ee PAGE THREE It Cost NBC About A Million Dollars, But They Learned To Cover A War Fearless Corresponde nis Have Given Home Folks The Running Story In Nearly 2,000 Broadcasts / A year ago last Sunday Europe went to war. A year ago radio got an lenge to test its mettle. Lacking any precedent to assignment in Europe—a chal- guide it, the broadcasting com- panies, without hesitation engaged in an undertaking wherein cost and actual operations, even human lives, were so many question marks. True, radio had taken soundings in China, Ethiopa and Spain but, unlike the great newspaper and press services, it never had tackled anything so immense in scope as a World War. But less than two hours after re- ports of the German-Soviet pact trickled in by cable on the night of August 21, 1939, NBC was on the air with a two-way discussion of the agreement between William Hillman, INS correspondent in Lon- don, and Baukhage, NBC's Wash- ington observer. The crisis was on and NBC quickly mobilized manpower and facilities. In New York's towering |’ RCA building they burned the mid- night oil. Portentous dispatches were scanned, the short-wave sys- tem geared toc newer and greater burdens. Then came those momentous words from the lips of Prime Minis- ter Chamberlain that NBC brought to its listeners throughout the United States—‘‘this country is at war with Germany.” Nearly 2,000 Broadcasts Since that fateful day a year ago, NBC has brought the American au- dience close to 2,000 broadcasts from 45 different pickup points in the theatre of war. The cost has been computed at nearly a million dollars. Aside from ité" routine news broadcasts and European roundups, NBC brought its listeners, the words of Adolf Hitler, Winston Churchill, Marshal Petain, and a series of dramatic events such as the scuttling of the Graf Spee and broadcasts from the Maginot and Siegfried lines last Christmas. To accomplish all this, Schechter’s NBC's director of news and special events, bolstered his AA $ CALLING NEW YORK... Max Jordan, ace war corres- pondent, giving the world an eye- witness account of the war as it looked and felt along the West- ern front. parative safety of behind-the-lines war offices and around countries to which war is a next door neighbor. Fred Bate, head of NBC's London office is intimate with the Euro- pean scene through 18 years of res- idence abroad. A native of Chicago, he was connected with the Repara- | World War, serving in Vienna and | Paris. Recently he moved from a fashionable London suburb to an apartment across the street from] | the offices of the British Broadcast- | ing Corporation. { Paul Archinard, NBC’s Paris rep- | resentative, is a native of that city! land a veteran traveler. Born a year | before the turn of the century, he came to the United States before lhe was five, was educated in Ohio rand returned to France in 1918. There followed several years trav- eling in Europe for American firms. {In 1934, he joined NBC’s London tions Commission after the first | i Yo) & ER g, 77 ZS WN NBC Mikes Across the Map In front line trenches, atop hills looking down on shell- pocked battlefields, in the heart of Europe's largest cities with air raid sirens screeching and bombers roaring over- head, from ships at sea crowded with survivors, and at the side of rulers of state, cabinet members and generals in the field—from these and many more points at home and abroad, NBC's radio reporters, commentators and military experts bring to radio audiences the play-by-play account of World War No. 2. Hutchison Talks Says Apples "Stick’ If Hormone Mix Is Used By JIM HUTCHISON Agricultural Extension Association Apple growers in Luzerne County who have lost fruit by premature dropping can now make their fruit “stick to the trees” by using the new hormone sprays available for the first time this year. The new sprays were developed by workers in the Federal Bureau of Plant Industry and are applied the same as other sprays. Correct timing is very important, since the effectiveness usually is not more than from two to three weeks. Tests on McIntosh show that the spray loses its effectiveness after i eight to 10 days. With long-stem- (med varieties such as Williams, Rome Beauty, or Delicious, good | control of dropping is obtained for | | three to four weeks following the | spray. Because of the relatively brief pe- | riod of effectiveness, it is impor- | tant that application be delayed as long as possible, preferably being | made just prior to dropping or soon | after its beginning in order to have D.T.H.S. Gridders About New Spray Point To Opener Lewis's Team To Meet Jenkins September 20 Coach Thorwald Lewis's Dallas Township high school football team will open its 1940 grid season on Friday, September 20, when it will i play Jenkins Township here. | Dallas Township and Kingston Township will be in the Luzerne County Conference again this year. [Kingston Township will open its | conference season when it plays Clarks Summit on Saturday, Sep- tember 28. Other games scheduled for Dallas Township: September 28, Edwards- ville, away; October 5, Taylor, away; October 12, West Pittston, home; October 19, West Wyoming, home; October 26, Kingston Township, home; November 2, Tunkhannock, away; November 8, Lehman, away; | November 16, Factoryville, away. color development and some im- provement in size. It is emphasized that though this spray greatly reduces fruit-drop, it {does not stop the normal ripening ! of fruit on the trees. Thus caution must be used not to delay picking | beyond proper maturity, or the fruit David Jenkins Funeral Was Held On Monday | The funeral of David Jenkins, | who died last Friday afternoon at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Ern- | est Wood, Rice Street, Dallas, was held on Monday, with interment at Woodlawn Cemetery. A native of Wales, Mr. Jenkins was a young man when he came to this country. He lived at Plymouth ! and at Pittston before he came to! Dallas. For 19 years he was fore-, man for the Lehigh Valley Coal Co. at its Heidelberg Colliery in Avoca. Before he became ill he was an active member of St. Stephen's Church and served as sexton there for several years. He was affiliated ! | with Pittston Lodge, I. O. O. F., for more than 40 years. Survivors include his widow and Blired A. Tucker, 62, Was Stricken Suddenly Alfred A. Tucker, 62, Main Road, Trucksville, died Tuesday morning of a heart attack which struck while he was apparently in good health. Mr. Tucker was born in Wilkes- Barre and moved to Trucksville 14 | years ago. Until 10 years ago he was employed at the Hazard Wire Rope Company in Wilkes-Barre. the former Jeanette Housley; a brother, Surviving are his widow, the effect when most needed. The |may become too ripe on the tree | material takes effect within one to for good handling and storage qual- | two days after application. lity. Such troubles as water core In the experimental work at the | and physiological breakdown in { United States Horticultural Station, [storage are likely to be serious in sioners to fix a date on which voters here can go to designated registra- tion headquarters to change their party affiliations or register. Arthur, Mrs. | Amelia Farmer, Mt. Top. | Allentown; a sister, afternoon, with services at the Snowden Funeral Home. Rev. Ralph | of companies showed that yearly | taxes equalled $283 for each com- | | mon stockholder and $576 for each | The funeral was held yesterday | jobholder. | | Beltsville, Md., pure hormones were | Petitioners Request used. The amount needed is almost | Extra Registration Day | unbelievably small. A concentra- | tion of 10 parts per million, or one: Petitions seeking an additional | ounce to 700 gallons, in water has | registration day for voters in Dal- | given effective control. A stronger | | las Borough and Kingston Township spray is likely to make the fruit | have been addressed to Luzerne stick to the tree so tightly that it | County Commissioners. cannot be pulled off without damage [to the fruit. Commercial prepara- | tions carry complete directions for | use, and these should be followed | | closely. | So far no injury to tree, fruit or| foliage has been observed when hor- | ‘mone sprays have been used. The | only effect on the fruit is to delay A recent survey of a large group | qropping, thus giving time for better ! The petitioners ask the Commis- —— overmature fruit. THE WYOMING NATIONAL BANK OF WILKES-BARRE, PA. PERSONAL LOAN SERVICE $25 to $1000 Payments On $100— $7.75 Per Month—15 Months Discount Rate $6 per Hundred LOANS INSURED With or Without Co-Makers You need not be a depositor to apply for a Personal Loan at THE WYOMING NATIONAL BANK OF WILKES-BARRE, PA. JE ', NBC's staff of rewrite men in New York, | staff and a year later was in Paris. built up a competent, flexible staff! Berlin, nerve center of the Ger- of war correspondents, developed | man’ campaign, is covered for NBC the shortwave listening post into a by William C. Kerker, 25-year-old model of efficiency, designed stu-!New York engineer, whose back- dios for newscasters and engaged ground enables him to give lucid topnotch news commentators. | explanations of technical develop- Radio’s Listening Posts SE in the Hitler military ma- Radio’s coverage of the war has) NBC's news analyst in the placed great responsibility upon troubled Balkans is Martin Agron- the sentinels of the shortwave mon- sky, a native of Philadelphia and a itor service. To qualify you must veteran in the field of foreign re- be a skilled linguist able to trans- porting. Born in the Quaker City late broadcasts in French, German in 1915 he went to Europe after Spanish, Italian, Dutch and Afri-| his schooling and made a reportorial kaans. Moreover, it requires good | tour of foreign capitals now figur- news judgment, a thorough graspling in the war news. His present of international affairs and geog- post is Belgrade. raphy, shorthand and fast typing | Proving they can “take it” like experience. | men, two women are on NBC's war The staff of monitors, under the! reporting staff, Helen Hiett in Ma- direction of Jules Van Item, face a|drid and Joan Livingston in Shang- variety of problems. They must cut hai. Graduate of the University of through a barrage of static and oth- | Chicago, Miss Hiett has long been er interference to obtain authen- a student of European politics. tic information, much of it verba-! Miss Livingston, a native of Lon- tim. i don, comes from a family of distin- After a lengthy speech by a for-|guished European journalists. eign official, the monitor must be| With Max Jordan, NBC's repre- prepared to write a digest of the | sentative in continental Europe, talk with all the salient points in|these men and women and others detail. |who have filled in at the micro- The shortwave monitor works phones, are telling by radio the his- with an engineer who lines up all tory of World War IL international broadcasting stations | on the receiving sets. Every minute of the monitor's eight hour shift is| Uphelstering devoted to some foreign station. | PAUL B. SMITH Whether the ether is filled with | Rr. 16 N. Main Street ® Free Estimates Brahms, ballyhoo, or the blasts of | a bomber, the results are duly re-| corded in a daily report which is an accurate recording of every na- | tion’s radio activities. They Live With War Wilkes-Barre —— PHONE 38-0281 —— radio reporters tramp | across Europe's war fronts, into com- Gity Chevrolet Co. ~ City Chevrolet Co. is first again to reduce their Used Cars in line with 1941. It is still our policy each year to give the public the used cars we have left at the same price they would pay next year—and still give a 1940 allowance for the Trade-in. Here is a sample of the 50 Cars To Choose From. : 1935 PLYMOUTH De- 1938 FORD ' Deluxe Sedan—Refinished in black — Mechanical- inside—New tires $225 finish—Like new inside Unconditional guarantee { Tudor—Quiet motor 1 § —Exceptionally good & mechanical condition maroon $425 Te luxe 2-Door Touring : ly perfect — Clean —Beautiful “OUR NAME REMOVES THE RISK” CITY CHEVROLET CO. YOUR WILKES-BARRE CHEVROLET DEALER A. L, STRAYER, Pres. Market and Gates Streets, Kingston, Pa. 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