Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 112, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 September 1930 — Page 9
SEPT. IS, 1930.
NATION'S GREAT MUSICIANS ON RADIO HOOKUPS Programs of Highest Type Are Arranged by NBC and Columbia. / .YE .4 Kfrrirr NEW YORK, Sept. 18—In preparation for the coming indoor season. both national radio networks ire preparing musical programs of he higher type. NBO announces the return of Walter Damrosch to the air with his music appreciation hour for schools, beginning Oct. 10, as well as a series of concerts by Leopold .Stokowski and his Philadelphia Symphony orchestra. Columbia is bringing to radio for the first time in its eighty-eight years of existence the New York Philharmonic Symphony orchestra. In addition to these chain features individual stations throughout the country will put their total symphony orchestra on the air. Damrosch Continues Work This year will mark Damrosch's third as conductor of the music appreciation hour. The plan of his programs will run about like last year’s, with four different series, each consisting of twelve programs. Series A will be for grades three and four at 11 a. m., and Series B
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Damrosch
Stokowski
for grades five and six at 11:30 a. m. on every other Friday. On alternate Fridays Series C. for grades seven, eight and nine, at 11 and Series D, for high schools, colleges and music clubs, at 11:30 will be given. The course will start Oct. 10 and will continue to April 24. Damrosch’s series will cover the makeup of a symphony orchestra, the different rhythms and tempos of music, symphonic music in more complicated forms and works of the more important composers. New ThriJl Offered The Stokowski program will present anew thrill to lovers of fine music. After his series last year, Stokowski spent eight weeks in the ttiew York studios of NBC learning how broadcasting is handled, and it Is expected his offerings will be greatly improved as a result. More than fifty stations in a
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coast-to-coast. and Canadian hookup will take the Stokowski series. These will go on the air Oct 12, Nov. 16, Christmas day and Easter Sunday of 1931. Columbia's signing of tire New York Philharmonic symphony is a real achievement. The organization of 111 musicians will go on the air for the first time on Oct. 5. Four of the foremost musical conductors in the world will direct them. They are Arturo Toscanini, Erik Kleiber. Bernardino Molinari and Ernest Schelling Notables to Conduct Kleiber, young German conductor of fame, will conduct the orchestra during the first, six weeks of the season. Toscanini will then take up the leadership for two weeks. He also will direct the concerts from Dec. 8 to Jan. 18 and from Feb. 23 to April 19. Molinari will oroadcast. from Jan. 19 to Feb. 22. Ernest. Schelling will conduct ten children's concerts and five young people’s concerts ifhich will be broadcast on Saturday mornings at
Schilling
Kleiber
11 o’clock eastern standard time. Programs for adults will be broadcast on Sundays, and will come from Carnegie hall. Metropolitan opera house and the Brooklyn Academy of Music. In all, there will be twenty-seven concerts for adults. Aged Woman Dies r.u Timen Special NOBLESVILLE. Ind.. Sept. 18.Mrs. Nancy E. Conner, 90. was buried following death at the home of her son. Edward Conner, in Anderson, with whom she has been living for several years. She leaves two other children. Mrs. Nora Fisher and Mrs. Fred Toye, both of Anderson. She was a sister of the late Dr. Isaac Austin, commander of the G. A. R. of Indiana, who died here in June. She leaves a sister, Mrs. Solomon Pennington. Kokomo.
Eczema on Body and Face For Ten Years. Cuticura Healed. "Ecsem* came on my body and face when 1 was a small child. It started with pimples that itched terribly and scaled over It spread all over my back, arms and limbs and became dry and scaly. My dothes aggravated it when I got warm. There were times when I could Dot sleep on account of the itching and burning. I had the trouble off and on for ten years “I read an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample, r purchased more and was completely healed.” (Signed) Mrs. Clara Burleigh. 929 W. Ist St-, Duluth, Minn. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 end 50c. Telcum 25c. Sold everywhere Sample each free. Address. “CeUcur. Laboratories. Dept. H. Malden. Mass.”
Real Romance
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Not long ago Miss Ellis Morgan Brandon, artist's model, posed for pictures for the newspaper serial, “Rash Romance.” Now she has found a real romance, and on Oct. 19 she will be married to William J. Lohman at Popular Bluff, Mo., where her parents live. Miss Brandon has been model for such famous artists as Harrison Fisher and McClelland Barclay. POUCEEXFOSE ‘HOT CAR’ RING •Salesman’ Admits Thefts of Autos 'to Order.’ Bu United Pree* NEW YORK, Sept. 18.—Activity of an automobile theft ring that dealt only in high priced cars and frequently stole cars “to order” has been exposed here by police. William Stanley Hayes, 44, arrested as the "salesman” of the gang, is said to have admitted the sale of more than a score of costly motor cars. Hayes claims to be a Yale graduate of the class of 1908 and a member of a wealthy New Haven, Conn., family. According to police, Hayes was sent to “prospects” to demonstrate the stolen cars, and a mode] not in the gang's possession was desired, members would steal the car, change the license and motor numbers, and sell it at a substantial discount from the list price.
Mothers Corns Are All Gone That's what. ar. English girl writes to the makers of Radox—the greatest corrector of common foot ailments the world hes ever known. Millions of mothe r s in America have corns and bun lens • and callouses as well as tired, burning, aching feet. These foot troubles will all go in a week if you will use Radox faithfuly for a few nights in succession as directed. You can get Radox at any real drug store in America. Hook's Dependable Drug Stores sell dozens of packages a. day—Get a package; follow directions and if Radox doesn’t do as advertised get your money back. ivhat English Girl Wrote "Mother suffered for years with very bad corns, but now after using Radox, has not got a corn, or any sign of a com at all. She used three tablespoonfuls of Radox to tw r o quarts of hot water (not. boiling) so that she could put her feet in with comfort, and soaked the feet for. half an hour, adding more hot water as the other got a bit cold; after which she found she could pick off pieces of corn quite easily. Now they are gone.” < Miss'- G., London. England. 6th Nov., 1929.—Advertisement.
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SAVE MILLIONS er NEW BRIDGE DESIGN THEORY Principle to Be Used When Golden Gate Span Is Constructed. . BY WATSON DAVIS Managing Editor, Science Service. BERKELEY, Cal., Sept. 18.—Several million dollars will be saved when the Golden Gate at San Francisco is spanned by the longest bridge in the world, because civil engineers have developed new methods of designing long span suspension bridges. This was revealed today at the opening session of the National Academy of Science at the University of California. If the Golden Gate bridge were constructed according to the theory used on large bridges up to a few years ago it undoubtedly would cost some three or four millions more than the estimated cost of thirtythree million dollars, Professor Charles Derlett Jr. of the Univer-
"A Significant Example"
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LUCKY STRIKE the finest cigarette you ever smoked, made of the finest tobaccos—the Cream of the Crop— THIN— "IT’S TOASTED." Everyone knows that heat purifies and so TOASTING removes harmful irritants that cause throat irritation and 4 coughing. No wonder 20,679 physicians have stated LUCKIES to be less irritating! Everyone knows that sunshine mellows that’s why TOASTING includes the use of the Ultra Violet Ray. “It’s toasted" Your Throat Protection against irritation against cough TUNE IN—The Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra, every Saturday and Thursday evening over N. B. C. neFAvrlis. © 1930, The American Tobacco Cos., Macufaetorera
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .
sity of California and one of the designers, told academieans. By using what is known as the deflection theory which considers that the gigantic cable, the steel members holding the floor of the bridge and the stiffening steel that makes the bridge rigid, all act as one elastic structure, the engineers find that parts of the bridge do not need to be designed for such large tensions and compressions as would be the case under the older theory. This allows a lightening of the steel and the saving of money. The Golden Gate bridge will be begun next spring and finished in 1935 if a bond issue to provide the money for it is authorized in the November California elections. It will have a single span 4,200 feet long, exceeding by 700 feet the present world’s record suspension bridge across the Hudson at New York City, which is now being finished. Road Dispute Ended Bu Time* Special MUNCIE, Ind., Sept. 18.—Delaware county’s most bitter road fight in years has been settled, with the county commissioners as the losers. A remonstrance against a bond issue for the paving of a road connecting the factory district of Muncie with Ball Memorial hospital was upheld by the state tax commissioners. The county had planned the improvement of the highway under the three-mile law.
COLORADO'S DRY CHIEF FOR 18 YEARSDEPOSED Oil Stock Peddling Crusader Resigns as Campaign Probe Progresses. Bu Scripps-Hoicard Vet espaper Alliance DENVER, Sept. 18— Less than three weeks after he was exposed in the role of an oil stock salesman, peddling wildcat 6tock to politicians and candidates, the Rev. A. J. Finch has resigned as superintendent of the Colorado Anti-Saloon League. Thus, the man who for eighteen years has been prohibition dictator of Colorado at last has been deposed. Nor will there be a successor. Disorganized forces of the Anti-Saloon League, trying to recover from their predicament, for the present will be guided by a committee. Finch’s resignation came just before an investigation of his activities by the senate campaign funds committee was to have started. Investigators for the committee.
now In Denver, stiff are looking Into the league's affairs and it virtually Is certain the books of the AntiSaloon League and of Finch's oil company will be inspected when the committee opens hearings here Sept. 24. During the primary campaign the league became the principal issue when it indorsed one of the senatorial candidates and opposed his opponent—although It publicly was charged that neither personally was dry. A minority of trustees demanded, a thorough investigation to determine personal habits and convictions of the candidates, instead of merely their political statements. This demand was rejected. Immediately after the Rocky Mountain News dug up the fact that Mr. Finch is president of the Fitzsimmons Oil and Leasing Company and received a 25 per cent commission on all stock he sold. Finch was discovered to have sold
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stock to numerous office holders and candidates on whom the AntiSaloon League was about to pass or already had passed. Included in the list of stockholders, then and since revealed, are i such prominent office holders and i candidates as William V_ Hodges, defeated candidate for the Republican nomination; E. P. Costigan. ; Democratic senatorial nominee; j Governor William H. Adams; ex- j Senator Alva Adams, the district; attorneys of Denver and an adjoining district. All candidates opposed by the AntiSaloon League were successful in the primaries, although in the past it almost always had succeeded in defeating those whom it opposed. Pecan Crop to Be Normal MT. VERNON, Ind.. Sept. 18.— Reports received here indicate that j J drought did not harm the pecan j I crop and that a normal yield is ex- j 1 pected from trees in the valleys of! t the Wabash and Ohio rivers.
Says SAMUEL HARDIN CHURCH President of the Carnegie Institute —that great enterprise founded by Andrew Carnegie at Pittsburgh for the promotion of art, science and literature* Known throughout the world as a student of current problems. Chairman of the Board Carnegie Institute of Technology. Director American National TheatreMember American Mission to Morocco 1923, Officer * of Legion of Honor (France). “Perhaps the most vital influence in the American business world in recent years has been the tendency of industrial leaders to join hands with science . No more sig* nificant example of this trend exists than your modern use of the Ultra Violet Ray in the ‘Toasting of the LUCKY STRIKE tobaccos . The great success of your experi* ments demonstrates the wisdom of this union between business and science.” Consistent with its policy of laying the facts before the public The American Tobacco Company has invited Mr, Samuel Harden Church to review the reports of the distinguished men uho have witnessed LUCKY STRIKE’S famous Toasting Process, The statement of Mr. Church appears on this page .
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