Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 48, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 July 1927 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Fbut Our Way

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Our Boarding House

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Fishing The Air BY LEONARD E. PEARSON

Editor’s Note—All references In this column are to Central Standard (Indianapolis) time. The South Sea Islanders will be heard through WEAF, New York, and WTAG, Worchester, Mass., at 5:30 p. m. in their first anniversary program, for which special selections have been made. The Goodrich Orchestra has now become a mid-week feature, having last week

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IDEAL Furniture Company 141 W. Wash.

SMART APPAREL On Easy Terms PURITAN CLOTHING STORES ,131 W. Washington St.

3-ROOM (Reconditioned Used * vwn* w Furniture) Easy Terms LEWIS FURNITURE CO. 844 8. MERIDIAN BT. The United Outlet Store

l jMuiin n On Monument Circle Mt MUSICAL CENTER OF INDIANAPOLIS %

shifted from Thursday to Wednesday evening at 7:30 p. m. The full program of the Red network tonight is: s:3o—South Sea Islanders. 6:oo—'Torre and Bivlano. violin and accordion. 6:ls—Talk by Tom Masson. 6:3o—Organ Masters. 7:oo—Broadway’s Best Steppers, bv the Ipana Troubadours. 7:3o—Goodrich Silvertown Orchestra and Silver Masked Tenor. B:3o—Jack Albin and his orchestras (WEAF only). t 9:oo—Eddie Elkins and his orchestra (WEAF and WRC). Choral music comes from WLS, Chicago, at 7 and the all-State hour at 8, followed from 9 to 11 p. m., by a popular program including orchestra, organ and other features. The studio little symphony of

PLAYER Q ROLLS O for Pl Many to choose from. Dance, popular, standard, sacred and march numbers. High grade rolls. All in good condition. CARLIN MUSIC CO. 143 EAST WASHINGTON ST.

BIRDS POULTRY FEED, Etc.

SEEDS BULBS PLANTS

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SPECIAL WINDOW SHADES 36-Inch Oil OPAQUE cC SHADE ODC W. R. BEARD & CO. 453 E. Washington St.

*H3tmanA 317 E. Washington St. A Furniture Store Since 1883

—By Williams

—By Ahern

CNRW, Winnipeg, Man., radios a classical and semi-classical program at 10 p. m. An hour later CNRE, Edmonton, Alta., broadcasts a dance bill. * The Blue Room hour from Clevei land’s public auditorium is scheduled I for 8:30 p. m. by WTAM, that city, : and at 9:30 Emerson Gill’s Bamboo Garden Orchestra. One of the beautiful-toned organs regularly on the air is that of the Chicago Theater, broadcast this evening at 5 by WMAQ, Chicago. ______ Music by the studio dinner orchestra comes from WBAL, Baltimore, at 5:30 and the string quartet at 6:30 p. m. Modern as radio is, some of the old time forms of entertainment have proved most popular on the air. Witness the old fiddlers’ programs, barn dances, accordions, harmonicas and others that might make a longer list. If any of these hive found appeal to those sharing your set fish for WCCO, Minneap- j olis-St. Paul, at 8:30 p. m. to hear the Old Style Entertainers. One of the popular events of 1 WGY, Schenectady, is the weekly i concert of the Remington Band of : Ilion, N. Y. It is heard at 6p, m. each Wednesday, just at the dinner , hour for many fans in the Middle West. Erwin Swindell, organist at WOC, Davenport, radiocasts at 8:30 p. m. Charles H. Partington, accordionist; Eddie Schoelwer, pianist, and Gertrtide Arnold, mezzo-soprano, go on the air at WSAI, Cincinnati, at 7:01 p. m. Musical tones will paint scenes from all lands when Nathaniel Shilkret’s Maxwell Concert Orchestra and individual artists appear on the Maxwell hour of WJZ, New York, and the Blue network. The complete schedule this evening is: B:oo —Yesterthoughts. 6:3o—Davis Saxophone Octet (WJZ only). 7:oo—Maxwell hour. B:OO—RCA Radiotrons. 6:oo—Hotel Astor Roof Orchestra (WJZ only). The evening at WLW, Cincinnati, will be occupied w.th: 6:oo—Hotel Gibson program. 6:3o—National Farm Radio Council talk. 6:4o—Hotel Gibson program. 7:oo—Crosley String Orchestra. 7:3o—Luke Minnlch's Harmony Four. 8:00—Coon-Sanders Orchestra at Castle Farm. 1 o:oo—Crosley Instrumental Trio. 10:00—Organ recital and diversified program by Johanna Orosse. The Unitid States Navy Yard 7

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Boots and Her Buddies

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Freckles and His Friends

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Washington Tubbs II

WIFE

Salesman Sam

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The Book of Knowledge

The first great British missionary in Africa was Robert Moffatt. He transformed bloodstained Bechu- News of Moffatt’s analand into a sanctuary of Christian civilization. In deeds of mercy traveled the homes of Boer slave-owners he persuaded the mas- back to England. A poor ters to let the slaves, the Hottentots, to enter the factory hand named house for divine services. David Livingstone heard By NE. Thrall" Sptcltl Fermi;,ion of th PuWlifcer, o ( Th. of Know M-o. CoOylehr. A |7-6| of them. j

Band radios from Boston at 6 p. m. over WBZ, Springfield, Mass. The KOA Little Symphony will be heard from the Denver broadcaster at 9:15 p. m. A Gilbert and Sullivan program will be rendered by the Goldman Band playing at 6:30 p. m. over WNYC, New York. Asa dinner feature, fish for WHO, Des Moines an dhear the Bankers’ Life Little Symphony at 6 p. m. This station has a dance program at 9:30 p. m., Philbreck’s Riverview Park Orchestra. JURY ADDS TEN YEARS Burglar Refuses Two Year Sentence, Gets Twelve. ST. LOUIS, July 6.—Charles Wirtz guessed wrong. Refusing to plead guilty to a burglary charge and accept a two-year penitentiary sentence he was convicted by a jury and sentenced to twelve years.

GIRLS CLAIM SKATING RECORD FOR 32 MILES r— 1 Two Wear Out Four Pairs of Skates In Eleven and Half Honrs Bv United Press GRAND HAVEN, Mich., July 6. Two Grand Rapids girls, Frances Carpenter and Imogene Riley, claim the long-distance roller skating championship of Michigan. The girls skated from Grand Rapids to Grand Haven in 11 and onehalf hours, their course aggregating 32 miles. During the trip they wore out four pairs of roller skates, an exigency for which they had made provisions. Frances and Imogene stated emphatically upon their arrival in this city that they are holding up their stunt as one not easily* duplicated when the thermometer is hovering near the 96 degree mark.

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• Livingstone entered Africa as a doctor, explorer and missionary in 1841. His first great undertaking was Livingstone educated to cross the Dark Continent from east to west and from himself. Often while at west to east, between the Atlantic and Indian oceans, his work in a cotton mill It was an appalling task, with such traveling companin Scotland he studied ions as pestilence, starvation, wild beasts and savages. books of medicine. )76[snwiwwi8ynn.w.copy*;*;. W7. u' cioi...s, ■.!>. (To Be Continued)

POWER AT LEAST COST Bureau Report Shows Decline In Expense of Electric Service. Bu United Press MILWAUKEE, July 6A—Cost. of electric service to the average householder in the United States now is at its lowest point in its 45 years of sale, according to a nation-wide survey received by the Wisconsin public utility information bureau. Figures compiled by the United States bureau of labor and the National Industrial conference board show that the cost of electricity represents 63 per cent of the general cost of living in the average family’s budget. Boy Wading Burned Bv Times Special LEBANON, Ind., July 6.—James Jdtdan, 8, had the unusual experience of being burned while wading when he came in contact with a charged electric light pole in the Memorial Park pooL

TWO LIVE WITH NECKS BROKEN TEN DAYS AGO Men Forestall Death, Contrary to Predictions. MT. HOLLY, I>. J., July G.~ Ten days have passed since Frank De Palma of Newark and Fred Griffith of Moorestown were brought to the Burlington County Hospital with broken necks. Bot hare still alive, contrary to all predictions of the physicians and nurses. After De Palma, 33 years old, was admitted June 25 following an autoaccident it was not believed he could live for more than a few hours, according to a Philadelphia specialist who examined him. Griffith, aged 60, suffered a broken spinal cord when he fell down stairs at his home. His condition has not changed, although De Palma is showing signs of weakness. Sense of color is not developed in children until .they are about two years old.

.TPT-Y 6, 1927

—By Martin

—By Blossei

By Crane

By Small

By Taylor

SKETCHES BT BESSES' SYNOPSIS BY BRAUCHER

New Building Mark TERRE HAUTE, Ind., July 6 All June building permit records were broken here by the total for the month Just ended. Two hundred nine permits were Issued for buildings valued slightly $500,000.

CHOLERA MORBUSW (Summer Complaint) til food or water may cruse - BfrWTll diarrhea and stomach cramps MB Ja For prompt relief take Cham- 'll berlain's Colic Remedy In *Ol ■ m water Ask your druggist for this old. reliable remedy today. For trial size,send 4c to Chamberlain Medicine Company, 702 Sixth Avenue, Des Mcsnes, lowa Chamber lAnjc