THE DISTINCTIVE DADIO) PROGRAMS ANNI NA A NAN NA NNN NSN On Your Radio “FRIENDSHIP TOWN" FRIDAY, 9:00 P. M., EST. NBC Coast to Coast Netwerk Vaseline REG. U. 8, FAT, OFF. PREPARATIONS Second Educational Series of Radio Lectures Started Authorities on economics, psychol- ogy and other subjects have inaug- urated the second series of “Listen and Learn” Lectures under the gus- pices of the National Advisory Coun- cil on Radio in Education. over coast- to-coast networks. Dr. Robert M, Hutchins, of the University of Chicago, started the spring series in January when be and representatives of the Coun- e¢il outlined the lecture courses to follow. The programs are heard every Saturday over NBC-WEAF facilities, The series president is scheduled for twenty weeks, closing with a valedictory program the last week In May. Among the Speakers. Interna trade, the tariff and industrial planning are economic sub- jects to be touched ug such as James Rogers of Yale, Ernes erson of Penn- sylvania, F. W. Taussig of Harvard, George Henry Soule, Jr, editor of The New Republic, and Walton H. Hamilton of Yale. Changes and growth In personall- ties, animal beliarvior a hychology in education are topics to be taken up by Fred A. Moss of George Wash- ington University, Henry W. Nissen of Yale, Frank N. Freeman of Chi- eago, and others, Public response to the Initial ten lectures broadcast In the fall Indi: cated, according to the Council, that they reached listening groups in the home, school, special gatherings and even Nova Scotia, PATRIOTIC SONGS The songs that thrill Americans patriotic written by In spired composers, will De played In the February National 4-H club pro- gram of the National Farm and Home Hour by the United States Marine Pand. The won by speakers neighborhood fishermen of selections concert will be another pro gram In series by the Marine Band on “Learn Amer ica’s Music” Beginning with gled Banper™ the swing through the ng to Know “The Star-Span itions will “America,” and the lively “Dixie.” These will be followed “Yankee Doodle” “America tl smutiful,” “Columbia, the Gem of the Ocenn,” “Hall Colum bia,” and a more ng writ ten when the United States Army was moving to the European battle front, “Over There." The programs are designed to ac quaint and famill the 850.000 4-H club members of the United States with the musle which Is typ fcal of America. Each month an additional concert will be provided by the Marine Band. On March 5 America’s hymns and re ligious songs will he featured. The programs are broadcast over a coast to-const network, The series, which promises to be one of the most entertaining fea tures of the Nationa! Farm and Home Hour during the winter months, will contain much basic forestry Informa tion of Interest to both town and country listeners, s 0 strains of with wont Sin i } recent se " irize Carveth Wells, adventurer, explor er and lecturer, who starts a new series of programs over an NBC net- work next month under the title “Conoco Adventurers,” says that if all the hogs in Texas were rolled into one hog, they, or it, could root out a Panama Canal with ease and dis patch. * & » In presenting Organ Melodies, Irma Glen has the threefold job of speak ing the verse while she plays the or gan with feet and hands, and watches the music, prose, and stop watch, - » - Harvey Hays, well known to radio listeners for his interpretations of outdoor roles, will play the part of the forest ranger. Wise in the ways of forest uses and protection through long experience in the fields, the character will often find himself In amusing situations with his sub as sistant whose eagerness sometimes overwhelms his better judgment, . » » Alfred Corn, whe plays the part of Sammy In The Goldbergs’ NBC dally feature, Is nearing his sixteenth birthday, and is a student in high standing at the Art Students’ League, I Did It Because o The Story of a Jealous Heart ® By Fannie Hurst © v &B (©, 1932, MeClure Nowaspaper Syndicate.) WNU Bervice) > HERE are certain things so closely enmeshed within the complicated pattern and fiber of the human heart, that to even try to explain the more subtle and terrifying of human motives and emo- tions were worse than useless. So felt Howard Bennet as he sat forward on his chair, with the steel-looking beads of sweat hanging from his brow. . . Who knows! Perhaps he should never have married. Perhaps that streak in his nature, destined to spoll his happiness from the first week of it, might have developed under any circumstances, Ernest, sometimes trying to analyze his sickness, and it amounted to that, felt differently. If, perchance, he woman with passionately, had married a whom he had been less less devastatingly In love than he had been with Elaine since the hour he lald eyes on her, it all would have been different. How could he argued to him. self in the bitter reaches of many a sleepless night, find one's mere travel. Ing salesman of a self married to the frailest, whitest, most lily-like crea- ture ims and not fairly burn, as a sm furnace -buras, with the 18 terror of losing her. iv ¥ #1 of a girl, one, this and red nelther straying ey straying fancy, did not serve t mitigate the torture tha luckle fs more and mor he precious of her de thillty impressed itsel atient conf chronic 88 youth, on him during the first few years their al To add eling salesms four, six and eight weeks and it was borne Ing these Bennet, « that practical in tees, is nine in upon same few fitted him for Once, years, no other kind of work, he went so far as to resign 1 year position with wholesal firm and set about of finding a position tha him from months of one serious adjustment after another, it chastened young hushan and position, owing to secret and utterly un pangs of had resigned After that, realizing that his fears and suspicions amounted to insamity, and that his ceaseless jealous carpings were wearing down the and gentle resistance of his wife, there was a pronounced in the manner and attitude of Bennet. He no longer reproached her for the wandering of her glance if they happened to be walking together on the street; ceased dropping In from his two and three days before he had announced himself due, and for a while it seemed to the luckless El last, she had got h marriage on some kind of an even keel But slowly, surely, like a beast shoe the per fous task it did not take After case of the home, three mal- was a I who sought, which Justified obtained, the old jealousy over his wife, he even sweet improvemen slightest one, trips, aine that now, nat there of Bennet, terrors and sus creeping up on its prey, back Into the heart traveling, the old plelons concerning | She was go fair. She was so Inf ly desirable. She was so over and above any qualities that existed In any woman he had ever known. Nat. urally, men would covet her. Why not? She was something to be covet. ed. She was something worth covet Ing! And last, all her goodness and sweet patience to the contrary not. withstanding, she was only human. And so there overshadowed the household, torment and fear and all the ugly anguish that follows in the wake of Jealousy. With her lovely blue eves that had already eried more than thelr share, imploring sanity of her husband, it sometimes seemed to him, holding her closely after one of his tantrums over a trifling nothing and imploring to he forgiven, that the only way out of his dilemma of fear concerning this dar. ing of his lifetime, was death. Death for them both, hen he could be sure . . . Only then, . . There were so many possibilities for losing her. He was away at least six months of his year. Before her marriage Elaine had been courted and sought more than any girl In her set, God knows, he used to ask of himself, why she chose him. It must have been his adoration . . . his mad blinding adoration, that drew ler. There had been many a heart ache over this marriage. Bennet could have counted them off on his ten fingers. Even the rector of her church, tal. ented, young, sought after, the type of man who “had everything” had no- torlonsly been In love with Elaine when she up and eloped with Bennet, Elaine, who “had everything,” could in turn have had Dr. Bradford Losee who “had everything” and miracle of miracles, she had married Bennet. Well, when a man had a bequest like that, Bennet was apt to argue with himself, It made a maniac of him. It was like owning a jewel with no vault, casket, or case strong enough to protect it. crept while is wife. nite. And strangely, adding fuel to this secret fire within Bennet, the only source of solace In these terrible years of the realization of her husband's folly lay in the quiet sympathetic mo- ments slie could manage to spend with her rector. Dr, Bradford Losee, who since the marriage of Elaine and Bennet had who was finishing a final year's mis- slonary work in China before coming home to her marriage, seemed to resl- ize better than anyone else, the qual- ity of anguish that resided in the heart of Elaine, to have a sympathetic understanding for the plight of her husband. “1 think I'll have to leave him, Brad- again, as time after time the fires of Jealousy had raged and burned in the household, “I can't stand it. 1 him, in his heart he knows it, but he's kill- ing me, Bradford. Killing me” There is not “evil In Only weakness and acles, Elaine. Howard's heart doubt.” That was true. And true also the fact that deep in that twisted for- lorn heart of his Bennet knew his wife to be Innocent; innocent of the bor, that between her and Bradford old fires were rekindling. He knew her to be Innocent wit mind and wit} h his 1+ his heart he burned and hurt and raged and flayed, Time after time, coming cording to his old before home ac- few day occurred hI his household, because he had found her in the innocent company of this or that person, or in Innocent tasks pertaining to this or that relationship seenes imeful to bear telling, and time after tl } } 4 her red ruse a scheduled, there too sh beside strength to go on, out of the wide = for bo her andis standin unexpected on he there in the witness chalr, ids of sweat out all aver nh nag trying to begin to ex- plain to the judge, why he had com- mitted the helnous erime of kills sudden] g his iy Bennet of the attempt. ngs so closely enmeshed with tern of the hu the complicated pat. n heart, that to even try to explain the more subtle and ter rifying of human motives and emo tions were worse than useless, . Always Springtime in Quito, on the Equator The suburbs of Quito, Ecuador, nearly touch the equator, but its 100.060) the eapital of nhabitants enjoy perpet- ¥8 a bulletin from the National Geographic society. The city nestles depres. gion nearly Andean tains are Before the tion of the Quito Guayaquil rallroad, connectin the capital with Ecuador's prinel wny and port, few travelers trekked for two over : trails to reach Cwiito. Now, by rail, tl t at the Qui ual springtime, =a in a bowlshaped two miles high among the Snow-capped moun from the peak a, visihle streets, comple to was isola vigited weeks ey may alig evening of the se to depot the ond day out of Cuayaquil Many Indians mak ¥ ¢ Quito the manent resi ir per- lence: many come and go 2 from the rural districts with the Quito un. In the market place the shawls and ponchos of the natives add color to the Piles of fruit and veg tables, homen 2 and dyed bid Some of the bronze skinned visitors, particularly those who specialize In selling blankets, prefer the streets to dispose of their merchandise. Nearly all of them wear Panama hats because Ecuador iz the home of Panama hats, In nearly three centuries that the Spanish ruled Ecuador they saturated the capital city with their customs, The principal square, Plaza Mayor, is ald out in Spanish style with a Span- ish government bullding facing ft. Here and there, throughout the ornate facades of Spanish churches rise above the roof tops. The narrow cobbled streets, flanked by white, red. roofed with balconied stories, recall streets of cities In 8 brig ght city, houses upper pain, Justifiable Homicide The Summer ottager, who had heen nt the shore since May, closed the cot- ward his car In which waited, Suddenly he wheeled and fired a shot. =~ The Woman Year-Around Resident, standing on the porch of the cottage next door, uttered a sharp ery and fell dead, a bullet through her breagt. Pollece came and arrested the Sum- mer Cottager, who made no resistance, “Yes, 1 did It right,” he sald. “Put what was your provocation?” demanded the police, “Plenty,” snapped the man. “Just ns we wore leaving she came out and pulled that old one about the loveliest vacation days coming In September and October !"—Detroit Free Press, Men Without Musie Australian natives are the only race in the world who have no musical in. strumenis, not even drums or pipes. At a corroboree, or festival dance, a man chants a monotonous refrain while others keep time by beating two boomerangs together, his family By the t and rord This ecinat ng It is an ideal It is chic fund may it is to | gow lets tur she 1 hes velvet to the right Florent! Hee guishes handsome and picturesqu However, ments are d herew ue where self i 1 in the Ins nest velvet! eve trim- tance of many the handso ning coats whi have no other THREE TYPES OF There are three types of sleeves on daytime frocks that stand out from the general mass, as it were—the bal loon-top sleeves. tight between wrist and elbow or a little higher; the rather loose, straight sleeve which is attached to a wide shoulder yoke that ends midway between shoulder and elbow, and the peasant-puffed sleeve, with the puff over the SOW, and ight above and below thi Conte, of courge, don't have Nod + but they do interesting things with fu just the same. Sometimes the sleeve jg fur from wrist to elbow, or else from elbow to shoulder-—and the very gleoves, And shoulders? These are drop. ghoulder effects, given by wide shoul. der yokes: kimono style, or raglan, is an occasional is comfort: And though there sloping shoulder, it, too, ably roomy. Velveteen an Effective Complement to Woolens The vogue of woolens has done much toward stimulating Interest in velveteens, The French couture con- tinues to advoeate the alllance of vel. veteen coat or Jacket with a woolen dress, One dresamaker Is featuring them with wool mesh frocks. South. ern resort and cruise fashion show. ings slso indicate a continued spon. gorship of this fabric combination, and one finds dark or high colored velve teens accompanying white or pastel lightweight worsteds. ¢ Black and Red This gay color combination Is featured in an evening gown which first saw the light of day in Paris It is of black velvet, long and slinky with Inserts of coral red velvet set in under the armholes, One notes this tendenc rkling embroidery. ¥ a modish on unto themselves In afternoon le of an entirely dif. than that of the dress leeves may be of idered wis. Or y favored, sheer ned sleeve continues to interest, The n of sheer fabric with evening lero usually d epls ¥ the short or the case may be, erial also border mek these ruch flowers, Newspaper Union.) Another Abdication i f man is the dowh of the Ames You are Angeles ome one, MANY BUTTONS By (HERIE. NICHOLAS Ocean pearl buttons of matching col- or serve ax a practical fastening at the same time that they ofnament this tailored blouse of Algerian yellow silk. The suit is of brown tweed collared In red fox. The new midwinter and ree sort collections stress the Importance of buttons, Pretty effects are achieved in that many of the new buttons are very colorful and are made to enter into the color scheme of the costume. (D. 1922, Western Newsvaver Union.) Mercolized Wax Keeps Skin Young Cet an ouuee and use ss Alrected. Fine partides of sesd skin peel! off until sll defects puch se pleaples, vey opis, fan end freckles dissppesr., Flin le then sof and velvety, ¥ our {aoe looks yesrs yousger , Meroclisnd ax brings out the hidden beauty of your skin. Te remove wrinkles use one ounces Powdered Bandolitg dissvived lau one-half pint witeh hasel. At drog stoves, ———— w—— - = - —— Postal Cards “Caught On" When postal dards made their ap- pearance In England about sixty years ago, people were so eager to purchase them that small riots took place in the post offices, nearly 1,000. 000 being sold the first week, RR —————— gNTHOLA cools, heals and softens chapped lips, face and hands. It is an inexpensive and valuable, aid to a good complexion, Jars and tubes, Yes! Please “Ladies and gentlemen,” lecturer, “I understand guage of wild animals” From the back of the hall came a voice: “Well, the next time you see a skunk, what's the big {dea Harold’s Mother Knew Answer “Yes, said the the lan- agk him ves lone gans so they re intends yr 11 hows its popu- endorsed by , always bears More From the Back Seat “Who taught Mrs. Jones to drive name of her elo- LOOK OUT! Counterfeit Aspirin! HOUSANDS of boxes of counterfeit aspirin have been put on the market. Walch oul. Take no chances and flatly refuse to accept any box not marked “Genuine Bayer Aspirin.” Don't put any tablet mot marked “Bayer” in your stomach. Tell your family and your friends of this. Refuse any preparation offered you as the “same” or “like” Genuine Bayer Aspirin. Decnan® and accept only this box, this "Bayer" mar tablet DOES NOT HARM THE HEART One ™ as a “rule, “wise enough to stop nagging a man who is visibly keeping his temper. If you fear making a mistake you won't make It. Mistakes are made when you are not thinking of them.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers