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. 5 :30 — C incinnat i Trade School Program. 5 :45 — Studio. 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5:55 — Sports Review. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. C :00 — Home Furniture Co., Kate Smith (CBS) 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 6:13— Time and weather. 6:15 — Linit Program, with Dennis King (CBS). 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quartet hour (CBS). 7:00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15 — Hy Rve and Willie Winsome. 7:30— The Bon Bons (CBS). 7:45 — Studio Feature. 8:00— Henrv George (CBS) 8:30— The Bristoleers (CBS) 9:00— Ben Bernie and His Blue Ribbon Orchestra (CBS). 9:15— Tito Guizar (CBS). 9 :30— Conev Island Dance Orches- tra. 10:00— Pyol Blackberrv Dudes. 10:15— Studio. 10 :25 — Sports Review. 10:30— Bridge Lessons by Tom Col- lins Jr. 10 :45 — Tacoma Dance Orchestra. 11:00 — Gruen Witching Hour. 11 :30 — Time and weather. 11:32— Tacoma Park Dance Orchestra 11:45— Jos. R. Deins, Organ Concert. Pat Gillick. Special Offer to RADIO DIAL readers 4 CLUB Golf Set ^ Complete with bag $ #^ .98 PUTTER— MIDIRON MASHIE— DRIVER or BRASSIE. WITH GOOD QUALITY 3 STAY BAG. "Sporting Goods Headquarters' CHECKER STORE °£™^™"° Club, have Second Growth Hickory Shaft id Chromium Heads COURT & RACE WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M._ 6 :00 — International Fiddlers. 6:29— Bulova Time. 6 :30 — Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & 5. Food News (NBC). 7:59— Bulova Time. 8 :00 — Morning Devotions. 8:15 — Bradley Kincaid. 8 :30— Montgomery Ward (NBC). 8:45— Ford and Wallace (NBC). 9 :00— Morning Ballads. 9:15— Frances Ingram (NBC). 9 :30— Fashionette. 9 :45 — Premium Man. 10:00— Murrav Horton's Orchestra. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Organ and Vocal Solos. 11:00 — Island Serenaders. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45— River Reports; Time Signals. Noon — Tuxedo Trio. P. M.— 12:15— Bulova Time. 12:10— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12 :45— Market Reports. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JULY U, 1931. Thursday, July 30 12:60 — Live Stock Reports. I -00— National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30 — Nethcrla.nl Plaza Orchestra. 2:00 — Organ Matinee. 2-30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 2:45— Kiss Proof (NBC). 3 -00 — Mary Steele, vocal solos. 3:15— U. S. Navy Band (NBC). 4:00— Salt and Peanuts. 4:15 — Organ and Cello. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4:40 — Mitchem and Quartet, 5:00— The Hottentots. ,1:30— Stger Ellis. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). C:00— Amos 'n* Andy (NBC). fl:15— The Chatter. (!:30— Southern Singers. (i:45— Mail Pouch (e. t.). 7:00— Armstrong Quakers (NBC). 7:30 — Los Ramos Baseball Scores. 7:35 — Nethcrland Plaza Orchestra. 7:45— Sisters of the Skillet (NBC). 8:00— Fuller's Orchestra. 8:15— Icyeast Jamboree. 8:30— Werk Bubble Blowers. •1:00— Crimelights. 9:30— Chevrolet Chronicles (e. I.). 10:00— Cotton Queen Minstrels. 10 :30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sports Slices. 10:58— Estate Weather. 11:00 — Los Amigos. 11:30— Moon River. Midnight — Hole! Gibson Orchestra. A. M.— 12:30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm, 1:00— Sign off. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15— Teddy Black's Orchestra (NBC), 8:45— Records. fl:00— Mrs. Blake's Raido Column NBC). 9:15— Records. 10:00— Talks by Dr. Ella Oppen- lieimer (NBC). 10 :15— R a d i o Household Institute (NBC). 10:30— U. S. Army Band (NBC). J 1:00 — The Hellman Trouhadors (NBC). 11:15— Sign Off. P. M.— 12:50 — Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop. Comm. Assn. 1 :00— Sign off. 2 :00 — Women's Radio Review (NBC). 3:00— Records. 3:45 — Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4:00— Lady Next Door (NBC). 4:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4 :45— Records. 5:15— Vocal Solos. 5:30— Records. 0' :00— Midweek Federation Hymn Sing (NBC). 0:30— Jerry Foy. 6:45 — Larry Grueter, Accordion. 7:00— Blackstone Plantation (NBC). 7 :30 — National Dairy Virtuoso (NBC). 8:00— Nash Parade (NBC). 8:30— Fuller Brush Man (NBC). 9:00-Lucky Strike Dance (NBC). 10:00— Fuller's Orchestra. 10:13— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. H:00— Sign Off. WEDNESDAY July 29 WCKY(202m.— 1490 kc. A.M.— 7:00 — The Crooning Guitarist. ":15— Morning Devotions (NBC). Mary's Cat In a Purrsonal Appearance It "ap-purrs" Mary Charles, Columbia Broadcasting System songstress, is encountering difficulties in teaching the proper microphone technique to her prize-winning Persian cat, "Nazir." Miss Charles is well known on the English as well as the American stage, having appeared abroad in "Chariot's Review." In this country she played in "Interference" and then did several specialty acts m Ziegfteld's "Show Girl." She sings on several Columbia programs heard through WKRC. Wednesday, July 29 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8 :00— Mountain Red, 8:15 — Early morning dance program. 9:15 — My New Kentucky Home, 9:45 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:15 — Classic Hour. 1 :45 — Musical Novelties. 11:30— Blue Ridge Shindiggers. Noon — Little Red Riding Hood, John R. Coppin Co. P. Ai.— 12:15 — Popular Dance Melodies. 12:30— Live Stock Reports. 12:35 — Randall Fryer, tenor. 1 :00— Sign off. 5 :45 — Dance Records. 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). C;15 Charlcnc and Catherine. 6 :30— Original Ibold Race Results. 6 :35— Crooning Guitarist. i) : 15— Tommy Ott. 7 :00 — Lawson's Hawaiians. 7 :30— Christian Glee Club. 8:00 — Blue Ridge Shindiggers. 8:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. 9:00— Steve Bates. 0:15 — Lucille Fox, Blues. i) :30— Tommy and Wille. 0:45— Nothing But the Truth, Alex- ander McQueen. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.~ 7:00 — Voices at Dawn. 7:30— Classified Jirectory. 8:00 — Morning Concert. 9 :00— Variety. 9:15— Post Baby Beauty Contest. 9:45 — Kleeman Home Chats. 10 :00— Zoo-cttes. 10:05 — Sunshine Special. 10:35— Vocal Varieties. 10:50 — Mrs. Evans' Questions and Answers. 10:59— Simper Time. Out Of Its Swaddling Clothes! Radio broadcasting is now recognized as the power- fully effective advertising medium it has proved itself to be. But it still needs at the helm the guiding power of experience. And that is what the CHARLES W. REAUME organization supplies. We Know Radio. CHARLES W. REAUME RADIO ADVERTISING 622 Broadway CHerry 2440 Wednesday, July 29 11:00— Garden of Melody. 11 :30— Melodies of Long Ago. Noon— Organ Recital. P. M.~ 12:30— Serenade. 12 :45 — Bellonby Luncheon Musicale. 1 :00— Kroness Brothers. 1:15 — Story Telling' Time. 1 :30— Post Baby Beauty Contest. 2:00 — The Parent's Forum. 2:15 — Galvano & Cortcz. 2:30 — Pauline Ungar, contralto. 2 :45— Reds vs. Brooklyn at Redland Field. 4:45 — Paul & Gene, "The Miniature Kings of iazz." 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:45 — World Series Contest. 6:00— Musical Interlude. 6:15 — World Series Contest. 6:45 — Berning Ford Travelogue. 7 :00— The Pest Question Box. 7;15 — Julius Sein. 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7:45 — Ralph and Harlan. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints. 8:30— Colonial Stages. 8:45 — Coney Island Dance Frolic. 9 :00— Tile- Way Fire- Proof Home Program. 9:30 — Jewish Commercial Program. 10:30— Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M-— 0:45 — Sunrise Worship, God's Bible School. A Laugh a Second with HyRye and Willie Winsum Radio's biggest IS minutes of good cheer and snappy music. Every Tuesday and Thursday 7:15 P. M. WKRC Tune In ... . enjoy yourself Sponsored by The Rubel Baking Co. Wednesday. July 29 7:15— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Grucn Time. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS1 9:15— Morning Minstrels (CHS). 9:30 — Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:00— Learn to Swim It I'.SI 10:15— Floralinc Talk. 10:20— Time and weather. 10:23 — Woman's Hour, Tremlettc Tulley. 10 :45— Charles W. Rcaume Studio. 11:15 — Don Bigelow Orchestra (CBS). 11 :30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11:45 — Drink-Mor Program. Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. «.- 12:30 — Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1:00— Farm Program (CBS). 2:00— Charles W. Reaumc S'.udio 2:15— Salon Orchestrt (CBS). 2:28— Race Result trim Lam.ia, Ky. 2:30— The Three Doctors (CB3). 2 :45— Dancing by the Sea (CBS) 3:15 — Starr-Freeze Melcdies (E.T.) 3 :30 — Columbia C a in o Concert (CBS). 4 :00 — Asbury Park Casino Orchestra (CBS). 4:15 — A. L. Fink Program. 4:45 — Edna Wallace Hopper's Youth Matinee (CBS). 5:00— A. O. Rust, Happy Feet. Wedne.day, July 29 5:15 — Jos. R. Deins Organ Con • rt, Pat Gillick. 5:30 — Cincinnati Trade School Program. 5 :4S — Studio. 5:50— Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. 5:59— Burke Weather Forecast. 0:00 — Kate Smith Swanee Music Home Furniture G>. (( BS) 6:10— Stocks, Cohle ft Tyree. 0:13— Time and weather. 0:15— Linit Program, with Kennis King (CBS). 0:30— Miller and Lylc (CBS). 0:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS). 7:00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15— The Barb a sol Program (CBS). 7:30— Howard Barlow (CBS). 7:45— Old Wurzburg Malt Program. 8:00— Gold Medal Fast Freight (CBS). 8:30— Eno Crime Club (CBS). 9 :00 — What's Happening, Geo. Mul- vihill— Full Measure Gas. 9:15— Rhythm Choristers (CBS). 9:30— Nit Wit Hour (CBS). 10:00— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. 10 :15 — Gruen Answer Man. 10 :25 — Happy Feet. 10:30 — Coney Island Dance Orches- tra. 11:00— Time; Weather; Spurts Re- view. 11:08— Ben Bernie and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11:30— Hill Billy Kid. 11 :45 — Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. Don't Miss « These Wonderful Programs To be without RADIO DIAL in your home ia like touring the country without a road map and guide. You may "g e t there," sure — but if you're missing all the high spots, you are not getting your money's worth. RADIO DIAL puts you in intimate touch with "What's What" in Radio entertainment. Mailed to you weekly with one week's complete program. Clip off and mail the coupon below with one dollar attached, and we will enter your subscription for 6 months. RADIO DIAL 6 months (or $1-00 RADIO DIAL 22 E. 12th Street Cincinnati, Ohio Gentlemen: Enclosed find One Dollar (SI ). Send RADIO DIAL for 6 months. [ ] New Subscriber " | | Renewal Name Address City State i RADIO DIAL. FRIDAY, JULY 2*. 1931. Wedneid.y. July 29 1 WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) | A. M.— r, (JO In!, lint,, n .1 I' iddll i' " ,l! tiii i*- music. 29 Bulova I 0:30— Gym Claslca. g p Food Newi (NBC) .- "" Morning iii ■. i |S : .11 I , • | i litUJ I Mi" 1 Program H i.; I .ml and Wallao i Bi 'i mi Mary Hale Martin (NB( ). ■■ i , II.,,,,,. i... Workshop. I. '.IniMtm. I (NBC) . i , ,i,, I I-. rsonality Perl Bl Mi i .im.i.i fiddlers, mi to Live Sti i Reports. 'hi,., Soloi. Ill r, Manhattan ^..-'l. I' rog ' ' " leg, i I Hi II, Swifl I'mnr. NBI II 90 WI.W Stars. 1 1 i.'i River Ri porls: I inn Signals. Noun l lie Village Rhymester. I'. M. 18 I.'i BlllOVD Time. 12:10. Hotel Gibson Orchestra, r I , Markcl Reports. 1 DO l iv, Stock Reports. i mi National Farm ami Home (NBC) 10 N.ilinl I I'l.i... Orchestra. ■ .in Matinee. ■ 30 i incinnati Zoo Concert. :i :00— Weather Forecast. : in l he Matinee Players I nil I huts will. I'ecpv Winlhtop (NBC). I IE I. in and Walt. I in I ive Slock Reports. i in Mitchem .mil Quartet, \n, n Melodies. .". mi Ramona, , IS i ..mil Thomas (NBC). I A s V Audi INI'.O. ii I.'i The Chatter. 6 SO Phil Cook (NI)C). 8:45— ''Believe It or Not, " Ripley (Nun T on I,.. Ramos Baseball Scores, 7 OB Scger Ellis . 10 l.liu Ruskin i Irchcstra (c. t.). 10 lack Prosl Melodv Moments , Mil i 8:00— The Buddy Boys. ! 3 Id man Hand Concerts (NBI i 'i B0 l ni.v.i Coffee Hour. 10 00 ll.oi y Hush's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 10 I" Variety. in US Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 10:58 Estate Weather Man. I I'" I idler's Orchestra. 11 I" M ' River. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. A. M.- 12:80— Henry Bussc's Orchestra, Castle F'arni. I "" --inn off. WSAI (225 m.-1330 kc.) A. M, 8 00 Gem and Glenn (NBC). . teddy Black's Orchestra , HB( ' , Record " 00 \h. Blaki Ra I , NBI ' i . I, mi, Grant's Stee i ■• Horn (NBI 9:30— National Home II. mi (NBI I n hi' -Records. 10 18 Radio Household Institute NBI in li Records. Ilillin, ubadors NBI ' 11:16 Sign OH P. H. I SO i ive Stock Reports. Sign ,.u I "" \\ ..ir,,ili\ R ., d i ., K ,- v i e w (NB( • 1:00 i. Dealers Salute. • I • ' ■■ t.n ' ... Daytii (NB( i 00 Don Becket I :1S San, Wilson, baritone. 1 10 I'. ■ mi- I., II,, i n Holcombe t I.'i K,..,i,l. Mel rmick Piddlers - rice Talk. .in., with Madame 10 Records NBC). . :00— Back of tin \.„< „i \\.,.!i mo, :: , NBC I'doil Concert (NBC). Wedneiday, July 29 | e.Otl— Halsey Stuart (NBC). ■ J. l'alnnilivc Hum (NBC). 0:80— Coca Cola Program (NBC). 11:00— Scger Ellis. (Til -i, 1.1. iii. I!... i' I Mil ' , io 1 1, .i.l Gibson ' Irchestra. I mm Sign Off. THURSDAY July 30 WCKY(202m.~ 1490 kc.) A. M.- 7:00 — The Crooning Guilarisl. 7 ;I5 Morning Devotions (NBC). 7;30-Ch«-rio (NBC). ,- uii Mountain Red. .- I.. I arly Morning Dance. 8:15— My New Kentucky Home, 9:-15 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:15— Dance Records. 10:30— Nortliam-Warrcn (NBC). 10:45— Classic Hour. 1 1 :00— Musical Novelties. 11:30— Blue Rid«e Sliiudiesers. Noon— 1. idle Red Riding Hood, John R. Coppin Co. P. M-— 12:16 — Popular Dance Tunes. 12:30— Live Stock Quotations. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. 12:15— Rev. Chas. A. Vanderniuelen. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45— Dance Records. 5:55— Avers Sport Flash. 0:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). G:15— Tastvcast Jesters (NBC). (5:30— OriRinal Ihold Race Results. 0:35— Walk, the Radio Clown. fi :45— Utile Red Riding Hood. 7 :00 — D ixic Spiritual Singers (NBC). 7:15 — Tommy and Willie. 7:30— Nothing But the Truth, Alex- ander McQueen. 7 : l"i i roiling Guitarist. B:00 Blackstone Plantation (NBC). 8:30— Blue Ridge Shiudiggcrs. Jt :00 — Karl Arnold and His Orches- tra from Lookout House. D $0— Lawson's Hawaiian Players WFBK (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn. 7 :30 — Classified Directory. 8:00 — Morning Concert. 9 :00— Variety. !>:15— Post Baby Beauty Contest. 9:45 — Kteeman Home Chats. i" '"i /oo-ettes. 10:i)5 — Sunshine Special. in ;85— Morning Musicalc. Hi -o Sister Mary's Kitchen. 10:5!) — Simper Time Announcement. U:00— Victor Herbert's Melodies. U 80 S,.ng Mil Time. 11 :45— Violinist and Accordian. Noon— Organ Recital. P. M.- 12:30 — Musical Brevities, l' 1". Bellonby Luncheon Musicale, ] i00— Two Irish Boys and Chas. Schaeffi i , 1 15- M.>rv Telling Time. i SO Post Baby Beauty Contest. •J :1H1— Matinee. 2:15- Vocal Recital, by Don Gallo- way. 2:80— Dance Frolic 3:00— Memory I ane. 3 :,.u— Harmony Duo. 3 45— Garden oi Melody 4:15— Serenade. 4 :45— Ralph and Harlan i:00 I yric Hour. 80 world Series Contest 6 " ,l Musical Interlude. 6:15 — World Series Contest. 6:45 — Periling Ford Travelogue 7:00— The Posl Question Box 7:1,5 — Julius Sein. 7 30— Harry Hart'man's Sport Re- view. ■ I i Mnr.Wk William. B :0ft— Luckev Boys. irj Ridge Health Hints. B : " LVilighl R i ; i ) Island Dance Frolic 9 :0O — Independent Oil Program. Meyer's Hot Tunes. - imber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc. A. M.— E inrist Worship. I IS— Hill Bilb Kid 7:59— Gmen Time Signal. • .-. .- (CSB Veronica Wiggins of the NBC staff is the contralto voice yoi hear sometimes on the A. & P. Gypsies' program and with th« Happy Wonder Bakers. Thursday, July 30 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 11:00— Pot of Gold (CBS). 9:lo — Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 9 :45 — Barbara Gould Beauty Talk (CBS). 10 :00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 10:30— Vacation Roads. 10:45 — Time and weather. 10:48— Woman's Hour, Treuiletlc Tully. 11:15— Don Bigelow and His Or- chestra (CBS). 1 1 :30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 1 1 :45 — Drinknior Program. Noon— Wurlitzcr Music Box Revue. P. Al.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00— Columbia Farm P r o g r a in (CBS). 1 :25 — Studio Feature. 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. '2:15— Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2 :28— Race Result from Latonia, Ky. 2:30— A. L. Fink— The Three Doc- tors (CBS). 3:45— A. L. Fink— Ben and Helen (CBS). 3:00— Melody Magic (CBS) 3:30— Hotel Taft Orchestra (CBS). 4:00— Jewish Art Program (CBS). 1 :30— Kathrvn Parsons (CBS). 1:45— Meet the Arlists (CBS). 5:00-A. .0 Rust, Happy Feet. 5:15— Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert, Pal Gillick. 5 :30— C incinnati Trade School Program. •i :45 — Studio. 5:50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. Thursday, July 30 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. :00 — Kate Smith and her Swauec Music (CBS) Home Furni- ture Co. :10— Stocks, Coble & Tyree. :13 — Time and weather. :I5 — Unit Program, with Dennis King (CBS). :30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). :45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS). :00 — Pryor's Crcmo Military Band (CBS). :15— Hy Rye and Willie Winsoin, Rubel. :30— The Columbians (CBS). :45— The Old Wurtzburg Malt Pro- gram. :00 — The Premier Salad Dressers (CBS). :15— The Coty Melody Girl (CBS) :30 — Detective Story Program (CBS). :00 — Tacoma Dance Orchestra. :30— Barbara Maurel (CBS). :45— Peter's Parade (CBS). :00— Pyol Blackberry Dudes. : 15— Studio. :20 — Sports Review. :25 — Sports Review. :30 — Coney Island Dance Orches- tra. :00— Gruen Witching Hour. :30 — Time and weather. :33 — Hill Billy Kid. :45 — Jos. R. Dcins Organ Concert Pat Gillick. Thursday, July 30 0:30 — Gym Classes. 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 7:50 — Bulova Time. 8:00 — Morning Devotions. 8:15— Scger Ellis. 8 :30 — Montgomery Ward Program (NBC). 8:48— Ford and Wallace (NBC). 9:00— Rav Perkins (NBC). 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9 :30— Community Heallb. Dr. Carl Wilzbach. 9:45 — Housekeeper Chats. 10:00 — Murray Horton Orchestra. 10:30 — Live Stock Reports. 1 1 :00— The Venetian Three. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 1 1 :30— WLW Stars. 1 1 :45— River Reports ; Time Signals. Noon — Seger Ellis. P. Al.— 12 :15 — Bulova Time. 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:45— Market Reports. 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1 :00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 2 :00 — Organ Matinee. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC I. 2:45— Kiss Proof (NBC). 3 :00— Afternoon Melodies. 3:30— Maze of Melody (NBC). 4:00— Salt and Peanuts. 4:15— Gems of Melody (NBC). 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4:40— Harriet Wellen and Don Becker. 5:00— Edna Wallace Hopper ( NRC). 5:15 — Wildeson's Wildcats. 5 :29 — Bulova Time. 5 :30 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 6 :15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 6 :30— Glenn Adams, Dog Talks. 6:45— News Flashes from Hollywood (E.T.) 7 :00 — Baseball Scores. 7:05— The Chatter. 7 :15— Rin-Tin-Tin Thriller (NBC) 7 :30— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 7:45— Sisters of the Skillet (NBC). 8:00— Varsity Four. 8 :15— Horseshoe Gardens Orchestra 8 :30— Castilian Nights. 9 :00— Fuller's Orchestra. 9:30— Clara, Lou and Em (NBC). 9 :45 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona, 10:00— Canada Dry Program. 10 :30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 10:58— Estate Weather Man. 1 1 :00 — Great Composers. 1 1 :30— Moon River. Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. A. Al.— 12 :30— Henry Bussc's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. 1 :00— Sign OIL WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A, Al.— 0:00 — International Fiddlers. 0:29— Bulova Time. WE CALL and DELIVER WHITE FLANNEL PANTS 50c DRESSES (1-piece) 60c DRESSES (2-piece) 75c DRESSES (3-piece) 85c CLEANED AND PRESSED Phone AVon 9030 City Office, 628 Walnut THE TEASDALE COMPANY WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. Al.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15— Teddy Black's Orchestra (NBC). 8 :45 — Records. 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9:15— Records. 9 :45 — Organ Program. 10 :00— M c C o r m i c k's Old Time Fiddlers. 10:15 — Radio Household Instilule (NBC). 10:30— Records. 11:00— The Hellman Troubadors (NBC). 11:15— Sign Oft. P. Al.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— Sign off. 2 :00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3:00— Records. 3:45 — Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4:00— Mona Motor Organ Recital. 4:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4 :45 — Records. 5:15 — Ramona. 5:30— Records. 6:00— Harry Willsey's Orchestra. 6:25— Better Business Bureau Talk. 6 :30— Records. 0:45— The Goldbergs (NBC). 7 :00— Fleischmann Hour (NBC). 8:00— Arco Birthday Party (NBC). 8:30— Goldman Band (NBC). 9:00 — Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra (NBC). 10:00— Fuller's Orchestra. 0:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). ":3ft— Murray Horton's Orchestra, al Horseshoe Gardens. 11:00— Sign off. Mil 3 1 ©C1B 123502 WEEKLY; Volume I, No. 11 FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1931 Price 5c President and Mrs. Hoover, Col. Lindbergh will be heard locally during coming week Grace Moore (right), a principal in the 1931 edition of "The Ziegfeld Follies" and considered one of the most beautiful girls on the American stage, and Bobbie Brodsley (left), a member of the chorus of the same show, will appear before CBS microphones "i "Views and Interviews," on Monday (August 3) at 5 p. m. Miss Moore and Miss Brodsley will be interviewed during the broadcasts by Nelson Hesse, Columbia writer, and each will smg a selection from the show in which they are appearing. WABC is the nearest outlet (860 kc.) Eastern Michigan Water Carnival is Broadcast The Third Annual Michigan Outdoor Swimming Champion- ship, at Bay City, Mich., one of l 'ie major events of the Eastern Michigan Water Carnival, will >>e described over WKRC and 'lie Columbia network on Friday (July 31) from 3 to 4:15 p.m., b y Ted Husing. The Eastern Michigan Motor- boat Regatta, will be broadcast h' WKRC from 3 to 4:15 Sat-' Three Programs From England on WSAI This Week A portion of the Tidworth Tattoo, a celebration of massed military bands in London, Eng- land; a concert by a symphony orchestra in London; and an orchestra concert under the di- rection of Percy Pitt in London will be heard through WSAI at 3:25 p. m. on Friday (July 31), Monday (August 3), and Tues- day ( August 4) , respectively. The broadcasts will be relayed by NBC from the British Broad- casting Company's short wave station in England. tirday afternoon (August 1 ") from Bay City, Mich. President's Talk Will Be Saturday Mr. Hoover will dedicate "Akron" on same afternoon President Hoover will speak from his camp on the Rapidan at 8 p. m. next Saturday (Au^ ust 8), giving his address for the general conference of the Y. M. C. A. at Cleveland, O. WKRC will carry the Co- lumbia network's broadcast of the speech. Either WLW or WSAI probably will be the NBC outlet. President Hoover will be introduced by John R. Mott, president of the general council of the Y. M. C. A. The same afternoon, Mrs Hoover will dedicate the Navy'- new dirigible "Akron" at cere- monies which will be broadcast on both networks. Lum and Abner Are Subs for Gene and Glenn Gene and Glenn and Jake and Lena have gone on a vacation which will last until August 8. Lum and Abner are filling in on the NBC network while they are gone (WSAI H a. ni. daily). In real life, Lum and Abner are Chester Lauck, and "Tuffy" Goff, business men of Mena, Ark. They created the charac- ters last winter when they were asked to put on a benefit show for the Red Cross Drought re- lief. They are University of Arkansas graduates and Sigma Chis. Gene ( Rowell ) and Glenn (Carroll), with their families and Cal DeVoll who writes their scripts, have gone to Glen Lake, Mich. Post and Gatty To Land Sunday In Silence When Post and Gatty ar- rive at Watson airport Sun- day (August 2) for the Cin- cinnati stop of their triumphal national tour, local radio sta- tions will not tell the world about it, last-minute reports say although WLW originally announced a broadcast from the field. The testimonial banquet to the fliers at 7 :30 Sunday night will be broadcast by WLW, however. Both fliers are ex- pected to respond to the speeches made in their honor. Fritz Reiner Takes Baton for 2 Weeks Lindbergh's Flight Will Be Followed Take Off and Landing of Trip to Japan to be Described Fritz Reiner, erstwhile Cin- cinnati Symphony conductor, will be heard on the nation-wide Co- lumbia network beginning July 30 as conductor of the New York Philharmonic orchestra in the Lewisohn Stadium con- certs. Where Col. Charles A. Lind- bergh goes, the radio goes too. The National Broadcasting company announces that it has completed plans for transmitting an account of the take-off of the Colonel and Mrs. Lindbergh on their proposed flight to Japan and of their arrival in Tokyo. If the Lindberghs want to es- cape the broadcast, they will need to land their plane in Si- beria and walk back. A short-wave radio transmitter and receiver in their plane will keep the Lindberghs in touch with America en route although they will do no broadcasting. Perry Memorial Dedication Will Be Broadcast Ceremonies dedicating a great granite shaft to Commodore Perry's victory in the battle of Lake Erie and commemorating the peace which followed will be heard over a nation-wide net- work Friday (July 31) at 3:45 [j. m. from the site of the monu- ment at Putin Bay, Ohio. James Hamilton Lewis, pic- turesque Illinois senator will de- liver the principal address. Other speakers will include Governor George White of Ohio and Ed- win A. Scott, representing the Canadian Government and presi- dent of the Canadian Club of New York. John H. Clark, former Associate Justice of the Supreme Court will preside. Complete Radio Programs Begin on Page 4 RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY. JULY 31, 1931. Weekly RADIO DIAL Publi.hed every Thur.day by «h. R.*o DU1 P""j.hi«« C °" 22 Ea.t 12th St., Cincinnati, Oh.o. Contents copyr.ghted. Application (of Second Class Entry Pending. NATALIE GIDDINGS, Editor ____ VOL. I JULY 31, 1931 No. 11 Listen While You Eat Aileen Stanley •■I istan While You Eat" seems to be the slogan in more and more hom.c these days In fact, if our observation means anything, meal „me is fas. beaming the' thrice-daily period v,hen the radio audience ' S Pr 4o ,y b« 1 °"«!p. , opi'e'n™«' been adding a radio course to their evening meal for a lone time Many, too, have made it a point to turn on their receives VurinVTe noon 'meal.' But the clinch U««- of radio's meal-time popularity has been provided by breakfast. At first thought this would seem to be an unlikely spot for much if any listening In many homes breakfast is a hurried affair, to describe it moat charitably. Yet the bacon-and-egg audience has teen growing """Perhaps the best evidence of that, next to an actual listener canvass, ,s the buying of early morning time by sponsors. Sponsors, you know are not accustomed to pay out good dollars for air time unless they are pretty thoroughly convinced that people will be listening then And sponsors have been buying time at the period when the incense of burn- ing Why dq S pe h „ e pl 1 e an Hs,.n a. breakfast? Considering everything, that is " fa At''th| tl evening meal they listen because it is a natural time of leisure, and — less consciously — because radio supplies the gayety ot a restaurant. And much the same is true at noon. But breakfast is different. It is far from a time of leisure, and breakfast music is some- thing new, even in the smartest hotels. ., The answer seems to be radio alone. People have come to listen at grapefruit time because radio supplies something they find they have been wanting. . , , L .,—„ Which is quite a feather in radio's cap, particularly when programs have the highly beneficial effect of sending listeners out smiling to meet what the day has to bring. Around the Dial By THE DIAL TWISTER «« PROGRAM JOTTINGS »» The sweet- voiced and stage star whose millions of phonograph records are favor ites in most every home, will sing three new songs as guest artist with Rudy Vallee and the Connecticut Yankees on the Fleischmann Yeast Hour, Thurs- day (August 6) at 7 p.m., over WSAI. FRIDAY, JULY 31 Harriet Wellen, \YL\V so- prano, will celebrate two years at the station with a special recital at 3 p. m. She will include her favorite numbers: "Pale Moon," "Le Saron Rose," "Song of the Soul," and "My Heart Stood Still." * * * Toscha Seidel, concert violin- ist, and Theo Karle, tenor, will be featured in the Pillsbury Pageant at 9 p. m. through WKRC and the Columbia net work. Sam Lanin's orchestra will play music from the "Third Little Show" and "Show Boat. * * * Heatrolatown is back o n WLW at 9 p. m„ replacing Paul Whiteman. under the title of "Murder in the Willett Family" by the Eno Crime Club at S p, m. through WKRC. The suspense will be held over until Wednesday, Au- gust 5, when the mystery will he unravelled at S :30. Enter Miller and Lyles (WKRC, Wednesday, at 6:30 p. m.) as the latest dispensers of black-face com- edy by radio. If you saw "Shuftlin' Along" or any of their other stage hits you know what to expect, and you won't be disappointed. Too soon to say whether they're the competition for Amos' n' Andy Columbia's been trying to unearth. Hut they'll bear watching. That Ravinia Opera Concert (WLW, Sunday, at 3 p. m.) is getting a big hand from the lads and lasses who know their allegros and moderatos. The orchestra is a darb. and the full hour puts no cramp in the prog ram- builders' style. Alexander McQueen has flitted over to WCKY, where his "Noth- ing But the Truth" is now a nightly tidbit. This gives the genial fount of strange facts the distinction of having worked at all five locals. And, better than that, his interest- ing feature is something that isn't duplicated. * * * The WLW people seem to be rather surprised that Musical Dreams (Monday at 9:30 p. m.) has set off such a loud listener cheer. They shouldn't be. More restful programs is what a lot of people have been wanting for quite a spell, if this column knows its kilocycles. * * * Those Red Goose Adventures (WKRC, Friday, at 6:30 p. m.) are a good break for the youngsters. Yarns with Indians and all that, exciting enough to keep 'em wrig- gling. Cincinnati's own Henry Fillmore guest-conducted Goldman's Band last Wednesday night (WLW). Naturally, "Mike" did his stuff, too. And did the Central Park crowd like it? Maybe you heard them. Strange that Cincinnati pro- gram sponsors neglect a born show- man like Fillmore. V\ atch for "Singing Sam" on th< Barbasol program (WKRC, Mon day, Wednesday and Friday, ai 7:15 p. m.}. Another WLW act gone chain. It's getting to be a habit. That Gold Medal Express roars along at a fast clip (WLW, Mon- day, at 9 p. m.). It's a peppy pop- ular show. This column's money (if any) goes down on Ohman and Arden. Always did like a good piano team, * « * Dr. Julius Klein keeps up the pace with his series of talks about business (WKRC, Sunday, at 6 p. m.). One of the few that step right out of the loudspeaker and sit down beside you. No depression in audience. MONDAY, AUGUST 3 Elizabeth Lennox ( Palm- olive's contralto) and Lewis James (Revelers' tenor) will be co-starred at S :30 p. m. in the General Motors program through WSAI. Miss Lennox will sing "Habanera" from "Carmen." * * * Guy Lombardo will include "What Is This Thing Called Love?" "Just a Little Closer," and "Somebody Loves Me" in his Robert Burns Panatela pro- gram through WKRC at 9 p. m. The Club Valspar (WSAI, Sat urday, at 8:30 p. m.) is putting on a regular oarade of guest stars. Like standing at the corner of Broadway and 42nd. They'll all come along if you give 'em time. Speedy act, too. The Silver Flute (WSAI, Satur- day, at 7:30 p. m.) is a sure bet if you like the old folk tales dressed up in intriguing new clothes. Some of them are gems of subtle com- ity, for instance the Greek myths; nd some of them are good straight drama. The old boys weren't so sloppy, after all, were they? Creatore's Band is subbing for Billy Jones and Ernie Hare on the Interwoven program (WCKY, Fri- day, at 8 p. m.). It's a top-notcher. Wonder if the maestro still does his daily three or four dozen while conducting. * * * The Kellogg Slumber Music goes on winning its full ration of gratitude from plenty of listeners (WLW, Sunday, at 8:30 p. m. from now on). And Ludwig Laurier does turn in a handsome piece of work, arrangements, choice of numbers, or conducting. That Bayuk Stag Party is a good listen for ears that aren't so shell- like (WLW, at 8:15 p. m., Sun- day). It's a breezy show, with in- teresting guest celebrities. Glad to find Jim Stanle/s corking baritone coming into its own, too. * * * The National Dairy program (7:30 p. m. on WSAI, Tuesday) is getting a hand from those who know their music these days. Its string ensemble with cellos front and center is mighty refreshing, sure enough. What Wild Radio Waves are Saying Walter Damrosch : "The world needs a new giant of music. There are no giants creating music today. This age does not seem able to express itself mu- sically. * * * Ellis McDiarmid, flutist (once with Cincinnati Symphony, and College of Music prodigy. Now NEC flutist among other New York positions) — A flute is a column of hot air confined by a silver cylinder. * * * East and Dumke (Sisters of the Skillet) — When we ride our motorcycle we have to figure both gasoline mileage and tire mileage because we weigh so much. * * * Don Gilman, NBC Pacific coast vice president : Radio broadcasters who want to pre- serve freedom of ether waves must censor advertising they ac- cept, and establish standards to judge all commercial broadcasts. * * * Pepsodent president : We be- lieve one of the main reasons Amos 'n' Andy are so real and so human is because everything they do, and say, every episode is created by them. Only Amos 'n' Andy are Amos 'n' Andy. SATURDAY, AUGUST 1 Rudy Vallee and his Connect! cut Yankees play at 7 :30 p. .n through WCKY from the Hotel Pennsylvania. * * * Such ambitious numbers as the first movement from Bee- thoven's "Eroica Symphony," the "Valse Triste" of Sibelius, and Tschaikowski's "Nutcracker Suite" and "Marche Slav" will be played by the National High School orchestra at Interlochen, Mich., through WLW at 8 o'clock Saturday night. The or- chestra includes 300 of the best high school musicians in the country. * * * A dramatization of "The New Magdalen," the story written years ago by Wilkie Collins, will be played through WKRC at 9 p. m. Andrew regusted. H. Brown — I'se TUESDAY, AUGUST 4 Singin' Sam, the Barbasol Man, will do a one-man minstrel show at 7 :15 p. m. through WKRC. He will do all the parts — two end men, the inter- locutor, and all the ballad singers. * * * Liszt's orchestral version of the traditional Hungarian march Rakoczy," will be played by the Jristoleers under the direction of Sidney Lowenstein as a cli- max to their program WKRC at 8:30 p. m. over WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5 Walter Butler Mahony, editor and publisher of "The North American Review," will be the guest speaker on "Bill Schudt's Going to Press" program over WKRC at 5 p. m. SUNDAY, AUGUST 2 Melodic Interlude is a new NBC concert on WLW at 13:30 p. m. * * * The Ravinia Opera orchestra will play Tschaikowski's "Pa- thetique Symphony" at 3 p. m * * * "The Dream of Gerontius," oratorio generally acclaimed Sir Edward Elgar's masterpiece, will be sung by the Cathedral Hour choir and soloist through WKRC at 3 p. m. * * * John R. Pogue, baritone, and Herschel Lindstaedt, pianist, will be soloist on the student pro- gram of the College of Music at WCKY at 7:30 p. m. Piano numbers will include among others the familiar "London- derry Air," and Kreisler's "Ca- price Viennois" and "The Old Refrain." Organist, Eddie Dunstader, will desert the console long enough to present another of his unique piano specialties as one of the high spots in the run of the Gold Medal Fast Freight, through WKRC at 8 p. m. Kentucky Troubadour Randall Fryer is the Ken- tucky Troubadour who sings at WCKY every day except Sun- day and Thursday at 12 :45 p. m. Fryer has broadcast frequently on NBC networks, has sung in musical comedy and light opera played in the "Vagabond King" and "Prince of Pilsen" com panies, and was a member for several seasons of the San Carlo Opera Company. MONDAY AUGUST 3 Mary Charles, CBS soprano (see July 24 'Radio Dial, page 7), has returned from a short vacation in Europe and will re- sume her weekly song recital at 6 p. m. Monday which WKRC will carry. * * * A thriller with scenes laid in Bermuda, New York and the Adirondack's will be dramatized THURSDAY, AUGUST 6 John Earrymore, recorded for the Radio Newsreel of Holly- wood, will be heard at 6 :45 p. m. through WLW. He will tell his experiences in filming "Svengali" and will introduce a section of ecord made during the actual taking of the picture. * * * John Charles Thomas will sing the stirring, sentimental "Tommy Lad" and the roman- tic "Rose Marie" in the Maxwell House Concert Thursday at 8 :30 p. m. His other songs will be "Yeoman's Wedding" by Prince Pontiatowski, "When I Think Upon the Maidens," and "Mah Lindy Lou." WHAS is the nearest NBC outlet (820 kc). Premier Sponsors of the Dutch Mas- ter's Minstrels formerly on the NBC network and of the Dutch Masters' program now on WKRC, the Consolidated Cigar Company i s to have another NBC program on WLW at 8 :30 p. m. Wednesday beginning this week (August 5). Type of pro- gram has not been announced. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1931. You Should Know--??? Behold Cincinnati's man of mystery, the Teaberry Sports Reviewer of WKRC. Do you know him? His name's a secret. Modesty and an aversion to young women combine to make him maintain strict anonymity on the air. By observation we found this much( and a picture) : He is approximately 25 years old. His hair is light brown. His eyes are blue. He drives a sporty blue roadster. He is impervious to women. My inquiry we discovered that for five years he was assistant sports editor of the defunct Commercial Tribune. He has worked in the sport department of the New York Times and his special articles on sports have appeared in newspapers all over the country. Writing is his avoca- tion. He writes all the time for magazines and newspapers — he sells his stories too. He is a sportsman too in an amateur way. He referees foot- ball games, played football and basket ball while in high school, and plays a good game of golf. He gives timely sport reviews 'n a rapid enthusiastic way at WKRC at G p. m. and 11 p. m. everj- night in the week, Tragedy Mary Hopple, NBC contralto, thinks there's an animal stork. She banished her Japanese gar- den to the kitchen sink because *he discovered a worm under a pagoda. The next morning she found the worm parading around the sink, a proud parental smile C, K its face and six infant worms crawling after it. Heartless, she washed the whole family down the drain. Ball Game Today! WFBE broadcasting. Friday (July 31) and Sat- urday (August 1) — Pitts- burgh vs. Cincinnati at Pitts- burgh; 8:45 p. m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday (August 3, 4. 5) —Chicago vs. Cincinnati at Chicago; 3:15 p. m. Thursday (August 6) — Pittsburgh vs. Cincinnati at Pittsburgh; 8:45 p. m. Torrid Titles Are Chosen for New Programs Radio program titles are get- ting more torrid as the summer grows warmer. "Paris Night Life," and "Ra- dio's Greatest Lover" are two new NBC programs WLW is adding to its schedules. Princess Ivanova Oblensky. of the Russian Imperial Court is featured in the Paris sketches at 6:45 p. m. Monday nights. Carlo La Mar, a love singer, is the Lover on Saturdays at 6:45 p. m. The Paris Night Life program can be heard also on Thursdays at 9 :45 through stations WGAR (1450 kc.) and KYW (1020 kc.) WENR has the Radio Lover program also on Wednes- day night 9:45 (870 kc.) Children Can Have Auditions at Station WCKY Little Red Riding Hood is hostess at WCKY every Satur- day morning at 9 :45 to children between the ages of 2 and 14. Every talented child is encour- aged to apply to the club for membership and the opportunity of performing on WCKY dur ing the Kiddie Club program. Double Duty Mabel Jackson, Dayton so- prano often heard locally in ra- dio and concert appearances, is singing on both the Columbia and National Broadcasting Com- pany networks. She sings in the quartet on the Pillsbury pro- gram through WKRC and CBS. Last week she was guest soloist on the Fuller Brush program through NBC stations. Ford Rush, half of that idol- zed team of Ford and Glenn, is to broadcast at WLW beginning August 3. Among other pro- grams, he will broadcast one for children modeled on the Lullaby Time that he originated for Ford and Glenn. After Jack Grady of the team of Jack and Gene lost his voice. Gene Carroll joined Ford and Glenn to make the trio of Gene, Ford and Glenn which was on the air at WLW and WTAM Then Ford left and went to KMOX where he has been musical director for some time. THESE PROGRAMS CAN BE DIALED OUT OF TOWN STATION GUIDE KMOX— 1090 kc— B76.1 i WBBM— 770 kc— 3S9.4 i WENR— 870 kc— 3*4.6 i WHAS— 830 kc— 365.6 i WLS— 870 kc— 3*4.0 r WMAQ— 670 kc — (47.5 r WTAM— 1070 kc— 280.2 r Saturday, July 25 Dean Gleason L. Archer of Suffolk Law- School, Boston, talks entertainninly at 0:15 p. m, on Laws (hat Snfcttuard Society. WENR cirried it from NBC. Friday, July 31 Here's a problem for real Dx-crs. Pick Up WNAC (Boston) at 9:30 p. m. to hear its ninth anniversary program. WNAC has 1000 watts, broadcasts on 12S0 kilocycles, the same wave used by WFBM, Indian. apolis. Paul Wliiteman's Paint Men, no longer on WLW at p. m., can be heard on WHAS. Saturday, August 1 Brooks and Ross sing on the Steelcote proRram at 8:15 p. m. on CBS stations, in- cluding WBBM and KMOX. Sunday, August 2 Jacques Fray and Mario BracRiotti, Franco-Italian piano leam, will play classics, modern music, and American jazi at 0:15 p. m. through station KMOX and CBS Southland Sketches, musical pictures Dixie by the Southernaircs male quartet and Levee band at S a. m. on WENR, WTAM, and NBC. Carvcth Wells, who explores Africa with his tongue in his cheek, talks entertain- iiifrly on travel at 1 p. m. on WTAM. WHAS and NBC. Semi-classical music is sung by the Pil- grims at 10 p. m. on NBC stations, in- eluding WHAS. The Riverdalc Country School Glee Club will broadcast from London at 11:30 a. m. over the Columbia network, including WBBM. The club, an American group, arc on a bicycle tour of England, singing at historical puhlic schools, including Win- chester and Harrow. Monday, August 3 Vaughn de Leath has a new series of pronrams at (I p. m, on NBC stations, in- cluding WENR. Tuesday, August 4 Wednesday, August 5 The First Nigbtcr has Rood dramatic entertainment for NBC stations, including WENR, at 8 p. m. Thursday, August 6 lobn Charles Thomas sings on the Max- well House concert at 8:30 p. m. through WHAS. Dutch Masters Move to Sunday The Dutch Masters, now a Columbia feature, hereafter arc to be heard at 8 o'clock Sunday night through WKRC instead of on Fridays. The new series of programs will be marked by light comedy dialogue between Peter Zorn and his friend Norton as they dis- cuss the songs of yesteryear that the program includes. This week the numbers include "Barney Google," Beale Street Blues," "Who." "Tell Me Pretty Maiden" and others. Grab Bag Boys George Lloyd, late of the WLW announcing staff and the Crosley Theater, has returned to the station as one of the Grab Bag Boys who are to appear fre- quently in 1 5 minute bits of comedy and songs. His partner is Freddy Miller with whom he toured big-time vaudeville cir- cuits IS years ago. Here's Mrs. Pennyfeather Rudy Vallee has a new con- tract with the Hotel Pennsyl- vania to play until next May "at a substantial increase." Our Dialy Dozen By DON BECKER i We're awfully sorry to tell you [Cliff Adams did not break liis arm! 1 "I only dislocated it," .!, | ■ •rethcart* of the Air 8:45— The Old h 9.-00— 0\ol Feature J>:15— Studio Feature 9:30— Consolidated Merchant*' Pro- gram 10:00— Rhtthcm K 10:15— Floralinr Talk ■ 10:3O— Charles W. Reaume Studio rime and Weather 1 1 ^3— Woman's Hoar— Trrmlette ToBj 11:30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11 :45— Dnnkmor Program. WSA1 Friday, July 31 Shopping gossip and music are hroadcast by WKRC every day from the Charles W. Reaume Studio where this picture was taken. The staff includes Mr. Reaume at the microphone, Johnny Alberts and Ruth Stokes, pianists, and Andy Jacobs, violinist. WKRC Friday, July 31 Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue P. M.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS) 1:15— Art Dry Cleaning Program 1:15— Farm Network Program (CBS). I 10 Pyol Program. 1 : 15— Studio Feature. 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio, 2:15— Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2:28— Race Result from 1-atonia, Ky. he Three Doctors (CBS). 8 .-45— Educational Features (CBS). 3:00— Eastern Michigan Water Car- nival (CBS). II \ I . Finlt Program. 4:45— Edna Wallace Hopper's Youth Matinee (CBS). 5:00— A. O. Rust— Happy Feet. 5:15— Jos. R. Dcini Program, Pat Gillick, Organist. 3:30— Cincinnati Trade School. 5 :45 — Studio 6:50 — Eureka Baseball Scores Sports Review 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast >'• 00 Kate Smith and Hei Swanet Music (CBS). — Home Furni- ture Company. fi:10— Stocks. Cohle & Tyree 6:13 — Time and weather 6:15 — Linit Program, with Dennis Kins CCBS) 6:30— St. Morits Orchestra (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Militan Band ( ( hs, 7 I'. Barbasol Program (CBS) 7:30— Indian Lake Period. I 36 What's Happening (Full Meas- ure — Geo. Muh ihill ). 1 15- 1 jtVt isohn Stadium Concert f ( B S ) S ;00— Liberty Magazine Hour 8:45 — Cincinnati & Lake Eric Pro- gram. 9:00— Pillaburv Pageant (CBS). D 10 W\ \C Anniversary Program (CBS). 10:00— Pyol Blackberry Dudcs(CBS). i" i i i .men Answer Man .land Orchestra. 11:00— Time: Weather: Sports Hemie and His Orches- tra (a Rid 11:45— Jos. R. Deins Program. Pat Gillick. Organist WI.W (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M— national Fiddlers and Salt and Peanuts, 6 :S0 — Gvm Classes t P. Food News (NBC) ter Ellis tauu i et . Ward Program 8:45- Ford and Wallace 9:00— Rav Perkins (SBCI 9 lis— ~Tiic Hostess." Mrs. Lutye ngeil 9:30 — Harshaw Artnounoement mcholt) Hints 9:45— Premium Man stand Serenadcrs 10:50— live Stock Report. ■hem Singer,: Ravmond Milchem 1 1 r■ Hartmin's Sport Review 7 :45 — I-atonia Lakes Subdivision 8:00— Luckey Boys 8:16— Murdock William* 8:30— Dn- Ridge Health Hints *:45— Twilight Reveries n :ft.i— Independent Oil Stations 9:30— Meyer's Hot Tunes 9:45— Slumber Music WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. ,M- 6 :45 — God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship 7:45— Hill Billy K.d. 'irucn Time Signal 8:00— Commuters (CBS). 8:45— Morning Minstrels (CBS). y*s Scrap Book (CBS) 8:45— Morning Minstrels (CBS). 9:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. WKRC S.turd.y. Autu.t l 9:30 — Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 10:00— Adventures of Helen and Marv (CBS). 10:15— Time: Weather 10:20— Woman's Hour — Trcmlette Tullv ilumbia Revue I > 11:00— Don Bi ■• lis Orel tra (( 11:30— Hotel Tail Orchestra (CBS) 11 :t."i— Drinkmor Program Noon— Wurlitzer Music B>>\ Revue P. M.— 12:30 — Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram 1 :00 — Columbia Farm Program (CBS) 1 :80— Pyol Program. 1 :45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 2 15 Mil and Cat sey. 2:28 — Race Result from Laloni;., K, 2:30— A. L. Fink Song Recital, Louie Johnson, tenor 3:00 — Eastern Michigan Water Car- nival (CBS). 4:15— Dancing by the Sea (CBS). 4:45 — Madison Singers (CBS). 5:00— A. O. Rust— Happy Feet. 5:15 — Jos. R, Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. 5:30 — Cincinnati Trade School Pro- gram. 5:45 — Studio 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores 5 :55 — Sports Review 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast 6:00— St. Morilz Orchestra (CBS) Home Furniture Co. 6:15— Studio 6:25— Stocks, Coble and Tyree 6:28— Time and weather 6:30— Happy Feet, 6:35 — Studio Feature. 6:45— Camel Quarter Hour (CBSl 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS) 7:15— Kate Smith and Her SwatlM Music (CBS). 7:30 — Junior Chamber <,f Commerce 8:00— United Spanish War Veterans. 8 :30 — Lewisohn Stadium Concert (CBS). 9 :00 — Hank Simmons' Show Boat (CBS) 9 :45 — Studio Feature 10:00— Bert Lown and His Orchestra (CBS). 10:15 -Coney Island Dance Orchestra, 10:45— Will Osborne and His Orches- tra (CBS). 1 1 :00— Time : Weather ; Sports 11:08 — Guy Lombardo and His Or- chestra (CBS) U:30_Hill Billy Kid. 11:45 — Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. Midnight— Jos. R. Deins Midnilc Frolic Request Program, Pat Gillick. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6:00 — International Fiddlers and Salt t and Peanuts 6:29 — Bulova Time. 6 :30— Gym Classes. 7:45-A. & P. Food News (NBC) S :0U — Morninu Devotions 8:15— Jim and Walt. 8 :30— Montgomery Ward Program (NBC) 8:45— Ford and Wallace (NBC) 9:00— Dance Miniatures (NBC) 9 :30— Book News. 9:45— WLW Mail Bag 10:00— Organ am] \ oral 10:30— Livestock Reports. McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 11 ■OH— Elliot Brock, violin. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC) 1 1 :30 — Livestock Reports. 11:45— River Reports; Time Signals Noon — Governmental Glimpses. At- torney General Gilbert Bettman P. M.— 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orrhcstra 13:45— National Farm and Home Period (NBC). I :o--N'cthcrIand Plaza Orchestra. 2:00— Organ Matinee. 2 :30 — Cincinnati Zoo Symphony Con- certs. I 00— Jim and Walt. 3:15— Pacific Feature Hour (NBC) 1:00— Mare of Melody (NBC) 4 :30 — Crosley Dealers' Hour 5:00 — Scckatorv Hawkins. 5:30— Doctors of Melody 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC) 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC) 6:30— The Chatter. 1-os Ramos Baseball Scores. C:50-Seger Ellis. 7 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, ITLV 31, 1931. WLW Saturday, Augu.t 1 7:30— R- F. D. Hour 8:00— Crosley Saturday Knights. 8:30— Domino Orchestra (NBC) 9:00— King Edward Cigar Band. 9:30— Clara, Lu and Em (NBC) 9 ;45— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 10:00— Club Sohio 10:30— Variety 10:45— Bob Newhall Sport Slices 10:69— Estate Weather Man. 11:00— The Singing Violin 11 :30 — Doodlesockers. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:30— Castle Farm Orchestra. 1 ;00— Fuller's Orchestra. 1 :30— H e n r y Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.- 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC) 8:15 — Tom Waring and His Trouba- dours (NBC). 8 ;4S— Records 9 :00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9:15— Hits and Bits (NBC). 10:15— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 10:30— Keys to Happiness (NBC) 11:00— Records 11:30— Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop. Comm. Assn. 11:45— Records Noon — Sign off P. M.— 3:00— Classic Gems (NBC) 3 :30— Records 3 ;45_Crosley Dealers Salute 4 :00— Records 5 :00— Southern Singers & Mitchem 5:30— Records. 6:00— Harry Willscy's Orchestra 6 :30— Records 6:45— The Goldbergs (NBC) 7 :00— Records 7:15 — Harry Willsey's Orchestra. 7:30— The "Silver Flute (NBC) 8;00~General Electric Hour (NBC) 8:30— Club Valspar (NBC) 9:00— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC) 10 :00— Fuller's Orchestra 10:30— Murray Horton's Orchestra, Horseshoe Gardens 11 :0O— Sign off SUNDAY August 2 WGKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 10:00— Nomads (NBC). 10:30— Jewels of Destiny (NBC). 11:00— The Crooning Guitarist. 11:15— Echoes of the Orient (NBC). 11:30— Hot Shot, the Briarhopper. H:45_Bob Sidell. Noon — Jack Moore. P. M.— 12 :15— Blue Ridge Shindiggers. 12:45— Charlene and Kathlcne, Ladies of Melody. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45— Lucille Fox, Blues. 6:00 — Lawson's Hawiians 6:30— Little Red Riding Hood. 6:45— The Crooning Guitarist. 7:00— Blue Ridge Shindiggers. 7:30— College of Music. 8:00— The Italian Screnaders. 8:15— Something for Everybody. 8 :45— Chicago Philharmonic Or- chestra. (NBC). 9:15— Flovd Gibbons (NBC). 9 :30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House.. WFBE Sunday, August 2 3:15 — Two Irish Boys and Chas. Schaeffer. 3:30— Vocal and Piano Recital, with Pauline Gidding Unger, con- tralto. 4:00— The Islanders. 4:15 — Pastels in Prose. 4:30 — Sundown Serenader. 4:45 — Post Symphony Hour. 5:45 — Tea Time Tunes. 6:15— Musical Interlude. 6:30— Church Federation Hour. 7:00 — Dinner Dance Music. 7 :30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Review. 7:45 — Anne Storey, contrato. 8:00— Song Hit Time. 8:30— The Orioles. 8:45— Twilight Reveries. 9 :00— Scotland Yard. 10:15— Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6 :45_7 :45— God's Bible School- Sunrise Worship. 9:00— God's Bible School. 10:00— Watchtower Program (e. t). 10 :15 — Jim Lightfield — Veteran's Civic Hour. 11 :00— Services from First Church of Christ Scientist. Noon — American Legion Program. P. M.— 1 :00 — Jewish Community Program. 1:30— Gypsy Trial (CBS). 2:00 — Gruen Old-Fashioned Garden. 3:00— Cathedral Hour (CBS) 4:00— French Trio (CBS). 4 :15— Pastorale (CBS). 4:45— Theo Karle (CBS). 5:00 — Around the Samover (CBS). 5 :30— Twilight Reveries. 5 :58— Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00— The World's Business (CBS). 6:15— Studio. 6:20— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6:25 — Sports Review. 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:45— The Boswell Sisters (CBS). 6 ;58 — Time and weather. 7:00— Devils, Drugs and Doctors (CBS). 7 :15— Kate Smith, Swanee Music CBS). 7:30— Tony Parcnti and His Singing Saxophone (CBS). 7 :45 — Studio Feature. 8:00— The Dutch Masters (CBS). 8:30— Lewisohn Stadium Concert (CBS). 9:30— The Gauchos (CBS). 9:45— Star Reveries (CBS). 10:00— Coney Island Dance Orchestra 10:30— Chic Variety Program (CBS) 11:00— Time and weather. 11:03— Sports Review. " 18 — Hollywood Gardens Orchestra (CBS). 11:30— Nocturne (CBS). Pretty Peggy is Romantic Lady with Frank WFBE Monday, Augu»t 3 9 :45— Klceman Furniture Program. 10:00— Zoo-ettes. 10:05— Musicalc Brevities. 10:35— Variety. 10:50— Mrs. Evans" Questions and Answers. 10 :59— Simper Time. 11:00— Song Hit Time. 11:30— Tone Poems. 12:00— Serenade. P. M-— „ . , 2 ;45 — Bellonby Luncheon Musicalc. 1 :00— Organ Recital. 1:15— Story Telling Time. 1 ;30 — Dance Frolic. 2:00— The Islanders, 2:15 — Vocal Varieties, Stewart. 2:30— Ralph and Harlan. 2:45— Harmony Duo. 3:00— Matinee, Musicalc. 3:15— Reds vs. Chicago, at Chicago. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30— World Series Contest. 6 :00— Musical Interlude. 6 :15_World Series Contest. 6:45— Bcrning Ford Travelogue. 7 :00— Post Question Box. 7:15— Julius Scin. 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7:45— Latonia Lakes Subdivision. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15_Byron Trio. 8:30— Drv Ridge Health Hints. g : 45_Twilight Reveries. 9 :00— Evening Chimes. 9:45_Slumber Music. Peggy Allenby is leading lady of the Realities of Romance which WSAI broadcasts from the NBC network at 10:30 Friday morning. Of Spanish, Irish and English descent. Miss Allenby is a New Yorker by birth but received her convent education in Montreal; Manhattanville (N. Y.) and South Bend. Sh< appeared in numerous Broadway plays, includ ~ Came Back," "Married and How," Hi and "Conflict." She speaks French and Spanish fluently, and can play anging from engenues to dangerous swimming, flying, rare perfume, of Romance. h; _ "The Man Wk< Understood Women,' adventuresses. She autiful furniture, and Re roles likes lities WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Voices at Dawn. 9 :00— Morning Concert. 9 :30— Invitation to the Waltz. 10:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints. 10:30— Echoes from Germany. 10:45— Beming Ford Travelogue. 11 :00— Excerpts from the Operas. 11:45— Tile Way Fire-Proof Home Program. P. M.— 12:15— Klceman Furniture Program. 12:30— Galvano & Cortez. 12:45— Organ Recital. 1 :00— Jewish Hour. 2:00— Garden of Melody. 2:30— Hawaiian Bluebirds. 2:45— Harlan and Ralph. 3:00— Man- Tribble, soprano. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 8:59— Time. 9 :00— Church Forum. 9:30— Song for Today (NBC). 9 :45— Pollack and Lawnhurs (NBC). 10:05— Organ, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 10:25— River Reports. 10:30— Morning Musical (NBC). 11:30— Troika Bells (NBC) Noon— Tales of the Emerald Isle (NBC). P. M.- 12:30— Melodv Interlude (NBC). 1:30— Yeast Foamcrs (NBC). 00— Matinee Jewels. 30— Henry Thies' Orchestra. 00— Ravinia Opera Concerts (NBC). 4:00— Sabbath Reveries (NBC). 5:00— The Roamios. 5 :30— Plantation Days. 6:00— The Chatter. 6 :30— Conservatory of Music Concert (NBC). 55 — Baseball Scores. 00— Enna Jettick Melodics(NBC) 15— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 30— Harbor Lights (NBC). 00— Heel Hugger Harmonic; (NBC). 8:15— Eavuk Stag Party (NBC). 8:45— Kaffee Hag Slumber Music (NBC). 9:15— Variety. 9 :30— Fuller's Dance Orchestra. 10:00— Estate Weather Man. 10:02— Croslev Concert. 10:45— Murray Horton's Orchestra at Horseshoe Gardens. 11:00— Hcnrv Thies and His WLW Orchestra (to NBC "Blue" Network), Midnight— Henry Busse's Orchestra, at Castle Farm. Sunday, August 2 WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) p. JW.— 2:00 — Sermonette and Hymn Time. 2:30— Balkan Mountain Men (NBC) 3 :00 — National Sunday Forum (NBC). 4 :00— Rebroadcast From Mt. Vernon, Paris (NBC). 5:00— Catholic Services (NBC). 6:00— Thru the Opera Glass (NBC). 7:00— Chase and Sanborn (NBC). 8 :00 — "Our Government," David Lawrence (NBC). 8:15— The Russian Singers (NBC). 8:45— Iodent Big Brother (NBC). 9 :15 — G oldman Band Concert (NBC). !) :45— Fuller's Orchestra. MONDAY August 3 WGKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7:00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15 — Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Hot Shot, the Briarhopper. 8:15 — Early morning dance program. 9 :15— My New Kentucky Home, Jetta Crane. 9 :45 — Dance Records. 10:30— Classic Hour. H :00— Musical Novelties. 11:30— Skillet Lickers. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— 12:15— Little Red Riding Hood. John R. Coppin Co. 12:30— Norris Brock Live Stock. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. WCKY Monday, August 3 12 :45— Randall Fryer, tenor. 1 :00— Sign off. 5 :45 — Dance Records. 5 :55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6 : 15— Tasty east Jesters (NBC). 6 :30— Steve Bates, Singing to an Octofonc. 6:45— Little Red Riding Hood. 7 ;00— Program dedicated to Zanes- ville, Ohio. 7:30— Stromberg Carlson (NBC). 8:00— Wally. the Radio Clown. 8:15— "The Man Who Could Not Die," mystery thriller. 8:45— Hot Shot, the Briarhopper. 9 :00— Charlene and Kathleen. 9:15— Tommy and Willie. 9:30— Nothing But the Truth, Alex- ander McQueen. 9 :45 — Italian Serenaders. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn. 7:30 — Classified Directory. 8:00 — Morning Concert. 9:00— Hyde Park Community Pro- gram. 9:15" — Sunshine Special. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 0:45— God's Bible Sehool— Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7:59— Gruen Time. 800— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 0:00— Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 9:30— Mr. Fixit (CBS). 9:45— Charles W. Reaumc, studio. [0:15— The Madison Singers (CBS) 10:30— Bruce Chapman (CBS). 10:45— Time and weather. 10-48— Woman's Hour — Tremlette Tully. n , 11 15— Don Bigelow and His Orches- tra (CBS) 11:30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11 :45— Drink-Mor Program. Noon— Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M-— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram. 1 ;00— A. L. Fink Program. 1 :30— Pyol Program. 1 :45— Studio Feature. 2-00— Charles W. Reaumc Studio 2 :15— Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS) . v 2-28— Race Result from Latonia, Ky. 2:30— Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45— Starr-Freeze Melodies (E. T.) •3:00— U. S. Army Band (CBS). 3:30— St. George Hotel Orchestra (CBS). 4:00— Dancing by the Sea (CBS) 4:30— Hoosier Photographer — Tramp Starr, 4 :45-Jolly Jugglers (CBS). 5 -.00— A. O. Rust, Happy Feet. 5:15— Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. 5:30— Cincinna t i Trade School Program. 5 :45— Studio. 5:50— Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. 5 : 59— Burke Weather Forecast. fi:00— Home Furniture Program, Mary Charles (CBS). 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. RADIO TUBE SPECIALISTS LINK'S TUBE SHOP 607 WALNUT STREET RADIO REPAIRING PArkway 6415 Do You JSfeed "Money 1 If you are in need of some ready cash with which to meet a press- ing financial situation or to pay up scattered bills, we have a helpful, Personal Loan Service whereby you can obtain the necessary money promptly. You have a year or more in which to repay it. Open 8:30 to 5:00 The Central Acceptance Corporation 26 East Sixth St., between Vine and Walnut Cincinnati, Ohio. PArkway 6280. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1931. WKRC Monday, August 3 6:13— Time and weather. 8:15— Linit Program, with Dennis King (CBS). 6:30— MUler and Lyle (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS). 7:0(1— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15— The Barhasol Program (CBS). 7 :30— What's Happening— Full Meas- ure Gas. 7:15— Old Wurzburg Malt Program. 8:00— Eno Crime Club (CBS) 8:30— An Evening in Paris (CBS). 8:45— Summer Daze (CBS). !l : oo— Robt. Burns Panatella Pro- gram (CBS). !) :3Q— Arabesque (CBS). 10:00— Fletcher Henderson Orchestra (CBS). 10:15— Grucn Answer Man 10:2,5— Happy Feet. 10 :30— Coney Island Dance Orches- tra. 11:00— Time and weather. 11:03— Sports Review. 11:08— Ben Bernie's Orchcstra(CBS). 11:30— Hill Billy Kid. 11:48 — Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gil lick. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. Al.— 6:30/ — Time Announcement. 6:31 — International Fiddlers and Salt and Peanuts. 6 :59— Weather. 7 :00 — Physical Exercises. 7:14 — Time Announcement. 7:15— The Sunbirds (NBC). 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 8:00 — Morning Devotions. 8:15— Ball Brothers Canning Time. 8:30 — Montgomery Ward Program (NBC). 8:45 — Phvsical Exercises. 9:00— Housekeeper Chats. 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9:30— Musical Portrait. :40— Harshaw Announcement. 9:50— The Potter's Art. 10:00— Syncopatcrs (NBC).- 10:30— Live Stock Reports, 10:40 — McCormick Fiddlers. 11:00— Mills Brothers Quartet. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signal Noon — Seger Ellis. P. M.— 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. \2 :45 — Market Reports. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1:00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 2:00— Organ Matinee. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 3:00— Jim and Walt. 3:15 — Charles Schcuerman Brown Palace Hotel Orchestra (NBC). 3:45— Matinee Melodies (NBC). 4:00— Chats with Peggy Winthrop (NBC). 4:15— The Grab Bag Boys. 4:30— Live Stock Reports. 4 :40 — Afternoon Revelers. 5.00— Salt and Peanuts. 5:16 — Mormon Tabernacle Choir. 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 6:15 — Los Ramos Baseball Scores. 6:25— The Chatter. 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC). 6 :45 — Affiliated Products Program (NBC). 7:00— Roxv's Gang (NBC). 7:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. Letter Box Jack Foy, the Hill Billy boy who used to yodel and announce with McCormick's Fiddlers at WLW, writes from station KDKA (Pittsburgh) that he is singing there every morning at 7:15; every afternoon at 4:45; at 7:30 Tuesday and Thursday nights, and on a Far North program at 10:15 Saturday nights. He is drawing lots of mail, he says. He plans soon to publish a book of his songs like the one Bradley Kincaid offers. Radio Dial opinions of interested in the readers. It will endeavor to answer questions. Unsigned letters will not be con- dered but signatures will be with- held when the request is made. Vagabond Poet Recalls Old Times in Radio R. C. C.j of Columbus, Ind., asks if Henry Ring who used to an- nounce the dance programs from the Gibson and Netherland Plaza still with WLW? Yes. He signs WSAI off every night and is a control room opera- tor the rest of the time. * * * H. B. G. thinks some radio sing- ers "sound like Tom Cats on the back fence" F. A. wants to know what WLW remote control announcers do when they are not announcing for the dance orchestras. He says he never hears them on the air. When they're not on the air, John Mitchell (Castle Farm), Henry Ring, and Leonard Barnes are studio operators. Remote con- trol announcers have to operate the remote control amplifiers and must be technicians as well as an- nouncers. * * * Lou, of Dayton, O., thinks Ster- ling Jack and Smiling Ed McCon- nell are the same. She's wrong. Sterling Jack is Tack Turner, of Louisville— a man the size of Little Jack Little. Smiling Ed McConnel weighs over 2, r )0; hails from Detroit, Mich. * * * A. G. of Bellevue, Ky., wants Radio Dial to compliment Seger Ellis and Murdock Williams. He thinks they are the best pianists on the air. He wants them on a half hour at a time. Tommy Ott is an- other of his favorites. He wants to know who plays the piano for Little Red Riding Hood at WCKY. Little Red Riding Hood's mother ; her accompanist. AN EXPERT RADIO MAN sent to your home to inspect your radio and test tubes for the small charge of 75 cents Just call CHcrry 7895 See phone book, page 215 WM. THREM'S UPTOWN RADIO SHOP 68 E. McMICKEN Eddy Utt, wno calls himself the Vagabond Poet, is one of the last of the traveling min- strels of radio, a survival of the barnstorming days when Wen- dell Hall, Little Jack Little, the Ray o 1 Vac Twins, John and Ned and other radio ramblers trav- eled about, appearing on radi- stations all over the country. Utt will read poems, sing songs, and give impersonations of the characters whose pictures appear above with him, at 7:30 Friday night (July 31) at WSMK in Dayton (1380 kc.) TUESDAY August 4 WLW Monday, Augu.t 3 8 :00— Mavtag Orchestra (NBC). 8:30— Real Folks (NBC). 9:00— Gold Medal Express (NBC). fl :30— Musical Dreams. 10:00— Canada Dry. 10:30— Variety. 10 :45— Bob Newhall. Sport Slices. 10:58— Estate Weather Man. 1 1 :00 — Chime Reveries. Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12 :30— H e n r y Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. 1 :00— Sign off. . . WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC).. 8:15 — Tom Waring and His Trouba- dours (NBC). WSAI Monday, Augu.t 3 8 :45 — Records. 9:00 — Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9 :15— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 9 :30 — Jean Carroll, please tell me (NBC). 9 :45 — Jerry Foy. 10:00— Records. 10:15— Blue Streaks (NBC). 10 :30— Records. 1 1 :00— The Hellman Troubadors (NBC). 11 :15— Sign Off. P. M.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— Sign off. 2 :00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 3 :45 — Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4:00 — Crosley Singers. 4 :30— Records. 4 :45 — Minabelle and Chick. 5 :00— Records. 5:15 — Cecy Gordon; Gene Perazzo. 5:30 — Records. 6:00— Teddy Black's Orchestra (NBC). 6:30— Poems by George Elliston (NBC). 6:45— The Goldbergs (NBC). 7 :00— Records. 7:15— Vocal Solos. 7:30— A. & P. Orchestra (NBC). 8 :30 — General Motors P r o g r a (NBC). 9:00— True Story Hour (NBC. 9 :45— Simonize Program (NBC). 10:00— Seger Ellis. 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 11:00— Sign off. WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) 7 ; 00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 15— Morning Devotions (NBC). 30— Cheerio (NBC). 00— Hot Shot, the Briarhopper. 15— Early morning dance program. 15— My New Kentucky Home, Jetta Crane. 9 :45— Dance Program. 10;00 — Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:15 — Classic Hour. 10:45— Musical Novelties. 11:30— Skillet Lickers. Noon— Dance Program. P. M.— 12:30 — Live Stock Quotations. 12:35— -Luncheon Concert. 12:45— Randall Fryer, tenor. 1:00— Sign off. 5:45 — Dance Records. 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andv (NBC). 6:15— Gus Van (NBC). 6:35— Little Red Riding Hood. 6:45 — Crooning Guitarist. 7 : 00— Glenyce Chambers, blues. 7:15— Tri-Statc Entertainers. 7 :45— Crinoline Girl, Alma Ashcraft 8:00— Earl Arnold's Orchestra Lookout House. 8:30— Death Valley Days (NBC), 9 :00— Nothing But the Truth, Alex ander McQueen. 9 :15— Tommy and Willie. 9:30— Blue Ridge Shindiggers. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc. -Voices at Dawn. -Classified Directory. -Morning Concert. -Variety. -Sunshine Special. -Home Chats. -Zoo-ettes. -Musical Brevities. -Sister Mary's Kitchen. -Simper Time. -Dance Frolic. -NoKy Trio. Out Of Its Swaddling Clothes! Radio broadcasting is now recognized as the power- fully effective advertising medium it has proved itself to be. But it still needs at the helm the guiding power of experience. And that is what the CHARLES \V. REAUME organization supplies. We Know Radio. CHARLES W. REAUME RADIO ADVERTISING 622 Broadway CHerry 2440 8:00- 9:00- 9:15- 9:45- 10:00- 10:05- 10 :50- 10:5!)- 1 1 :00- 11 :45- Noon — Serenade. P. M.— :00— Two Irish B oys and Chas, SchaefTer. :15 — Story Telling Time. :30— Organ Recital. :00— Dance Frolic. :30— Ralph and Harlan. :45 — Day Dreams. :15 — Reds vs. Chicago, at Chicago. :00— Lyric Hour. :30— World Series Contest. :00 — Musical Interlude. :15 — World Series Contest. :45 — Berning Ford Travelogue. :00— Post Question Box. :15— Julius Sein. :30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. :45 — Latonia Lakes Subdivision. :00 — Luckey Boys. :I5 — Murdock Williams. :30— Dry Ridge Health Hints. :45 — Twilight Reveries. :00 — Independent Oil Station Program. :30 — Meyer's Hot Tunes. :45 — Licking River Fiddlers. :00— Slumber Music. Tuesday, August 4 WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6 : 45— God's Bible School, Sunrise Worship. 7:45^Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Gruen Time. g : 00 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 8:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tonv's Scrap Book (CBS. 8:45— Morning Minstrels (CBS). 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS). 9:15— Melody Parade (CBS). 9 :30— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:00— Fashion Facts of 1931 (CBS). 10:15— Charles W. Rcaume Studio. 10:45— Time and Weather. 10 :48— Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tully. 11 -15— Don Bigelow and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11:30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11 :45— Drinkmor Program (CBS) Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. At.— 12 -.30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS). 1 :15— Studio Feature. 1 :30— Pyol Program. 1 :45 — Studio Feature. 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio 2:15 — Mel and Cassey. 2:28 — Race Result from Latonia, Ky. 2-30— (A. L. Fink)— The Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45— (A. L. Fink)— The Capitava- tors (CBS). 3:00— Four Clubmen (CBS). 3:30— Phil Fisher's Orchestra(CBS). 4:00— Frank Ross, Songs (CBS) 4:15— Adventures in Words (CBS) 4:30— Gypsy Music Makers (CBS). 4 :45— Sweethearts of the Air (CBS). 5:00— A. 0. Rust, Happy Feet. 5:15— Jos. R, Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. 5:30— Cincinnati Trade School Program. 5 : 45_ Studio. 5:50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00— Home Furniture Co., "Kate Smith (CBS) 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 6:13— Time and weather. 6:15 — Linit Program, with Dennis King (CBS). 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quartet hour (CBS). 7:00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15— Rubel's Hy Rye and Willie Winsom. 7:30— The Bon Bons (CBS). 7 :45— Studio Feature. 8:00— Henry George (CBS) 8:30— The Bristolcers (CBS) 9:00— Ben Bernie and His Blue Ribbon Orchestra (CBS). 9:15— Tito Guizar (CBS). 9:30— Coney Island Dance Orches- tra. 10:00 — Fletcher Henderson Orchestra (CBS). 10:15 — Indian Lake Period. 10 :25 — Sports Review. 10:30 — Bridge Lessons by Tom Col- lins Jr. 10:45 — Asbury Park Casino Orchestra (CBS). 11 :00 — Gruen Witching Hour. 11:30 — Time and weather. 11:33— Hill Billy Kid. 11:45 — Jos. R. Deins, Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. The Newest Latest Creation Everything Complete, ready to install e/fbyeitic AUTO RADIO Enjoy music, lectures, stories, etc. while you ride This amazing new 7-tube Super Heterodyne Auto Radio with Dynamic Speaker on demonstration at the CHECKER STORE ORIGINAL. TIRE CO. Court & Race RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY. JULY 31, 1931. Tueiday, August 4 WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A M. lime Announcement. . . | i i dlen ind Sail and Peanuts. 1 -recast. ! , | ] . j I 1 ; r i i ■ \ I ■ i ■ ■ : I r ■ ■ I ii NBC). 7:4fl A 8 i 1 i ■■■ I •' b - MBI I ' Bulova Time. '■'•■ i mi,;' Devotions. i seger Ellis. - ■•>■ Montg i V\ ard I NBC ). B:46— Physical Exercises. 'i mi M. , !,■■,■■ liallaiK 9:15— Frances Ingram (NBC). 9:30— Faihiom tn 'i r. Premium Man. i in, Melod) Club to 80 Live Stock Reports, 10:40 — Organ and Vocal Solos. 11:00 — Island Serenade rs. M 16 Swift Program (NBC). II IQ WLW Stars. ii i"i -River Reports; Time Signals. Noon — Tuxedo Trio. P. M.— 12:10— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:40 Market Reports. 12;50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— National Farm and Home (NBC). L:80 N'ctlicrland Plaza Orchestra. |;00 I irgan Matinee. 8:80— Chicago Serenade (NBC). ■ i i kiss Proof (NBC). 3 :00 — Ramona. 8 16 -U. S. Navy Band (NBC). 4:00— Salt and Peanuts. i 10 The Grab Bag Boys. t 80 Live Stock Reports. ! 1" Mitchem and Quartet. 5:00— Tin. Hottentots 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 5:46— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andv (NBC). 0:15— The Chatter. 0:80 Southern Singers. (i:45— Mail Pouch (e. t.). 7 :00— Armstrong Quakers (NBC). ; ,:IH I ..-, Kanius li:isi.'ljall Stmres. I 36 -Nelhcrland Plaza Orchestra. 7:45 Sisters of the Skillet (NBC). 8:00— Fuller's Orchestra. 8:15 — Icyeasl famboree. 80 Werk Bubble Blowers. S 00 Crimelights. B 30 Chevrolet Chronicles (< 10;00— Cotton Queen Minstrels 10 80 Variety. 10 15 Bob Ncwhall, Sports Slices. 10:58— Estate Weather. 11 :00— Los Amigos. II ;io M. River. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra A. M.— 12:80 i ti m i Busse's ( Irchestra, Cas- tie Farm. i 00 Sign off. Heaven's Where Artennis Is To Columbia announcers, "Heaven" is Atlantic City and a chance to announce the weekly "Dancing by the Sea feature which WKRC carries at 4:15 p. m. Saturday (August 1). Here is one of the reasons : musical comedies. her name is Artennis Faque formerly of WEDNESDAY August 5 t.) WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M-— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15— Tom Waring and His Trouba- dours (NBC). 8:45— Records. !':lHi— Mrs. Blake's Kaido l..tiimi. NBC). 9:13— Records. I ..Iks bv Dr. Ella Oppc heimer iN'BC). 10:15— Radio Household Institute (NB( I [0 10 i S Annv Band I MB( I. 1 1 :00 — The Hellman Troubadors [NB( ii 15 Sign Off. P. M.- 12:50— Live Si am Prod. Coop. Comm. Assn. Sign off D I ft men's Radio Reviev (NB< I Records. D Salute. 4:00— Lady Next Door (NBC). 4:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4:45— Records \ .'.-'■ 5 :30— Records, 6:00— Midweek Federation Hymn - . Bradley Kincaid. ■ -Blackstone Plantation T&O— National Dairy Virtuoso Nash rarade (NBC). - '--Fuller Brush Man (SBC). -Lucky Strike Dance (NBC). 10:00— Fuller's Orchestra. -The Stcbbins Boys ^N'BC). Hotel Gibson Orchestra. H:00— Sign Off. WCKY(202m.— 1490 kc.) A.M.- 7:00— The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15— Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Hot Shot, the Briarhopper. 8:15 — Early morning dance program. 9:15— My New Kentucky Home. 9:45— Dance Tunes. It] Ou— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:15— Classic Hour. 10:45— Musical Novelties. 11:30— Skillet Lickers. Noon— Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— 1-2:15— Little Red Riding Hood, John R. Coppin Co. 12:30— Live Slock Reports. 12:35— Randall Fryer, tenor. 1 :00— Sicn off. 5:45 — Dance Records. 5:55 — Ayers Sport Flash. C:ftO— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). G.15 Charlcnc and Catherine. 6:35 — Crooning Guitarist. t>:45 — Tommy Ott. 7 :00 — Lawson's Hawaiians. 7:30— Christian Glee Club. 8:00— Skillet Lickers. 8:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. Stive Bates. 9:15— Tommie and Willie. 9:30— Lucille Fox. 9:45 — Italian Serenaders. WFBE Wednesday, August 5 11 :30— Melodies of Long Ago. Noon— Organ Recital. P. M.~ 12:30— Serenade. 12:45 — Be'lonby Luncheon Musicalc. 1 :00— Reveries. 1 :15 — Story Telling Time. 1 :30— Dance Frolic. 2:00— The Parent's Forum. 2:15 — Galvano & Cortcz. 2:30— Pauline Ungar, contralto. 2:45 — Memory Lane. 3:15— Reds vs. Chicago, at Chicago. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:45 — World Series Contest. 6 :00— Musical Interlude. 6:15— World Series Contest. 6:45— Berning Ford Travelogue. 7:00— The Pest Question Box. 7:15 — Julius Sein. 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re lew. WKRC Wednesday, August S 10:45 — Charles W. Reaume Studio. 11 : 15— Don Bigclow Orchestra lumbia Revue (CBS). 11 :45— Drink-Mor Program. Noon— Wurlitzcr Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12:30— Cini it ants' Pro- gram. 1:00— Farm Progt P. M.— 12:30 — Cincinnati Merchants' Pro gram 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS) WKRC Friday, Auguat 7 1:15— Farm Network Program (CBS). 1 :30— Pyol Program. 1 :45— Studio Feature. 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 2:15— Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2:28— Sport Flashes. 2:30— The Three Doctors (CBS). 2:45 — Educational Features (CBS). 3:00— Light Opera Gems (CBS). 3:45— Edna Thomas (CBS). 4:00— Asbury Park Casino Orchestra (CBS). 4:15 — A. L. Fink Program. 4:45 — Edna Wallace Hopper's Youth Matinee (CBS). 5:00— A. O. Rust— Happy Feet. 5:15 — Jos. R. Deins Program, Pat Gillick, Organist. 5:30 — Cincinnati Trade School. 5 :45 — Studio 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores 5:55 — Sports Review 5:59 — Burke Weather Forecast 6:00 — Kate Smith and Her Swanee Music (CBS). — Home Furni- ture Company. 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree 6:13— Time and weather 6:15 — Linit Program, with Dennis King (CBS) 6:30— St. Moritz Orchestra (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7:00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS) 7:15— Barbasol Program (CBS) 7:30 — Indian Lake Period. 7:35 — What's Happening (Full Meas- ure — Geo. Mulvihill). 7:45 — Lewisohn Stadium Concert (CBS). 8 :00 — Liberty Magazine Hour (CBS). 8:45 — Cincinnati & Lake Erie Pro gram. 9 :00— Pillsbury Pageant (CBS). 9:30— Poet's Gold (CBS). 10:00— Pyol Program. 10:15 — Gruen Answer Man 10:30— Conev Island Orchestra. 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports 11:08— Ben Bernie and His Orches tra (CBS). 11:30— Hill Billy Kid. 11:45— Jos. R. Deins Program, Pat Gillick, Organist, Friday, Auguat 7 WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6 :30— International Fiddlers and Salt and Peanuts. 7 ; 00— Physical Exercises. 7:15— The Sunbirds (NBC) 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 8:00 — Morning Devotions 8:15— Bradley Kincaid 8 :."10— Montgomery Ward Program (NBC) g : 45 — Physical Exercises 9:00— Ray Perkins (NBC) 9:15— "The Hostess," Mrs. Lutye Sohngen 9:30 — Harshaw Announcement 9:35— Household Hints 9:45 — Premium Man 10:00— Island Serenaders 10:30— Live Stock Reports 10 : 40— Southern Singers; Raymond Mitchem 11:00 — Moto Ironing Time 11:15— Swift Program (NBC) 11:30— WLW Stars 11:45— River Reports; Time Signals Noon — Tuxedo Fiddlers P. M.— 12 :15— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:45— Market Reports 12:50— Live Stock Reports 1 :00— National Farm and Home (NBC) 1 :30— Netherland Plaza Orchestra 2 :00 — Organ Matinee 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC) 3 :00— Ramona 3:15— Radio Guild (NBC) 4:1.5— Grab Bag Boys 4:30— The Hottentots 5 :00 — Words and Music 5:30— Old Man Sunshine 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC) 6:15— Madame Alda (NBC) 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC) 6:45— The Chatter. 7:00— Los Ramos Basebell Scores 7:05— Glenn Sisters 7:15 — Netherland Plaza Orchestra 7:30— Fuller's Orchestra 7:45— Sisters of the Skillet (NBC) 8:00— "In Romany" 8:15 — Icyeast Jamboree 8:30— Hoosier Editor 8:45— Armour Program (NBC) 9 :00— Heatrolatown 9:30— Clara, Lu and Em (NBC) 9:45— Wifdeson's Wildcats. 10:00— Encores. 10 :30— Variety 10:45— Bob Newhall Sport Slices 10:58— Estate Weather Man 11:00— Vox Celeste 11 :30 — Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm (NBC-Blue) Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra A. M.— 12 :30— Henry Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm 1 :00— Sign off. Lee Morse is Guest Star in Nestle Hour Lee Morse, petite radio favor- ite of the deep-throated, mellow Suwanee voice, will sing Friday night (August 7) at 7 p. m. in the Nestle Choclateers program through stations WLW and WCKY. She will sing "I'm Through with Love," "I'm an Unem- ployed Sweetheart," and * He s My Secret Passion," the latter a song which she sang on the air and recorded before any other performer. Miss Morse inherited her ex- traordinary vocal range from her mother, who still leads church choirs. From her father, one of the eight original Texas rangers, she received her early vocal training, part religious, part plantation, part prairie. Since then she has been featured in vaudeville, radio, picture houses, Broadway shows ("Kitchy Koo," "Artists and Models") and night clubs, including the Picadilly in London. SATURDAY August 8 WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) a. m— 8:00 — Gene and Glenn, the Quaker Early Bird (NBC) 8:15 — Tom Waring and His Trouba- dours (NBC). 8 :45— Records 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9 :15— Records 9 :30— National Home Hour (NBC) 9 :45— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 10:00— Records. 10 :30— Realities of Romance (NBC) 11 :00— The Hellman Troubadors (NBC). 11:15— Sign Off. P. M 12 :50 — Livestock Reports 1 :00— Sign Off 2 :00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC) 3:00— Records (NBC). 3:35 — Wireless Military Band From England (NBC). 4 :00— Records 4 :30 — Moore Paint Program (NBC) 4 :45 — Records. 5:15— Don Becker, Ukelele. 5 :30— Records. 6:00— Harry Willsey's Orchestra 9:30— Alice Richards 6:45— The Goldbergs (NBC) 7:00— Cities Service Concert (NBC) 8:00— Clicquot Club (NBC) 8:30— Pond's Dance (NBC) 9:00— Kodak Week End (NBC) 9:30— RKO Theater of the Air (NBC) 10:00— Seger Ellis 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC) 10:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 11:00— Sign Off. WCKY (202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7:00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15— Morning Devotion (NBC) 7:30— Cheerio (NBC) 8:00— Hot Shot, the Briarhopper. 8:15 — Early Morning Dance. 9 :15 — My New Kentucky Home, 9 :45— Little Red Riding Hood's Kid- die Club. 10 :30— Classic Hour 11:00 — Musical Novelties 11 :30— Skillet Lickers. 12 :00— Popular Dance Melodies P. M.— 12 :30 — Norris Brock live stock quo- tations 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert 12 :45 — Randall Fryer, tenor. 1 :00— Sign off. 5 :45 — Dance Records. 5:55— WCKY Baseball Scores. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC) § :30— Original Ibold Race Results. 6 :35 — Lucile Fox. 6 :45 — Italian Serenaders. 7:00— Rudy Vallce (NBC) 7 :30— Crossroads Quartette. 7 :45 — Crooning Guitarist. 8 :00— "Skillet Lickers" 8:30 — Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. 9:00— Cuckoo Club (NBC) 9 :30 — Earl Arnold's Orchestra From Lookout House. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn 7:15 — Tennessee Jeff 7:30— Classified Directory 8:00 — Morning Concert 9:00— Variety WFBE Saturday, Auguat 8 9:15 — Sunshine Special 9 :45 — Klecman Home Chats 10 :00— Musical Brevities 10:50 — Women and the News 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement 11 :00— Dance Frolic 11 : 30_ Vaudeville 11:45— Nor Ky Trio Noon — Tri-Statc Philco Program P. M.— 12:15 — Serenade 12 :45~Bellonby Luncheon Musicale 1:00— Two Irish Boys and Chas. Schaeffer 1:15— Story Telling Time 1 :30— Chas. Daunt, tenor 1 :45 — Tilda and Mary Lou 2:00 — Ralph and Harlan. 2:15— Reds vs. Pittsburgh, at Pitts- burgh 5:00— Lyric Hour 5 : 30 — World Series Contest 6:00— Musical Interlude 6:15 — World Series Contest 6:45 — Berning Ford Travelogue 7:00— The Post Question Box 7:14 — Novelty Notes 7:30— Harry Hartman's Sport Review 7:45— Ruth Wolfcnden, blues 8:00— Luckey Boys 8 :15 — Murdock Williams 8:30— Dry Ridge Health Hints 8:45— Twilight Reveries 9 :00— Independent Oil Stations 9:30 — Meyer's Hot Tunes 9 :45 — Slumber Music WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6 :45 — God's Bible School — Sunrise Worship 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Gruen Time Signal 8 :00— Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— Morning Minstrels (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS) 8:45 — Morning Minstrels (CBS). 9 :00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 9 :30— Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 10 -.00— Studio Feature. 10:15— Time; Weather 10 :20— Woman's Hour — Tremlette Tully 10.45— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11 :00 — Don Bigelow and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11 :30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11 :45 — Drinkmor Program. Noon — St. George Orchestra (CBS), P. M.— 12 :30— Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram 1 :00 — Columbia Farm Program (CBS) 1:30— Pyol Program. 1 :45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies. 2:15 — Mil and Cassey, 2:28— Sports Flash. 2:30— A. L. Fink Song Recital, Louie Johnson, tenor 3 :00— Possibly Dedication of Dirig- ible "Akron" (CBS). 3:00 — Ann Leaf at the Organ (CBS). 3:30 — Spanish Serenade (CBS). 4:00— Dancing by the Sea (CBS). 4:45— Madison Singers (CBS). 5 :00— A. O. Rust— Happy Feet 5:15 — Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. 5 :30— Cincinnati Trade School Pro- gram. 5 :45 — Studio 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores 5 :55 — Sports Review 5:59 — Burke Weather Forecast 6:00— St. Moritz Orchestra (CBS) Home Furniture Co. 6:15— Studio 6 :25 — Stocks, Cohle and Tyree 6 :28 — Time and weather 6:30— Reis Si Dunn (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter Hour (CBS) 7:00— Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS) 7:15— Henry Burbig (NBC). 7 :30 — Junior Chamber of Commerce 8 :00— President Hoover (CBS). 8:15— Studio Feature. 8 :30— Lewisohn Stadium Concert (CBS). 9:00— Hank Simmons' Show Boat (CBS) 10:00— Pyol Program. 10:15 — Coney Island Dance Or- chestra. 10 :45— Will Osborne and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports 11 :08 — Guy Lombardo and His Or- chestra (CBS) 11:30— Hill Billy Kid. 11 :45 — Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. Midnight— Jos. R. Deins Midnite Frolic Request Program, Pat Gillick. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1931. Saturday. August 8 WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) 6-3*0 — International Fiddlers and Salt and Peanuts 7 00— Physical Exercises. 7 :i5-The Sunbirds (NBC) 7 '45— A. & P. Pood News (NBC) 8-00— Morning Devotions 8:15-Seger Ellis g.g0_Montgomery Ward Program (NBC) 8 .45— Physical Exercises 9:00— Dance Miniatures (NBC) q.30 — Book News. 9:45— WLW Mail Bag 10:00— Organ and Vocal, 10:30— Livestock Reports. lO;40— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 11 00— Elliot Brock, violin. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC) 11:30— Livestock Reports. 11:45— River Reports; Time Signals Noon— Governmental Glimpses, At- torney General Gilbert Bettman P. M\— 12 :1&— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12 -45— National Farm and Home Period (NBO. 1 :30— Nethcrland Plaza Orchestra. 2:00— Organ Matinee. 2:30— Cincinnati Zuo Symphony Con- certs. 3:00 — Glenn Sisters and Ramona 3:15— Pacific Feature Hour (NBC) 4:00— Maze of Melody (NBC). 4:15— Grab Bag Boys 4:30— Crosley Dealers' Hour 5:00 — Scckatory Hawkins. 5:30— Doctors of Melody 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC) 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC) 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC) 6:30— The Chatter. 6:45— Los Ramos Baseball Scores. 6:50— Seger Ellis. 7 :00— Netherland Plaza Orchestra 7:30— R. F. D. Hour 8 :00— President Hoover (NBC) 8:30— Domino Orchestra (NBC) 9:00— King Edward Cigar Band. 9:30— Clara, Lu and Em (NBC) 9:45— Murray Horton's Orchestra Horseshoe Gardens 10:00— Club Sohio 10 :30— Variety 10:45— Bob Newhall Sport Slices 10:58— Estate Weather Man. 11:00— The Singing Violin 11:30— Doodlesockers. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra 12:30— Castle Farm Orchestra. 1 :00— Fuller's Orchestra. 1 :S0— H e n r y Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC) 8:15— Tom Waring and His Trouba- dours (NBC). 8:45— Records 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9:15— Hits and Bits (NBC). 10:15— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 10:30— Keys to Happiness (NBC) 11 :00— Records 11:30— Live Stock Reports from Prod. Coop. Comm. Assn. 11:45— Records Noon — Sign off P. M.— 2:30— Probably Dedication of Dirig- ible "Akron" (NBC). 3:00— Classic Gems (NBC) 3 :30— Records 3 :45— Crosley Dealers Salute 4 :00— Records 5 :00— Southern Singers & Mitchem 5 :30— Records. 6:00— Harrv Willsey's Orchestra 6 :30— Records 6:45— The Goldbergs (NBC) 7 :00— Records 7:15— Harry Willsey's Orchestra. 7:30— The Silver Flute (NBC) 8:00— General Electric Hour (NBC) 8:30— Club Vaispar (NBC) 9:00— Luckv Strike Dance (NBC) 10 :00— Fuller's Orchestra 10 :30— Murray Horton's Orchestra. Horseshoe Gardens 11:00— Sign off WCKY Sunday, August 9 11:15— Echoes of the Orient (NBC). 11:30— Hot Shot, the Briarhopper. 11:45— Bob Sidell. Noon — Jack Moore. P. M.— 12:15 — Blue Ridge Shindiggers. 12:45 — Charlene Todd, Blues Singer. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45 — Lucille Fox, Blues. 6 :00 — Ralph Briggs, piano. 6:15— Hot Shot, the Briar Hopper. 6:30— Piano Recital— Ralph Briggs. 6:30— Little Red Riding Hood. G :45 — Maurice Thompson, Baritone. 7:00— Blue Ridge Shindiggers. 7:30 — College of Music. 8:00 — The Italian Serenaders. 8 :15— Musical Roulette. 8:45 — Earl Arnold's Orchestra From Lookout House. 9:15— Floyd Gibbons (NBC). 9 :30 — Earl Arnold's Orchestra from Lookout House. Nit- Wits Get New Local Sponsor SUNDAY August 9 WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Voices at Dawn. 9:00 — Morning Concert. 9:30— Invitation to the Waltz. 10:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints. 10 :30— Echoes from Germany. 10:45 — Berning Ford Travelogue. 11:00 — Excerpts from the Operas. 11:45— Tile Way Fire-Proof Home Program. P. M.— 12:15 — Kleeman Furniture Program. 12 :30— Galvano & Cortez. 12:45 — Organ Recital. 1 :00 — Jewish Hour. 2:00— Garden of Melody. 2 :30 — Hawaiian Bluebirds. 2:45 — Harlan and Ralph. 3:00 — Mary Tribble, soprano. 3:15 — Two Irish Boys and Chas. Schaeffer. 3:30 — Vocal and Piano Recital, with Pauline Gidding Unger, con- tralto. 3:45— The Islanders. 4:00— Tea Time Tunes. 4:15 — Pastels in Prose. 4 :30 — Sundown Serenader. 4 :45 — Post Symphony Hour, 5 :45 — Afternoon Melodies. 6:00— Novelty Duo. 6:15— Musical Interlude. 6:30— Church Federation Hour. 7 :00 — Dinner Dance Music. 7 :15 — Anne Storey, contralto. 7 : 30 — Harry Hartman's SportReview, 7 : 45 — Novelty Notes. 8:00— Song Hit Time. 8:30— The Orioles. 8 :45— Twilight Reveries. 9 :00— Scotland Yard. 10 :15— Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6:45-7:45— God's Bible School- Sunrise Worship. 9 :00— God's Bible School. 10 :00— Watchtower Program (e. t). 10 :15— Jim Lightfield— Veteran's Civic Hour. Noon— American Legion Program. P. M.— 1 :00— Jewish Community Program. 1:30— Gypsy Trial .(CBS). 2-00 — Gruen Old-Fashioned Garden. 3 :00— Cathedral Hour (CBS) 4 :00— High Goal Polo Match (CBS). 5:00— Around the Samover (CBS). 5:30— Twilight Reveries. 5 -58— Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00— Theo. Karle (CBS). 6:15— Studio. 6:20— Eureka Baseball Scores. 6:25— Sports Review. 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:45— The Boswell Sisters (CBS). 6 ; 58— Time and weather. 7 00— Devils. Drugs and Doctors (CBS). „ . 7 -15— Kate Smith, Swanee Music CBS). 7:30— Tonv Parenti and His Singing Saxophone (CBS). 45— Modern Male Chorus (CBS). 00— The Dutch Masters (CBS) 30— Lewisohn Stadium Concert (CBS). 9:30— The Gauchos (CBS). 10;00— Coney Island Dance Orchestra 10:30— Benny Meroff and His Or chestra (CBS). Let there be dancing in the streets! The French-Bauer Company has elected to sponsor the Nit- Wit Period on WKRC at 9:30 every Wednesday night, thereby insuring that the slightly insane broadcasts will be retained by the station. Thus assured of Cincinnati jobs are Mrs. Van Rattletrap, Net- Wit social leader (Nila Mack), listening spell-bound while Mme. Molka de Polka, prima donna (Lucille Black) hits a high one. WKRC Sunday, August 9 11:00— Time and weather. 11:03— Sports Review. 11:08— Coon Sanders and Hollywood Gardens Orchestra (CBS). 11:30— Studio. -700 kc.) WLW (428 m.- A. M.— 8 : 59— Time. 9 :00 — Church Forum. 9 :30— Fiddlers Three (NBC). 9:45— Song for Today (NBC). 10:05— Organ, Arthur Chandler, Jr. 10:25— River Reports. 10 :30— Morning Musical (NBC). 11:30— Troika Bells (NBC) Noon— Tales of the Emerald Is) (NBC). P. M.— 12:30— Melody Interlude (NBC). 1:30— Yeast Foamers (NBC). 2 :00 — Matinee Jewels. 2:30— Henry Thies' Orchestra. 3 :00 — Ravinia Opera Concerts (NBC). 4:00— Sabbath Reveries (NBC). 5:00— The Roamios. 5:30 — Plantation Days. G:00— The Chatter. 6:30— College of Music Recital. 6 :55— Los Ramos Baseball Scores 7:00— Enna Jettick Melodies(NBC) 7:15 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 7 :30— Harbor Lights (NBC). 8:00 — Heel Hugger Harmonics (NBC). 8:15— Bayuk Stag Party (NBC). 8 :45— Kaffee Hag Slumber Music (NBC). 9:15— Variety. 9 ;30— Castle Farm Orchestra. 10:00— Estate Weather Man. WLW Sunday, August 9 10 :02— Crosley Concert. 10 :45 — Murray Horton's Orchestra at Horseshoe Gardens. 11:00— Henry Thies and His WLW Orchestra (to NBC "Blue" Network). Midnight — Fuller's Orchestra. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) P. M.— 2:00 — Sermonette and Hymn Time. 2:30— Carveth Wells (NBC). 2:45 — Balkan Mountain Men (NBC). 3:00 — National Sunday Forum (NBC). 4:00— Gilbert & Sullivan Gems (NBC). 5 :00— Catholic Services (NBC). 6:00— Thru the Opera Glass (NBC). 7:00— Chase and Sanborn (NBC) 8 :00 — "Our Government," David Lawrence (NBC). 8:15— The Russian Singers (NBC). 8:45— Iodent Big Brother (NBC). 9:15 — Goldman Band Concert (NBC). 9:45— Sunday Night at Seth Par- ker's (NBC). WCKY Monday. August 10 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Hot Shot, the Briarhopper. 8 15— Early morning dance program. 9 : 15 My New Kentucky Home, Jctta Crane, 9 :45— Dance Records. 10:30— Classic Hour. 11:00— Musical Novelties. 11:30— Skillet Lickcrs. Noon— Popular Dance Melodies. P. M-— :15— Little Red Riding Hood. John R. Coppin Co. 12:30— Norris Brock Live Stock, [2 ;35 — Luncheon Concert. 12 :45— Randall Fryer, tenor. 1:00— Sign off. 5:45— Dance Records. 5:55 — WCKY Baseball Scores. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 6:30— Steve Bates, Singing to an Octofone. 45— Hitchhikers. 00— Italian Serenaders. 15— Little Red Riding Hood. 30— Stromberg Carlson (NBC). 00 — Wally, the Radio Clown. : 15_"The Man Who Could Not Die," mystery thriller. 8:45— Hot Shot, the Briarhopper. 0:00— Charlene Todd, Blues Singer. 9:15 — Tommy and Willie. 9:30— Skillet Lickers. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — Voices at Dawn. 7:30— Classified Directory. 8:00 — Morning Concert. 9:00— Variety. 9:15 — Sunshine Special. 9 :45— Kleeman Furniture Program. 10:00— Musical Brevities. 10 :35— Variety. 10:50— Mrs. Evans' Questions and Answers. 11:00— Song Hit Time. 11 :30— Tone Poems. Noon— Tri-State Philco Program. P. M.— 12 :15 — Serenade. 12 :45— Bellonby Luncheon Musicals. 1 :00— Little Black Joe. 1:15— Story Telling Time. 1 :30— Dance Frolic. 2:00— The Islanders. 2;15 — Vocal Varieties, with Frank Stewart. 2:30— Ralph and Harlan. 2:45 — Harmony Duo. 3 :00 — Matinee Musicale. 3 :30— Vocal Varieties. 4:00— Wesley Fox. 4:15 — Owen Sellers, cellist. 4:30— Dance rolic. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30— World Series Contest. 6 :00— Musical Interlude. 6:15— World Series Contest. 6:45 — Berning Ford Travelogue. 7 ;00— Post Question Box. 7:15— Novelty Notes. 7 :30— Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. MONDAY August 10 45 — Julius Sein. 00— Luckey Boys. 15 — Bvron Trio. 30— Dry Ridge Health Hints. 45— Twilight Reveries. 15_Away Down South. 45 — Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A.M.— 6 :45 — God's Bible School— Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. WCKY (202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. IH.— 10:00— Nomads (NBC). 10 :30— Jewels of Destiny (NBC). 11:00— The Crooning Guitarist. RADIO TUBE SPECIALISTS LINK'S TUBE SHOP 607 WALNUT STREET RADIO REPAIRING PArkway 6415 JANE GREY The Kampf Artists Beginning August 17 Mor,., Wed., Fri. 11:30 A.M. Sponsored by The A. W, Kampf Jewelry Co, 18 West Sixth St. WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) A. in.— 7:00-— The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15— Morning Devotions (NBC). FLORENCE FREY BEAUTY EXPERT Every Wednesday 9:15 A. M. WLW PERMANENT WAVE $5.00 Positively Harmless — Painless — Quick FLORENCE FREY STUDIO 631 Walnut Street CHerry 6105 A Laugh A Second with H Y R Y E Willie Winsum E.i Thu y Tuesday and •day, 7:15 P. M. WKRC Radio's biggest good cheer and IS minutes of snappy music, ed by THE RUBEL BAKING CO. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, AUGUST t, 1931. WKRC Monday, Auguit 10 7:59— Gruen Time, 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9:00— Consolidated Merchants Pro- gram. 0:30— Mr. Fixit (CBS). 9 :45 — Charles W. Reaume, studio. 10:15— The Madison Singers (CBS) 10:30— Bruce Chapman (CBS). 10:15— Time and weather. 10:48 — Woman's Hour — Tremlette Tully. 11:15— Don Bigclow and His Orches- tra (CBS) 11:30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11:45 — Drink-Mor Program. Noon — Enric Madigueras Orchestra (CBS). P. M.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants Pro- gram. 1 :00— A. L. Fink Program. 1 :30— Pyol Program. 1:45— Blue Ridge Red. 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio 2:15 — Columbia Salon Orchestra (CBS) 2:28— Sports Flashes. 2:30— Marian and Jim (CBS). 2:45 — Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 3:00— U. S. Army Band (CBS). 3:30— The Dictators (CBS). 4:00— Dancing by the Sea (CBS) 4:30 — Hoosier Photographer — Tramp Starr. 4 :45— Virginia Arnold (CBS). 5:00— A. O. Rust, Happy Feet. 5:15 — Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. 5 :30 — C i n c i n n a t i Trade School Program. 5:45 — Studio. 5:50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5:55 — Sports Review. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00 — Home Furniture Program, Mary Charles (CBS). 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 6:13 — Time and weather. G :15 — Link Program, with Dennis King (CBS). 0:30— Miller and Lyle (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS). 7 :00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15 — The Barbasol Program (CBS). 7:30 — What's Happening — Full Meas- ure Gas. 7:45— Old Wurzburg Malt Program. 8:00— Eno Crime Club (CBS) 8:30— An Evening in Paris (CBS). 8:45— Summer Daze (CBS). 0:00— Robt. Burns Panatella Pro- gram (CBS). 9 :30— Arabesque (CBS). " 00— P vol Progra: 10 15 — Gruen Answer Man 10 30 — Coney tra. Island Dance Orches- 11 :00 — Time and weather. 11 :03— Sports Review. 11 .08— Bobby Meeker and His Or- chestra (CBS). 11:30— H.ll Billy Kid. 11 :45— Jos. R Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.- 6:30 — Time Announcement. 6:31 — International Fiddlers and Salt and Peanuts. 6:59— Weather. 7:00 — Physical Exercises. 7 :14 — Time Announcement. 7:15— The Sunbirds (NBC). 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 8 ;00— Morning Devotions. 8:15 — Ball Brothers Canning Time. 8:30 — Montgomery Ward Program (NBC). 8:45 — Physical Exercises. 9:00— Housekeeper Chats. 9:15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 9:30— Musical Portrait. 9:45 — Harshaw Announcement. 9:50— The Potter's Art. 10:00— Syncopaters (NBC). 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— McCormick Fiddlers. li:00— fcfoto Ironing Time. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:4.5 — River Reports; Time Signals. Call MElrose 2170 FOR EXPERT RADIO SERVICE on any make Radio AT THE RIGHT PRICE RADIO TUBE CENTER WLW Manager Says Business is Looking Up John L. Clark, general man- ager of WLW and WSAI, re- turning from the East this week, issues a bullish report on radio programs for the coming winter season, claims six new commer- cial accounts for WLW, and reservations for 11 others. New accounts are Maxwell Coffee, Woodbury Soap, Life Savers, the State of Maine, "My Story" magazine, and the Tower Raincoat Company. They will begin in August and September. Clark also promises new talent as yet unheard from Cincinnati stations. WLW Monday, August 10 Noon — Seger Ellis. P. M.— 15 — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. :45 — Market Reports. :50 — Live Stock Reports. :00— N a t i o n a I Farm and Home (NBC). :30— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. :00 — Organ Matinee. :30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). :00— Jim and Walt. :15— Charles Scheuerman Brown Palace Hotel Orchestra (NBC). :45 — Matinee Melodies (NBC). :00— Chats with Peggy Winthrop (NBC). :15 — The Grab Bag Boys. :30 — Live Stock Reports. :40 — Afternoon Revelers. :00— Salt and Peanuts. : 15— Mormon Tabernacle Choir. :30— Old Man Sunshine. :45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). :00— Amos V Andy (NBC). :15— Los Ramos Baseball Scores. :20— The Chatter. :30— Phil Cook (NBC). A5— Paris Night Life (NBC). :00— Roxy's Gang (NBC). :30— WLW Fanfares. ' ;00— Maytag Orchestra (NBC). :30— Real Folks (NBC). :00— Gold Medal Express (NBC). :30— Musical Dreams. :00— Canada Dry. :30— Variety. :45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. :58— Estate Weather Man. :00 — Chime Reveries, knight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. :30— H e n r y Busse's Orchestra, Castle Farm. :00— Sign off. . . WSAI (225 m.-1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC).. 8:15— Tom Waring and His Trouba- dours (NBC). 8:45— Records. 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9:15— McCormick's Old Time Fid- dlers. 9:30— Jean Carroll, please tell me (NBC). 9:45— Jerry Foy. 10 :00— Records. 10:15— Blue Streaks (NBC) 10:30— Records. Letter Box Radio Dial is interested in the opinions of its readers. It will endeavor to answer questions. Unsigned letters will not be con- sidered but signatures will be with- held when the request is made. Radio Dial: Last Friday I tuned in WSAI at 3:25 expecting to hear a broadcast from England. It wasn't on the air. I don't see why you want to say programs like that will be broad- cast and disappoint people like that. It doesn't make you any friends. Mrs. S. C. H. Radio Dial had information from National Broadcasting Company that rebroadcasting of English radio program would be tried. In- formed by WSAI in the past that all international broadcasts would be carried unless on a sustaining basis (i e.> charged for by NBC), Radio Dial carried news of the event, has not been able to ascer- tain whether WSAI refused pro- gram or NBC was unsuccessful in rebroadcasting. In similar cases, Radio Dial prefers to disappoint by over-advertising coining eve.nts than to disappoint by omitting programs probably carried locally. * * * Dear Mr. Radio Dial: We think Bradley Kincaid is the best on the air and wish you'd have him more and longer time on. Mrs. E. H. WLW please note. WSAI Monday, August 10 1 1 :00 — The Hellman Troubadors (NBC). 11:15— Sign Off. P. M.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— Sign off. 2 :00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3:00— Records. 3 :45 — Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4:00 — Crosley Singers. 4 :30— Records. 4:45 — Minabelle and Chick. 5 :00— Records. 5:15 — Cecy Gordon; Gene Perazzo. 5 :30— Records. 6:00— Teddy Black's Orchestra (NBC). G :30 — Poems by George Elliston. 6:45— The Goldbergs (NBC). 7 :00— Records. 7:15— Vocal Solos. 7:30— A. & P. Orchestra (NBC). 8 :30 — General Motors Program (NBC). 0:00— True Story Hour (NBC. 9:45— Simonize Program (NBC). 10:00— Seger Ellis. 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 11 :00— Sign off. TUESDAY August 11 WCKY(202 m.— 1490 kc.) 7 :00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15 — Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). Mastropaola is Soloist Sunday Carlo Mastropaola, concert master of the symphony or- chestra of the College of Music and a member of the faculty of the school, will play a half hour recital at WLW at 6:30 p. m. Sunday (August 9). His program includes the first movement of the Tschaikowsky Concerto for Violin and Piano, "Val se" (Chopin- Spaulding), "La Ghana" (Kreisler), and "Perpetual Motion" (Reis). John Quincy Bass will accompany him at the piano. WCKY Tuesday, August 11 8:00— Hot Shot, the Briarhopper. 8 :15 — Early morning dance program. 9 :15 — My New Kentucky Home, Jetta Crane. 9:45 — Dance Program. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:15— Classic Hour. 10 :45 — Musical Novelties. 11:30— Skillet Lickers. Noon — Dance Program. P. M.— 12:30 — Live Stock Quotations. 12 :35 — Luncheon Concert. 12:45 — Randall Fryer, tenor. 1 :00— Sign off. 5:45 — Dance Records. 5:55— WCKY Baseball Scores. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— Gus Van (NBC). 6:35— Little Red Riding Hood. 6:45 — Crooning Guitarist. 7 :00 — Glenyce Chambers, blues. 7:15 — Tri-State Entertainers. 7:45 — Crinoline Girl, Alma Ashcraft 8:00— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. 8:30— Death Valley Days (NBC), 9:00— Hot Shot, the Briar hopper. 9 :15 — Tommy and Willie. 9:30— Blue Ridge Shindiggers. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00— Voices at Dawn. 7:15 — Tennessee Jeff. 7:30 — Classified Directory. 8:00 — Morning Concert. 9 : 00— Variety. 9:15 — Sunshine Special. 9 :45— Home Chats. 10:00— Musical Brevities. 10:50— Sister Mary's Kitchen. 11:00— Dance Frolic. 11:30— Vocal Varieties. 11:45— NoKy Trio. Noon— Tri-State Philco Program. P. M.— 12:15 — Serenade. 1:00— Two Irish Boys and Chas. Schaeffer. 1:15— Story Telling Time. 1 :30 — Day Dreams. 2:00— Novelty Notes. 2:15— Reds vs. Boston at Boston. 4 :45— Ralph Harlan. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5:30— World Series Contest. 6:00— Musical Interlude. 6:15— World Series Contest. C :45 — Berning Ford Travelogue. 7:00— Post Question Box. 7 :15 — Vaudeville. WFBE Tuesday, August 11 7:30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7 :45— Ruth Wolfenden, Blues. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15— Murdock Williams. 8:30— Dry Ridge Health Mints. 8:45 — Twilight Reveries. 9:00— Independent Oil Station . Program. 9 :30— Meyer's Hot Tunes. 9:45 — Licking River Fiddlers. 10:00— Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6 :45 — God's Bible School, Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Gruen Time. 8 :00— Starr-Freeze Melodies. 8:15— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS. 8:45— Morning Minstrels (CBS). 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS). 9:15— Melody Parade (CBS). 9 :30— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:00— Fashion Facts of 1931 (CBS). 10:15— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 10:45— Time and Weather. 10 :48 — Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tully. 11:15 — Don Bigelow and His Orches- tra (CBS). 11:30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11 :45 — Drinkmor Program (CBS) Noon — Wurlitzer Music Box Revue. P. M.— 12 :30 — Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00— Pabst-ett Varieties (CBS). 1:15— Studio Feature. 1:30— Pyol Program. 1 :45— Blue Ridge Red. 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio 2:15 — Mel and Cassey. 2:28— Sports Flash. 2:30— (A. L. Fink)— Marian and Jim (CBS). 2:45— (A. L. Fink)— Jack Smith (CBS). 3:00— The Captivators. 3:30— Phil Fisher's Orchestra(CBS). 4:00— Frank Ross, Songs (CBS) 4:15— Adventures in Words (CBS) 4:30— Jolly Jugglers. 4 :45 — Sweethearts of the Air (CBS). 5:00— A. O. Rust, Happy Feet. 5:15 — Jos. R, Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. 5 :30 — C i n c i n n a t i Trade School Program. 5 :45 — Studio. 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00— Home Furniture Co., Kate Smith (CBS) 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 6 :13 — Time and weather. 6 :15 — Linit Prograrri, with Dennis King (CBS). 30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 45— Camel Quartet hour (CBS). 00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). WA N T E D BOYS s£x RADIO DIAL MAKE GOOD MONEY IN SPARE TIME Loans on Automobiles and Household Security Borrow up to your needs and repay it in small monthly payments ar- ranged conveniently for you. Prompt Service Open 8:30 to 5:00 The Central Acceptance Corporation 26 East Sixth St., between Vine and Walnut Cincinnati, Ohio. PArkway 6280. RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1931. WKRC Tuesday, August 11 7 ; 15— Rubel's Hy Rye and Willie Winsom. 7.3O— The Bon Bons (CBS). 7 -15 — The Manhattan Serenaders (CBS). g-00 — Henry George (CBS) 8-30— The Bristolcers (CBS) g. 00— Ben Bernie and His Blue Ribbon Orchestra (CBS). i(.j5_Tom Collins, Jr. !):30 — Coney Island Dance Orches- tra, in ;(IC>- — Pyol Program. |0:I5 — Indian Lake Period. 10:25 — Sports Review. ]H:30— Studio Feature. 10 ■■15 — Asbury Park Casino Orchestra (CBS). 11 : 00— Gruen Witching Hour. U : 30— Time and weather. 11:33— Blue Ridge Red. 1 1 -45 — Jos. R. Deins, Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— G :30 — Time Announcement. 0:31 — International Fiddlers and Salt and Peanuts. 0:59 — Weather Forecast. 7:00 — Physical Exercises. 7:14 — Time Announcement. 7:15— The Sunbirds (NBC). 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC). 7:59— Bulova Time. 8:00 — Morning Devotions. 8:15— Seger Ellis. 8:30— Montgomery Ward (NBC). 8:45 — Physical Exercises. 9 :00— Morning Ballads. 9:15 — Frances Ingram (NBC). 9:30— Fashionette. 9:45 — Premium Man. 10:00— The Melody Club. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40 — Organ and Vocal Solos. 11:00 — Island Serenaders. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30-WLW Stars. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals. Noon— Tuxedo Trio. P. M.— 12:15— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12 :45 — Market Reports. 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30 — Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 2:00 — Organ Matinee. 2:30— Chicago Serenade (NBC). 2 :45 — Princess Ovolensky Youth Matinee (NBC). 3 :00 — Ramona. 3:15— U. S. Navy Band (NBC). 4:00— Salt and Peanuts. 4:15 — The Grab Bag Boys. 4 :30 — Live Stock Reports. 4:40 — Mitchem and Quartet. 5:00— The Hottentots. 5:30 — Old Man Sunshine. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). f>:15— The Chatter. 0:30 — Southern Singers. 6:45— Mail Pouch (e. t.). 7:00— Armstrong Quakers (NBC). 7:30 — Los Ramos Baseball Scores. 7:35 — Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 7:45— Sisters of the Skillet (NBC). 8:00 — Fuller's Orchestra. 8:15 — Icyeast Jamboree. 8:30-Werk Bubble; Blowers. 9 :00— Crimelights. 9 :30— Chevrolet Chronicles (e. t.). 10:00— Cotton Queen Minstrels, 10:30 — Variety. M):45— Bob Newhall, Sports Slices. WLW Tuesday, August 1 1 10:58— Estate Weather. 11:00 — Los Amigos. 11:30— Moon River. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra, A. M.— 12:30— Henry Bnsse's Orchestra, Cas- tle Farm. I :00— Sign off. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15 — Tom Waring and His Trouba- dours (NBC). 8 :45— Records. 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Raido Column NBC). 9:15— Records. 10:00— Talks by Dr. Ella Oppen- heimer (NBC). 10 :15 — Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10:30— U. S. Army Band (NBC). 11 :00— The Hellniaii Troubadors (NBC). 11 :15— Sign Off. P. M.— 12:50 — Live Slock Reports from Prod. Coop. Comm. Assn. 1 :00— Sign off. 2 :00 — Women's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 3:45 — Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4:00— Lady Next Door (NBC). 4:30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4:45 — Records. 5:15 — Vocal Solos. 5:30— Records. 6 :00 — Midweek Federation Hymn Sing (NBC). 0:30 — Jerry Foy. G :45— The Goldbergs (NBC). 7 :00— Blackstone Plantation (NBC). 7 :30— National Dairy Virtuoso (NBC). 8:00— Nash Parade (NBC). 8:30— Fuller Brush Man (NBC). 9:00— Lucky Strike Dance (NBC). 10:00— Fuller's Orchestra. J r 1 5 — The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10 :W— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 11:00— Sign Off. WEDNESDAY August 12 WCKY(202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15 — Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Hot Shot, the Briarhopper. 8.15 — Early morning dance program, 9:15 — Mr New Kentucky Home, 9:45 — Dance Tunes. 1') : I -5 — Classic Hour. 1 :45 — Musical Novelties. 11:30— Skillet Lickers. Noon — Popular Dance Melodies. P. M.— 12:15— Little Red Riding Hood, John R. Coppin Co. 12:30— Live Stock Reports. 12 :35— Randall Fryer, tenor. 1 :00— Sien off. 5 :45 — Blue Ridge Shindiggers. KEEP COOL ELECTRIC FANS as low as $2 .69 Another Lot of 10,000 Radio Tubes ENJOY YOUR RADIO Induction Type. No Interference when placed on Radio. CHECKER STORE One Week Only Following Types: 201 A 227 280 112 226 224 171 245 ORIGINAL TIRE CO. Court & Race Senorita Arcos Sings Rumbas on Pond's Program Senorita Pilar Arcos sings boleros, rumas, tangos, so dansons, Cuban melodies and what have you — all in Spanish- as part oi the Pond's programs on NBC stations including WSAI at 8:30 Friday mghts. She was born in Madrid. Hei vocal training acquired abroad she appeared in recitals ir America with La Argentina the Spanish dancer and in vaudi ville. She now is one of the central figures in the Spanish theatre on upper Fifth Avenue in New York. This Friday (August 7) she will sing "Madonna Negra," a new song by Lecuona, composer of the "Peanut Vendor." WCKY Wednesday, August 12 5 :55— WCKY Baseball Scores. 6 : n0— Amos V Andy (NBC). 6:15 — Charlene Todd, Blues Singer. 6:35 — Crooning Guitarist. :4')— Tommy Ott. 7 :00— Hitchhikers. 7 :15— Red Riding Hood. 7:30— Christian Glee Club. 8:00— Skillet Lickers. 8:30— Earl Arnold's Orchestra, Lookout House. 9:00— Steve Bates. 9:15 — Tommie and Willie. 9:30— Lucille Fox. 9:45 — Italian Serenaders. FRENCH - BAUER Incorporated brings the nationally famous NIT-WITS to you every Wednesday night over Station WKRC from 9:30 to 10 FRENCH - BAUER Incorporated "Better Dairy Products Since 1842" Wednesday, August 12 WFRH (2-0 m.— 1200 kc.) A. M.— 7:00 — Voices at DaA'n. 7 :30 — Ciassirieu directory. 8:00 — Morning Concert. 9 :00— Variety. 9:15 — Sunshine Special. 9:45 — Kleeman Home Chats. 10:00— Musical Brevities. 10:35— Vocal Varieties. 10 :50 — Mrs. Evans' Questions and Answers. 10:59 — Simper Time. 11:00— Garden of Melody. 11:30 — Melodies of Long Ago. Noon— Tri-State Philco Program. P. JVL— 12 :15 — Serenade. 12:45 — Be!lonbv Luncheon Musicale. 1 :00— Little Black Joe. 1 :15— Story Telling Time. 1:30 — Pauline Ungar, Contralto, 1 :45— The Parent's Forum. 2 :00 — Galvano & Cortez. 2:15 — Reds vs. Boston, at Boston. 4:45 — Ralph and Harlan. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5 :45 — World Series Contest. 6 :00 — Musical Interlude. 6:15 — World Series Contest. 6:45 — Berning Ford Travelogue. 7 :00— The Pest Question Box. 7 :15 — Novelty Notes. 7 :30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7 :45 — Julius Sein. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15— Dry Ridge Health Hints. 8:30 — Colonial Stages. 8:45 — Twilight Reveries. WFBE Wednesday, August 12 o :00— Tile-Way Fire-Proof Home Program. 9:30— Jewish Commercial Program. 10:00— Dance Tunes. 10:30— Slumber Music. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6 :45— Sunrise Worship, God's Bible School. 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Grucn Time. 8:00— The Commuters (CBS). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— The Old Dutch Girl (CBS). 9:00— Oxol Feature (CBS) 9:15— Morning Minstrels (CBS). 9 :30— Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 10:00— Learn to Swim (CBS). 10:15— Floraline Talk. 10:20 — Time and weather. 10 :23— Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tulley. 10:45 — Charles W. Reaume Studio. 11:15 — Don Bigelow Orchestra (CBS). 11 :30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11 :45— Drink-Mor Program. Noon — Enric Madigueras Orchestra (CBS). P. M.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. 1 :00 — Studio Feature. 1:30— Pyol Program. 1:45— Blue Ridge Red. 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio 2:15— Salon Orchestra (CBS). 2:28— Sports Flashes. Don't Miss — These Wonderful Programs To be without RADIO DIAL in your home is like touring the country without a road map and guide. You may "get there," sure — but if you're missing all the high spots, you are not getting your money's worth. RADIO DIAL puts you in intimate touch with "What's What" in Radio entertainment. Mailed to you weekly with one week's complete program. Clip off and mail the coupon below with one dollar attached, and we will enter your subscription for 6 months. RADIO DIAL 6 months (or $1-00 RADIO DIAL 22 E. 12th Street Cincinnati, Ohio Gentlemen: Enclosed find One Dollar (SI). Send RADIO DIAL for 6 month.. [ ] New Subscriber [ ] Renewal RADIO DIAL, FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1931. WKRC Wednesday, August 12 2:30— Marian and Jim (CBS). L>:4.:.— Hambletonian Stake (CBS). 3:0O— Dancing by the Sea (CBS). 3:15— Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 3:30— Columbia Camp Concert (CBS). •1:00— Asbury Park Casino Orchestra (CBS). 4 :15 — A. L. Fink Program. 4:45 — Edna Wallace Hopper's Youth Matinee (CBS). 5:00— A. O. Rust, Happy Feet. 5:15 — Jos. R. Dcins Organ Con -rt. Pat Gil lick. 5:30— Cincinnati Trade School Program. b :45 — Studio. 5:60 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5:55 — Sports Review. 5 :59— Burke Weather Forecast. 6:00— Kate Smith Swanee Musi. Home Furniture Co. (CBS) 6:10— Stocks, Cohle & Tyree. 6 :13— Time and weather. 0:15 — Unit Program, with Kenni: King (CBS). 6:30— Miller and Lylc (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS) 7:00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15— The Barbasol Program (CBS). 7:30— Indian Lake Period. 7:35— What's Happening(Full Meas- ure Gas). 7:45— Old Wurzburg Malt Program. 8 .00— Gold Medal Fast Freight (CBS). 8:30— Eno Crime Club (CBS). 9 :00— Vitality Personalities (CBS). 9:15 — Symphonie Interlude (CBS). {» ;30— ( French-Bauer) — N i t W i t Hour (CBS). 10:00— The Pyol Program. 10:15 — Gruen Answer Man. 10:30 — Coney Island Dance Orches- tra. 11:00— Time; Weather; Sports Re- view. 11:08 — Coon Sanders and Hollywood Gardens Orchestra (CBS). 11:30— Blue Ridge Red. 11:45 — Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gil lick. WLW Wednefday, August 12 10:00— Castle Farm. 10:30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 10:58— Estate Weather Man. 1 1 :00— Fuller's Orchestra. 11 :30— Moon River. Midnight— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. A. M.— 12:30— Castle Farm. 1 :00— Sign off. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— 6:30 — Time Announcement. 6:31 — International Fiddlers and Jim and Walt. 6:59 — Weather Forecast. 7:00 — Physical Exercises, 7 :14 — Time Announcement. 7:15— The Sunbirds (NBC). 7:45— A. & P. Food News (NBC) 8:00 — Morning Devotions. 8:15 — Ball Brothers Canning Time. 8:30 — Montgomery Ward Program 8:46 — Physical Exercises. 9;00— Mary Hale Martin (NBC). 9:15 — Florence Frey's Workshop. 9 :30 — Harshaw Announcement. 9:35 — Organ Program. 9:45 — Masley Personality Perfumes (NBC). 10:00— McCormick Fiddlers. 10:15— Jim and Walt. 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Piano Solos. 10:45— Manhattan Soap Program (NBC). 11:00— Moto Ironing Time. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 11:30— WLW Stars. 11:45— River Reports; Time Signals Noon— The Village Rhymester. P. M.— 12:15— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:45— Market Reports. 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— National Farm and Home (NBC). 1 :30— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 2:00— Organ Matinee. 3 :S0 — Cincinnati Zoo Concert. 3:00— Weather Forecast. 3:01— The Matinee Players. 4:00— Chats with Peggy Winthrop (NBC). 4:15— The Grab Bag Boys. 4:30 — Live Stock Reports. 4:40 — Mitchein and Quartet. 5 :00 — Afternoon Melodies 5:30— Old Man Sunshine. 5:45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 6:00— Amos V Andy (NBC) fi:15-The Chatter. 6:30— Phil Cook (NBC). 6:45— "Believe It or Not. " Riolev (NBC). 7:00— Los Ramos Baseball Scores. 7:05— Fuller's Orchestra. 7:30— Jack Frost Melody Moments CNBC). 8:00— The Play Boys. 8:30— Consolidated Cigar Program (NBC). 9 :00— G oldman Band Concert i (NBC). 9:30— Canova Coffee Hour. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. M-— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15 — Tom Waring and His Trouba- dours (NBC). 8:45 — Records. 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9 :15 — Jane Grant's Steero Hour (NBC). 9:30— National Home Hour (NBC). 10:00— Records. 10:15 — Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10:45— Records. 1 1 :00 — The Hellman Troubadors (NBC). 11:15— Sign Off. % P. M.— 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1:00— Sign off. 2:00— Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 3:30— Crosley Dealers' Salute. 3:45 — Outstanding Daytime Speakers (NBC). 4:00— Don Becker. 4 :15 — Sam Wilson, baritone. 4 :20— Records. 5 :00— McCormick Fiddlers. 5:25— Civil Service Talk. 5 :30— Records. 6:15 — Boscul Moments, with Madame Alda (NBC). 6 :30— Records. 6:45— The Goldbergs (NBC). 7:00— Vocal Solos. 7 :15 — Records. 7:30— Mobiloil Concert (NBC). 8:00— Halsey Stuart (NBC). 8:30— Palmolive Hour (NBC). 9:30— Coca Cola Program (NBC). 10:00— Seger Ellis. 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10:30— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 11:00— Sign Off. Two Troupers Write Book THURSDAY August 13 WGKY(202m.— 1490 kc.) A. M.— 7 :00 — The Crooning Guitarist. 7:15— Morning Devotions (NBC). 7:30— Cheerio (NBC). 8:00— Hot Shot, the Briarhopper. 8:15 — Early Morning Dance. 9 .15 — My New Kentucky Home, 9:45 — Dance Tunes. 10:00— Mrs. A. M. Goudiss (NBC). 10:1 5 — Dance Records. 10:30— Northam-Warren (NBC). 10:45 — Classic Hour. 11 :00— Musical Novelties. 11:30— Skillet Lickers. Noon— Popular Dance Tunes. P. M.— 12:15— Little Red Riding Hood, John R. Coppin Co. 12:30 — Live Stock Quotations. 12:35 — Luncheon Concert. 12:45 — Rev. Chas. A. Vandermuelen. 1 :00— Sign off. 5 :45— Blue Ridge Shindiggers. 5 :55— WCKY Baseball Scores. 6:00— Amos 'n' Andy (NBC). 6:15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 6:30— Wally, the Radio Clown. 6:45— Little Red Riding Hood. 7 :00— D ixie Spiritual Singers (NBC). 7:15 — Hot Shot, the Briarhopper. 7:30 — Tonimie and Willie. 7:45 — Croning Guitarist. 8:00— Blackstone Plantation (NBC) 8:30— Studio Program. 8 :45— Hitchhikers. 9:00— Earl Arnold and His Orches- tra from Lookout House. 9:30— Skillet Lickers. The humorous side of an entertainer's life is being amusingly depicted in a book on which 'The Two Troupers," Helene Handin (left) and Marcella Shields (right) are hard at work between their broadcasts on an NBC-WJZ network of the "Margy The Steno" program. The story is in the form of letters exchanged by two young performers, one trying to break into the movies in Hollywood and the other rehearsing for a musical show in New York. Marcella Shields plays the stenographer on the Frances In- gram program through WLW on Tuesday mornings at 9:15. WFBE (250 m.— 1200 kc.) 00 — Voices at Dawn. 15 — Tennessee Jeff. 30 — Classified Directory. 00 — Morning Concert. 00— Variety. WFBE Thursday, August 13 9:15 — Sunshine Special. 9:45— Kleeman Home Chats. 10 :00— Zoo-ettes. 10:05 — Musical Brevities. 10:50— Sister Mary's Kitchen. 10:59 — Simper Time Announcement. 11:00— Vocal Varieties. 11 :30— Song Hit Time. 11 :45— NoKy Trio. Noon— Tri-State Philco Program. P. M.— 12 :15 — George Eiche, Jr. 12:45— Bellonby Luncheon Musicale. 1 :00— Two Irish Boys and Chas. Schaeffer. 1 :15— Storv Telling Time. 1 :30_Mclody Girls. 1 :45 — Matinee Musicale. 2:15— Reds vs. Boston, at Boston. 4:45 — Ralph and Harlan. 5:00— Lyric Hour. 5 :30 — World Series Contest, 6:00 — Musical Interlude. 6:15 — World Series Contest. 6:45 — Berning Ford Travelogue. 7:00— The Post Question Box. 7:15— Novelty Notes. 7:30 — Harry Hartman's Sport Re- view. 7:45— Ruth Wolfendcn, Blues. 8:00— Luckey Boys. 8:15— Murdock Williams. 8:30— Twilight Reveries. 8:45— The Post Tenor. 9:00 — Independent Oil Program. 9:30— Song Hit Time. 10:00— Dry Ridge Health Hints. WKRC (545 m.— 550 kc.) A. M.— 6 :45 — Sunrise Worship. 7:45— Hill Billy Kid. 7 :59 — Gruen Time Signal. 8:00— The Commuters (CSB). 8:30— Tony's Scrap Book (CBS). 8:45— Starr-Freeze Melodies (E.T.) 9:00— Pot of Gold (CBS). 9:15 — Consolidated Merchants' Pro- gram. 9:45— Barbara Gould Beauty Talk (CBS). 10 :00— Charles W. Reaume Studio 10:30— Vacation Roads. 10:45 — Time and weather. 10 :48— Woman's Hour, Tremlette Tully. 11 :15 — Don Bigelow and His Or- chestra (CBS). 11:30— Columbia Revue (CBS). 11:45 — Drinkmor Program. Noon— Enric Madigueras Orchestra (CBS). P. M.— 12:30— Cincinnati Merchants' Pro- gram. WKRC Thursday, August 13 1:00 — Columbia Farm Program (CBS). 1 :30— Pyol Program. 1 :45 — Studio Feature — Blue Ridge Red. 2:00— Charles W. Reaume Studio. 2:15 — Mel and Cassey. 2:30— (A. L. Fink)— Marian and Jim (CBS). 2:45— A. L. Fink— Ben and Helen (CBS). 3:00— Melody Magic (CBS) 3:30— Hotel Taft Orchestra (CBS). 4:00— Jewish Art Program (CBS). 4:30— Kathryn Parsons (CBS). 4:45— Meet tile Artists (CBS). 5:00— A. .0 Rust, Happy Feet. 5:15 — Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. 5:30— Cine in nat i Trade School Program. 5:45— Studio. 5 :50 — Eureka Baseball Scores. 5 :55 — Sports Review. 5 :59 — Burke Weather Forecast. 6 :00 — Kate Smith and her Swancc Music (CBS) Home Furni- ture Co. 6:10— Stocks, Cohle 5: Tyree. 6:13 — Time and weather. 6:15— Linit Program, with Dennis King (CBS). 6:30— Daddy and Rollo (CBS). 6:45— Camel Quarter-Hour (CBS). 7:00 — Pryor's Cremo Military Band (CBS). 7:15— Rubel's Hy Rye and Willie Winsom. 7:30— The Columbians (CBS). 7 :45— The Old Wurtzburg Malt Pro gram. 8:00 — The Premier Salad Dressers (CBS). 8:15— The Coty Melody Girl (CBS) 8:30 — Lewisohn Stadium Concert (CBS). 9:30— Barbara Maurel (CBS). 9 :45 — Studio Feature. 10:00— Pyol Program. 10:15 — Indian Lake Period. 10 :25 — Sports Review. 10 :30— Coney Island Dance Orches- tra. 1 1 :00 — Gruen Witching Hour. 11:30 — Time and weather. 11:33— Hill Billy Kid. 1 1 :45 — Jos. R. Deins Organ Concert, Pat Gillick. WLW (428 m.— 700 kc.) A. M.— ::',ij — Time Announcement. 6 :31— International Fiddlers and Ramona. 6:59 — Weather Forecast. WLW Thursday, August 13 7 :00— Physical Exercises, 7 :14 — Time Announcement. 7:15— The Sunbirds (NBC). 7:45— A. St P. Food News (NBC). 8:00 — Morning Devotions. 8 :]5 — Ramona. 8:30 — Montgoinerv Ward Program (NBC). 45 — Physical Exercises. 00— Ray Perkins (NBC). 15— Beatrice Mabie (NBC). 30— Community Health. Dr. Carl Wilzbach. 9:45 — Housekeeper Chats. 10 :00— McCormick Fiddlers. 10:15— Dance Miniatures (NBC). 10:30— Live Stock Reports. 10:40— Jim and Walt. 11:00— The Venetian Three. 11:15— Swift Program (NBC). 1 1 :30— WL W Stars. 11:45 — River Reports; Time Signals. Noon — Seger Ellis. P. M.— 12:16— Hotel Gibson Orchestra. 12:45 — Market Reports. 12:50 — Live Stock Reports. 1 :00 — National Farm and Home (NBC). -Netherland Plaza Orchestra. -Organ Matinee. -Chicago Serenade (NBC). -Princess Ovolensky Youth Matinee (NBC). 3 :00— Afternoon Melodies. 3:30— Maze of Melody (NBC). 4 :00_Jim and Walt. 4:15— Grab Bag Boys. 4:30 — Live Stock Reports. 4:40— Harriet Wellen and Don Becker. 00— Edna Wallace Hopper (NBC). 15— Wildeson's Wildcats. 30— Old Man Sunshine. 45— Lowell Thomas (NBC). 00— Amos V Andy (NBC). 15— Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). 30 — Glenn Adams, Dog Talks. 45 — News Flashes from Hollywood (E.T.) 7 :00 — Los Ramos Baseball Scores. 7:05— The Chatter. 7:15— Rin-Tin-Tin Thriller (NBC) 7 :30— Netherland Plaza Orchestra. 7:45— Sisters of the Skillet (NBC). 8 :00 — Horseshoe Gardens Orchestra. 8:30— Castilian Nights. 9:00— Fuller's Orchestra. 9:30— Clara, Lou and Em (NBC). 9 :4o — Varsity Four. 10:00 — Canada Dry Program. 10 :30— Variety. 10:45— Bob Newhall, Sport Slices. 10:58 — Estate Weather Man. 1 1 :00 — Great Composers. 11:30— Moon River. Midnight — Hotel Gibson Orchestra. A. M.— 12:30— Castle Farm Orchestra. 1 :00— Sign off. WSAI (225 m.— 1330 kc.) A. IH.— 8:00— Gene and Glenn (NBC). 8:15 — Tom Waring and His Trouba- dours (NBC). 8 :45 — Records. 9:00— Mrs. Blake's Radio Column (NBC). 9:15— Records. 9:45 — Organ Program. 10:00— McCormick's Old Time Fiddlers. 10:15— Radio Household Institute (NBC). 10 :30— Records. 1 1 :00— The Hellman Troubadors (NBC). 11:15— Sign Off. P. M.— 12:50— Live Stock Reports. 1 :00— Sign off. 2 :00 — Woman's Radio Review (NBC). 3 :00— Records. 3 :45— Crosley Dealers' Salute. 4:00 — Mona Motor Organ Recital. 4 :30— Rinso Talkie (NBC). 4:45 — Records. 5:00— Travel Talk by Jos. Ries. 5:15 — Ramona. 5 :30— Records. 6:00— Harry Willsey's Orchestra. 6:25— Better Business Bureau Talk. 6 :30— Records. 6:45— The Goldbergs (NBC). 7 :00— Fleischmann Hour (NBC). 8:00— Arco Birthday Party (NBC). 8:30— Goldman Band (NBC). 9:00— Luckv Strike Dance Orchestra (NBC). 10:011— Horseshoe Gardens. 10:15— The Stebbins Boys (NBC). 10 :30— Fuller's Orchestra. 11:00— Sign off. ©CI B 124223 jAUG 13 1931 ^WEEKLY Volume I, No. 13 FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1931 Price 5c Famous Radio Artists Choose This Week For Broadcasts Through Local Stations Helene Carlin, who is heard frequently as guest artist on Na- tional Broadcasting Company programs, is a former movie ac- tress. Harry Reser, who directs the Clicquot Club Eskimos, heard her singing once and per- suaded her to come to radio. She did, and is now making a steady rise. Kenner Stakes from Saratoga Aired by WKRG Description of the Kenner Stakes will be broadcast from the track at Saratoga Springs, New York, by Bryan Field over the Columbia network and WKRC Tuesday afternoon (August 18) at 3 :15. The Kenner was in- augurated in 1870, but during the last ten years has been run under the caption of the Miller Stakes. Field, well-known turf writer, will give a running description as the 3-year olds gallop over a niile and three-sixteenths course. Gov. Roosevelt Speaks Thursday Franklin D. Roosevelt, gover- nor of New York, will be heard Thursday (August 20) during the National Farm and Home program through WLW at 12 :30 P- m. when he speaks at the American Country Life Confer- Above, top to bottom, are Wal- ter Scanlon, Billy Murray and Marcella Shields, the featured artists in the new Dutch Mas- ters program through WLW at 8:30 p.m. Wednesdays. Scan- lon and Murray were popular a few years ago as phonograph re- corders. Miss Shields is well known for her acting on NBC dramatic programs. ence at Cornell University. Other speakers will be Dr. C. J. Galpin, a pioneer in rural life study, and one of the country's foremost figures in sociological accomplishment, and Dr. Liberty Hyde Bailey, president of the American Country Life Associa- tion. The Ponce Sisters are one of the most successful harmonizing "sister teams" on the air. Since they began broadcasting a f years ago they have made a steady rise. When talking pictures pictures were perfected the Ponce Sisters made a number of feature shorts. Now they broadcast each Thursday night at 6:45 over an NBC network including WENR (870 kc.) In th photograph Dorothea is at the left and Ethel at the right. Wagner Music Is Broadcast From Bayreuth Music from the Wagner Festi- val in Bayreuth, Germany, will be heard in the United States for the first time when NBC at- tempts a rebroadcast of a por- tion of "Tristan and Isolde" Tuesday, (August IS,) at 3 p. m. The performance will be the third and last in the current ser- ies at the great composer's birth- place. WSAI probably will take tht program although final arrange- ments have not been completed and there is a possibility that ii may be heard on WLW. Men About Town Sing Sunday on WSAI Program The Men About Town will sing Sunday night (August 1G) at 7 o'clock in the Chase and Sanborn program WSAI broad- casts from the NBC network. The trio will include "The Bride and Groom," a narrative comedy song relating the blissful oblivion of a happy couple to dis- asters all around them, "One Man Band," "Blue Again," and "Big Boy Jess of the Western Air Express." The three mu- sicians are Frank Luther, Jack Parker and Phil Dewey. J Alice Brady and Dennis King will present a radio version of the balcony scene from "Romeo and Juliet" during the Linit pro-