Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 53, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 July 1927 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Out 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 i time. It may require soap to “keqa that school girl complexion,” but there are those who believe that radio is keeping Americans young by spreading youthful thoughts and ideas throughout the Nation. This is the opinion voiced by V. Edward Scott or the Freed-Eiseman
00°/o Lit SjJ*np
the BURGER BROS.co. i CINCINNATI. OHIO. 4jSTEf\ MAITSTEItS SINCE 1674 '‘Laboratory teats have proved that Ibo nt-ponsd can of Buckeye Malt Syrtip is superior to 3-pounrt cans of grtllnc'.-j- nail. '
Radio Corporation. He goes on to say that if he were asked whether a nation was a backward or an energetic people, he would ask how many radio sets were in operation for each thousand of population. A low percentage indicates that they are out of touch with the world, a large proportion that it is a progressive commonwealth. Another thing about radio, true both from the standpoint of manu* - facturing sets and equipment and from broadcasting, is that practically all the leaders of these enterprises are comparatively~Tuthful. Many really young men and women are associated in these fields, while even the pioneers in them are now in the prime, the most productive, periods of their lives. Radio is too new and ever-changing for old men. They can keep up with it only as fans, not as a profession. WSAI, Cincinnati, starts oft at 5:45 p. m. with a chime concert by Robert Badgley, followed at 6, by studio recital with piano and tenor solos. A violin and piano concert fills the ether world, radiated from WMAQ, Chicago, at 8:30 p. m. Each Tuesday evening at 5, KDKA, East Pittsburgh, has a sacred song recital. Vocal selections, readings, piano and orchestra music constitute the Congress Carnival at KYW, Chicago, at 9:32 p. m. A tenor song recital comes at 8 p. m. from WGY, Schenectady, including several European classics. WCCO, Minneapolis-St. Paul, promises to give its listeners at 8:30 p. m. a view of “our friends in other countries.” George Olsen’s Orchestra on the Stromberg-Carlson hour, 6 p. m., will offer a variety bill. The Blue
CORE THROAT Guaranteed relief within 15 minutes or money back, 35c with one swallow of TEIQKINE
—By Williams
—By Ahern
network carries this feature and an hour later, the program by the Continentals. The .final program tonight, 7 to 9 p. m.. from WGHP. Detroit, is provided by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, playing at Belle Isle. “Hits and hit of Irving Berlin.” This constitutes the program of the Pacific *N. B. C. Orange network. Although it comes rather late, 11 p. m., for midwesterners, it should prove popular with those who hear it. The Willard Cavaliers have the .hour from 9 to 10, the next being given over to a dance orchestra at WTAM, Cleveland. The joint dance program of WIP, Philadelphia, and WGBS, New York, goes on the air at 9:05 p. m. A versatile entertainer, J. Wallace Mackay, known as the Jolly Jester, who specializes in the imitation of musical instruments, will be heard at 4 p. m. from WGBS, New York. When listening over the radio, it’s hard to belipve that Mackay is not actually using the instruments whose sounds one seems to hear, but the station management stanchly maintains that there is no trick nor deception. Fish for this one and see how it strikes you. ■ The Bankers Life String Trio plays for receptionists of WHO, Des Moines, at 8:30 a. m. The City Park Orchestra broadcasts its concert from WBAL, Baltimore, at |8 p. m. We always enjoy hearing old time songs. Dial WLS, Chicago, at 7 this evening and hear Bradley Kincaid. Four hours, will be devoted to Red network features from WEAF tonight. They are: 6:oo—Jack Albln’s Orchestra. 6:3o—The Four Bards in Songs of the City. 7:oo—Eveready hour. B:oo—Vivian, the Coca Cola Girl. B:3o—The Cavalcade. 9:3o—Janssen's Holbrau Orchestra. The Orient, land of flowery romance and incense, will be protrayed on this week's Musical Vignette series being radiocast through WOR, Newark, and WMAF, South Dartmouth, Mass., at 7:15 p. m. The Fbrmica Concert Orchestra radio over WLW, Cincinnati, at 8 p. m. The weekly Ford dealers hour at WKBF, Indianapolis, comes at |:3Q
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Boots and Her Buddies
Freckles and His Friends
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Washington Tubbs II
Salesman Sam
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Mom’n Pop
r MRS.-wre-L'woMoefit ifvoo \ N ( / HUMPH ' V/H4 should l Call im NNIU- DO ME A FAVOR- ALL OP MRS ) ( SOMEONE ELSE Tfc> CLEAN Op O'COWD, THE LAOV WHO WORKS FOR / i PLACE WHEN I. CAN £AR<\l THC MOM, AND HAVE HER COME OOT \ MONEO MM'sECF — AMO CLEAN UP OOR. HOUSE / BE GLAD V 1 HERE’S A HEW SO SHE CAN GET / To r~ , IN, AND VOU’U- TINO HER MR. GUNN* - 7 PAH IN THE TOP DRAWER V ItA i M J. ||^j|
The Book of Knowledge
A message, scratched upon an old tin dinner plate and nailed to a post is one of the earliest records avail- Sailors of Spain, ... One of Dampier’s company was Alexander Selkirk, able of the discovery of Australia. The proclamation was Portugal, Holland and William Dampier, pi- the original Rooinson Crusoe. Selkirk was marooned tacked up by Dirk Hartog, Dutch explorer, in 1616. France all claimed to rate and scholar, was on the island of Juan Fernandez and was rescued after The relic survived three centuries and is kept as a mu- have “discovered” the ' irs t Englishman to four y ears by Dampier. Cannibals then lived in Ausseum treasure in Amsterdam. Hartog, however, prob- island continent in the set ' oo * on the land. He tralia. The natives were adept with the boomerang, ably was not the first to see Austfalia. two centuries after Co- Australia in a strange stick which comes back to its starting point. r NH.TW-hsr-rr>;iiAAfft, Aitinwr,v,e,cktKnawic.i T-it l "".htie. 1688 ‘ ]7i*l £h., eh ,.„,d Cj p y „gM.iMT.th -.-j., (To Be Continued)
this evening. Mrs. J. D. Ross, Indianapolis Day Nursery Association president, is the Community Fund speaker at 8:30 o nthe subject, “Mothering by the Day.” FACTORY miS STUDY Special Courses Are Provided at Wisconsin University. MADISON, Wis. July 12.—Fifty factory workers, 4U of them young women, aye attending summer •school at tne University of Wisconsin where special courses in English, economics and physical education are offered them. Representatives of twelve nationalities from eight middlewestem states are attending this fourth annual industrial school. Their occupations range from machine operators to pastry cooks. Individual factories, women’s clubs, the Y. M. C. A., and social workers provide scholarships on which these girls attend. Stenographers, clerical workers and saleswomen are not admired because tlji course is designed primarily for factory employes.
FLIGHTS FROM EUROPE DOOMED, SAYS WRITER Count Tolstoy Claims Movement of 'Earth Is Handicap. Bit Times Special NEW YORK, July 12.—Count Leo L. Tolstoy, son of the late Russian novelist and philosopher, Leo N. Tolstoy, and writer and philosopher in his own right, says that transatlantic flights from Europe to the North American continent have not been and will not be successful because the direction of such an effort is contrary to the earth’s movement in rotation. To substantiate his theory he said that ocean navigators agreed that an ocean voqage from west to east was almost invariably more fortunate in all respects than one in the opposite direction. This, Count Tolstoy said, waa-because a western voyage was against the strong pull created by the natural movement of the earth.
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TAKE GAR FROM LAKES Crews Remove Fish Which Destroy Protected Species. Two crews consisting of a warden and two men each are busy removing gar and dogfish In northern lakes. Already two hundred seventy of the gar (which are deadly enemies of game fish protected by Indiana laws) have been removed from Clear Lake. Crews will work on Lake Gage, Steuben county, Big Long Lake, LeGrange county, and Winona Lake, Pike and Center Lake in Kosciusko county. Thieves Miss SIOO,OOO Loot Bu United Press HARRISON, N. Y., July 12. Thieves overlooked SIOO,OOO in jewelry in a pasteboard boy, which lay directly alongside $1,554 cash which they took from the Progress Country Club Sunday night. Apparently the thieves were sporting men. for they included 144 decks of cards in their loot,
TOO MANY LINDY DRINKS ‘Shame,’ Cries Judge as He Fines Drunken Motorist. CUCKFIELD. Sussex. England, July 12.—An echo of Col. Lindbergh’s visit to England has come up in the courts here on an appeal when a motorist charged with exceeding the speed limit told the magistrate he had been drinking too many “Charlie Lindbergh” cocktails. “You have only made your offense worse,” said the magistrate. “You ought to be ashamed for using Col. Lindbergh’s name in speaking of your offence.” Thereupon he Imposed a stiff fine on the motorist. jLnl Caps, new patterns I in Kn *pp ,f|t exp* I —Non breakable E visors. LJ 93.50 * 95.00 a 19 East Ohio St. 15 N. Penn. St. 139 N. 111. St. ]
JULY 12,1927 1_
—By Martin {
—By Blosser
By Crane
By Small
By Taylor
SKETCHES BY BESSET SYNOPSIS BY BRAUCHER
Indiana Headquarters THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE 229-230 I.KMCKE HI.IK, LIN. Slid Imllnnnpolla. Ind.
Ask for Furnas Ice Creanr “The Cream of Quality" At Your Dealer
Victrolas, Kimball I Pianos, Atwater Kent Radios, I Records and Rolls. I Wilson-Stewart Music Co.l 44 N. Penn. St. J
TUI A WANT AD IN IhJm
