,A 14 W f L teen he was a member of the Russian Symphony orchestra, which introduced to American some of the important Russian music The Nathaniel Shilkret to celebrate on I most conductor and soloists who played | with this orchestra included such yA Eveready program musical Immortals as Sibelius, A splendid program of the music IScriabin. Heifetz, Elrnan, Safanov of great composers has been selected and others equally famous. to celebrate the 200th performance of Nathaniel Shilkret, noted record- Gloom Chasers Monday Morning ing-, artist, as conductor of the Monday morning whoopee is not Eveready hour orchestra. always welcomed by even the best of Four years have passed since Shil- us, but Julie Wintz*s Blue Mondayfirst wielded the baton as di- Gloom Chasers will enliven the gloom of the orchestra. In that time of the after-week-end day by playing conducted programs which ei^ht cheery dance tunes especially become radio classics, repeated arranged for broadcasting by Mr. t m a g a year or oftener at public de- Wintz. This program will be heard over the Columbia Broadcasting SysM a very early age he studied tem and WMAK of Buffalo, at 9.30 piaipo and at seven was playing in a o'clock tomorrow morning, Februooy# orchestra of 70 pieces. At six- ary 3d. 200TH PERFORMANCE _ , k.- w * • —' - V i'j^iiui.Ahi' 2, l y a o 1930 AVIATION PLANS Seth Parker Group's Popularity Is Increasing F. Trubee Davison to talk on aeronautics Friday evening The war department's aviation.' plans for 1930 will be told by Trubee Davison, assistant secretary, of war in charge of aeronautics, in an address to be broadcast by the National Broadcasting Company in! connection with the New York com-' mission dinner, Friday, February 7th. This dinner will be given in the crystal room of the Hotel Manger directly preceding the opening of the New York Aviation Show in Grand Central Palace under the auspices of the Aviators' Post of the New York American Legion. While the dinner will be in New York, Davison will speak from the NBC's Washington studios. The diners will hear his words over a loudspeaker in the dining room. The program will open in New York at 7 p. m., Eastern standard time, with dance music presented by Roger Wolf Kahn and his orchestra. At 7.15 State Senator J.. Griswold VAUGHN DE LEATH Webb, state chairman of the New York state aviation commission, Vaughn De Leath is known as the speaking from the crystal room, will National Radio Girl, and is featured introduce Davison, who will respond in the Voice of Firestone program from the national capital. heard Monday nights through the NBC chain, including WGR, Buffalo. HEAR... SEE * NEW Super ZENITHS The Seth Parker group so widely popular with listeners to their Sunday evening programs over the Na- AUBADE PRIHTAHIERE INCLUDED tional Broadcasting Company system, which includes WGR. Buffalo. Phillips Lord, director and creator of the ON THURSDAY GOOLD BROADCAST program, is on the extreme left. The custom of playing a morning hymn, or aubade, In place of the evening song, or serenade, was once very popular In southern France. The troubadours frequently went at dawn to the windows of their fair ladies to sing a morning song of love. One of the favorites of this group was Lacome's Aubade Printaniere, which has been included on the Goold program for next Thursday at 7 o'clock over WGR of the Buffalo Broadcasting Corporation. | The ensemble of strings and vibraphones also will present Wagner's impressive Dreams ar.d Waldteufel's The musical culture of the Near j Pamone Waltz, besides a group of East and the Middle West from popular selections. points half 'round the world—will ' j meet in joint recital during the Atwater Kent hour of tonight when Series of Religions Lectures Genevieve Irene Rowe, soprano, of The Rev. Arthur Edward Leighton, Wooster, O., winner of the Third NaD.D., metropolitan archbishop and tional Radio Audition of the Atwater primate of the Episcopal church, anKent Foundation and Armand Tonounces an extensive lecture series to katyan, tenor, of Alexandria, Egypt, be broadcast over the Columbia now with the Metropolitan Opera Broadcasting System early this spring, Company of New York, are the stars. The Atwater Kent Concert Orchestra, directed by Josef Pasternack, will contribute orchestral numbers and accompaniments for the singers. Armand Tokatyan, an Armenian whose boyhood was spent and early musical training obtained in Alexandria, has been called the perfect lover of the opera. Though he has FRANK BLACK been singing* on the stage less than ten years, most of that time has been Frank Black, one of radio's best known musicians, is conductor of the speni in delineating such roles as Chase & Sanborn choral orchestra Romeo and 50 others that are In hearW SundayX nights through the standard repertoires. NBC system, including WGR, Buffalo. is Unlike most foreign artists. Tokatyan came to the United States after first season in opera in EuPALACE OF MAHARAJAH rope. His debut was in Birmingham, HAS WESTERN COMFORTS Ala., with the Scotti Opera Company. Jodphur, Rajput ana, India, Feb. 1, His engagement a t the Metropolitan (J?)—Oriental splendor and Western followed as a result of singing his comforts are combined in the new first role with Scotti—himself one of GENEVIEVE IRENE ROWE palace being built for the Maharajah the greatest baritones and MetropoK itan stars. ' of Jodhpur. I t is expected to deplete 19th, Miss Rowe has been the royal treasury by $7,500,000. In his part of the program To- December the recipient of many honors in her The spacious royal edifice, for katyan will demonstrate his ability which the cornerstone recently was to put the poetry and passion of native state and ^ a s been kept busy laid, will have everything that is dear music into his songs. One of them letting her loyal Ohio friends hear to the Oriental heart as well as such particularly, the so-called Flower her sing. In the Atwater Kent hour she will ^modern notes from the West as tiled Song of Don Jose in Bizet's Carmen, give evidence of her versatility and I bathrooms and electric refrigeration. which the singer has made peculiarly Besides the maharajah's personal his own in Metropolitan productions, vocal flexibility to an audience exsuite, the palace will contain many will be heard as the climax of the tending from coast to coast, served by the National Broadcasting Comguest suites of great luxury, a staff Atwater Kent hour program. pany, including WGR of Buffalo, court, a woman's court (zenana) and Genevieve Irene Rowe, the coloraI a sumptuous swimming pool. tura soprano whose singing of the Shadow Song, from t h e Meyerbeer Frontier days, a new program going opera, Dinorah, won for her first out on Tuesday nights over WEAF Dies Kneeling at Prayer Milwaukee, Wis.. Feb. 1—All the prize for women in the Third Na- and stations, is a portrayal of the 90 years of his life Jacob Wittbrod's j tional Radio Audition of the At- early advance of civilization into the first morning act was to kneel at his water Kent Foundation, will repeat West. bedside and say his prayers. He knelt the song as part of her contribution Jan Garber's orchestra, a CBS as usual and death came before he to the program. Since winning her had completed them. Relatives found title of being the best young woman dance featore on Monday nights, amateur singer in the United States, plays from Hollywood. him on his knees beside his bed. Leads Orchestra Genevieve Roive Features Atwater Kent Broadcast Armand Tokatyan, tenor, will support audition winner on tonight's program Priced for the THRIFT-WISE AUTOMATIC1 POPPENBERG'S 917 MAIN STREET Kl AT CARLTON Open Evenings Easy Terms •m ». Monday Feature SPANISfiTdTAR^ ONLY TWO VOTES CAST TO CARRY ANNEXATION WILL FEAftRtf MoeiLOiL HOUR Countess Olga Medolago Albam and Julian Olivier head program The second Mobiloil program under the direction of Nathaniel Shilkret, the new Mobiloil orchestra director, will be offered Wednesday, February 5, and will co-star two Spanish singers who are rapidly attainng fame in the radio field. They are Countess Olga Medolago Albani and Julian Olivier. Senorita Albani. a native of Barcelona, was educated in a New York convent school and has spent most cf her life in America. All of her musical eaucation has been in this country and her rich dramatic voice, remarkable beauty and radiant personality brought immediate success when she ventured into the field of radio entertainment. On Wednesday evening she will sing Bizet's Habanera from Carmen and, with Senor Olivier, the delightful duet from Samson and Delilah, My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice. Senor Julian Olivier, often referred to In musical circles as the Spanish McCormick, also Is a native of Barcelona. He has sung in all of the capitals of Europe, In Northern Africa, Central and South America and now In the United States. His solo contribution to the Mobololl program will be the beautiful M'Appari (Like a Dream) from Flotow's opera Martha. The Mobiloil hour will be presented at 8 p. m., Eastern standard time, over the NBC network including WGR of Buffalo. Santa Ana., Col., Feb. 1 (£•}—Probably the smallest election ever held is the one which recently made the area of Santa Ana an acre larger. Mr. and Mrs. John Mangold are ranchers whose property lay just outside the city limit. They petitioned for annexation. The clerk of Orange county ordered the regular voting equipment moved to tne Mangold front porch and the oath was administered to her as judge and to her husband asf election inspector. When the*polls closed it was determined that both votes had been Boll Attacks Owner recorded for annexation, carrying the Elkton, Md., Feb. 1—George E. L. proposition 100 per cent. Ness, of Fair Hill, this county, president of the board of trustees of Poor Flowers Keep Man from Jail and Insane for Cecil county, is conLaurel, Del., Feb. 1—Isaiah cran- fined to his home from injuries susfield, 83, arrested for drunkenness tained by being attacked by an angry three times within a week, paid a bull on his farm. The animal got fine in preference to going to jail. loose in the stable and when Ness unWhen told his sentence would be 60 dertook to drive it into its stall he days Cranfield exclaimed, • wouldn't was attacked and knocked to the get out in time to plant my flowers!" ground. We call this TEMPLE Radio Value you can # possibly gety C OME in and sec It. Compare It point* by point with any other set. T h e n , hear it. H e a r T e m p l e t o n e . That's t h e deciding argument. 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Schunke, 463 Amherst S t Henry Schunke, 1877 Clinton St :srhwegler Bros., Ellicott it Gent w« Sts. Select Radio Co., 2171 Seneca St. i. J. Siegrist St Co., 518 William St. Southall Co., 1008 ElmwaM Ave. Ralph Sterling. 458 South Park A r c Sterns Electric Co., 66 Broadway Sticht Furniture Co., 294 W. F e n / St. ; prig lit Tire St Rubber Co.. 9C3 MiJn St. Vnlted Motor Equip..Co.. 602 Broadway Herbert R. White. 94 Sprlngville Ave. OUT-OF-TOWN TEMPLE DEALERS MAX D o w n t o w n Store at 904 MAIN STREET 17 WILLIAM STREET Open Evenings Cleveland 1887 Untitled Document 1 Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com Alden, N. Y., A. E. Franta A Son Akron, N. Y.. The Oasis Alabama, N. Y. A. G. Vaughn Angola, N. Y.. A. J. Anderson Batavia, N. Y., Ellicott Electric Co., 440 Ellicott St. Bemus Point. N. Y.. W. A. Slater Bolivar. N. Y., Ireland Electric Co., Inc. Bowmansvllle, N. Y., Geo. Sugg Bradford, Pa., Brantz Electric Co. Clarence, N. Y., Kamner Motor Sales Clarence Center. N. Y., F. L. Gardner Corfu, N. y . , Palmer's Hardware Cuba, N. Y., Grant Ingalls Dunkirk, N. Y., Am son St Plckard. 204 Central Ave. East Aurora, N. Y.,~Peek*s Electric Co. EllicottvUle. N. Y.. C. J. Hnghey Frcdonia, N. V,. Damon Electric Co., 44 Main S t Hamburg, N. T., Washburn Tire Service Holland, N. Y., Roy F. Martindale Irving, N Y., Newton's Garage Jamestov/n, N. Y., Arnson St Plckard, 225 W. Third St. Java Village. N. Y.. Adrian Met! Kenmore, S. Y., Goold Bros. Nesbit Furniture Co. Kenmore, N. V., Delaware Electric Co., 2360 Delaware Ave. Kane, Pa., D. E. Rose Lackawanna. N. Y.. Rosinski Furniture Co.. 1005 Ridge Road Lancaster, N. Y„ Warren A. Rlegle, IS W. Main St. Lewiston, N. Y.. W. Guard, W. Main S t Lockport, N. Y.. C. A. Roe Niagara Falls. N. Y.. Kelly-Levy Radio Co.. Pine St. Niagara Falls, N Y., Main Auto Electric Co.. 319 Main St. Niagara Falls, N. Y., The Music Shopp*. 213 Falls St. Ni f,^ r a ~ F a l I s ' N - *•• N - *. 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