Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 310, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 May 1933 — Page 7
MAY 8, 1933
-COOKERY—ENGLISH THEATRE IOON, 2 P. M.—THURSDAY EVENING, 7:30 P M.
zhool of Meat Cookery Selects ELVINATOR r Perfect Preservation of Meats ,he man y reasons why those who know the fine points of electric nr* a.most invariably choose Kelvinator. 1. World’s fastest freezing. 2. Full n J r \ . 1 1,1 a 1 n,of lels so powerful they need run only about one-third of n crior arrangement that provides more food space. 4 Temperature selector re* nig speeds 3 Zone cold porcelain interior. 5. Keep Cold defroster, which perige** ion while defrosting. 6. Better Construction, longer life. arson’s Extraordinary Offer \ Never before has this offer been made to Indianapolis W homes ... an offer w'hich makes it possible for every 1 K one to have tlie very finest, the most dependable refrigeraSB % tion at No Money Down .. . then as little as 15c at day on 1 the Mcterator Plan. The model featured is Kelvinator’s 1 newest 1933 model with 4 cubic, feet of storage space. Has Mi 1 latest 1933 Kelvinator improvements . . . cold control . . . ilk Jhb \ defrosting switch .. . makes an abundance of ice cubes. MKgM 1 This and 15 other new models at the easiest terms and m lowest prices in Kelvinator history. See them: g__— TJ“ 1-8-130 N Penn
\POLIS TIMES unices Its ration With the National Mcmt Board in the THEATRE y, 2 P. M. —Thursday, 7:30 P. M. RUTH CHAMBERS oft management. See delicious dishes prepared before your very plained by this well known home economist. ture of the Cooking School, Miss Chambers will prepare a large dishes. She is an expert on meat cookery and you will find her glad to answer your questions. i RGET, THE DATES FREE ADMISSION S AWARDED EACH SESSION
tw delicious less you’ve (c^T§?f ced on the (§ It] BERS vogue ANGE Dc Luxe Console Model Turned Off $139.50 2 limited Time Only less * ls a£“ e ' in ' of a New 1933 "i^jas^SiSSS Oven goodness because it Is the • ultra modern adaptation of the / old Dutch Oven. Cook* with the Gas Turned Off. Equipped . ..e-Hir 1 ■■■ m y-v with heat control to regulate SO low. NO" you Wfj [7 temperature for short time gas eliVpred and in- II is used in the oven. 't * THERMOWELL cuts gas bills. 1 •,-> -\ /TV l™’ X T 'T' Does top stove cooking with pA y ivIL in 1 the s,s ,urnpd ° ff - IN A-TOP BROILER AND GRIDDLE eliminates danger of burning hands. An aho- __ __ lutelv unique feature with A ivyr Rl7 T? Q b,,ntin *riddle|H /“A IV I F> ■JI\ LJ See the many other exclusive WX-i- cooking features No other _ __ . . „ range can do for vou what the COHP. RETAIL STORE Chambers Range doe*, because '■'V no other range is built with 8 0 South Pennsylvania St. j£r.Ttur. le ,m, ' n,ed Cham ‘
RUTH CHAMBERS AGREES-
menus.” Pasteurized Milk Dealers of Indianapolis
Let Us Help You Enjoy the Cooking Show We Are Only Two Minutes From the Theater • 3 Hours PARKING FREE (with PROGRAM COUPON ONLY) 10c, 4th Hour; 5c Thereafter
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
■J? ? L— because you get it law. golden-brown sessl 3u II enjoy its full, frail flavor. Try it nowl AT AIL INDEPENDENT GROCERS Packed by SCHNULL & CO., Indianapolis ALSO PHOENIX MAYONNAISE, CANNED FRUITS, CANNED VEGETABLES, ETC
Let’s Explore Your Mind BY DR. ALBERT EDWARD WTGGAM, D. Sc.
\ 'son, EVERVONE ! I 1 A HA9 AN EQUAL SHOULD YOUNG ) OPPORTUNITY \ I 1 •• "SK&Jg, / \\ yv . T 0 BECOME IN THE belief t WyJWT / a GREAT that they \ l[| |l I 11 AXHHEVE V L DEVELOPING 7^ hat| ? to GO / 1 i "1 % back to ♦ 1 vmA y H fry , OO YOU BELIEVE /Wm7\ 4 _IK V W that women, -Jxf[ lIFU ll**t IHIY\. . -v. 2 Y HAVIN6 BEEN 3 ) TO V DOE 6 EDUCATION IN BOOKS \ - WORkt <xnr6lDE AND SCHOOL IMPROVE ONE'S l Y]~Y-v\wSV'| I THE home, GENERAL POWERS W 'LL EVER BE OF THINKJNG CONTENT TO RETURN AND JUD6/NG THE domessSsom? p^a,CAL PKD6LEM6 <* UFE ' M/my vesornS gsra
1. No. They should be carefully shown their actual abilities, and encouraged to develop them instead of being filled up with false ideas either of themselves or of what makes “success.” Success coirsists of finding your best abilities, and throwing all your heart and soul into making the most of these. Hardly anybody develops half the abilities he has, frequently because some foolish “character reader” or Pollyanna parent or teacher has led him to use his energies and eat his heart out trying to do things he is not fitted for. 2. Yes, as a rule. Dr. Florence Brown Sherborn, university of Kansas, has shown that practically all girls and young women day-dream of a husband, a home and children. Marriage doesn’t change this. Thousands of women have been forced to work outside the home to help hold the family together, but they long for the time when they can go back to the home. 3. No, or at leaest not enough to measure except where the
Radio Dial Twisters
WFBM (1230) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Power and Light Company) MONDAY P. M. s:3o—Records. s:4s—Polkadots. 6:oo—Singin’ Sam (CBSI. 6:ls—Columbia Symphony (CBS). 6:4s—Brown County Revelers. 7:oo—Rhythm Rhapsody iCBS). 7:3o—Evening in Paris (CBS). 8:00—Tallyho Club orchestra. B:ls—Sam and Carlyle. B:3o—Edwin C. Hill (CBS). B:4s—Columbia Symphony iCBS). 9:15 —William O'Neal (CBS). 9:3o—Ted Lewis orchestra iCBS). 10:00—Leon Belasco orchestra iCBS). 10:30 —Ozzie Nelson orchestra (CBS). 11:00—Bohemians. 11:30—Tallyho Club orchestra. 12:00 Mid.—Sign off. WKBF (1400) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Broadcasting. Inc.) MONDAY P. M. 4:oo—Twilight Treasure hour. 4:3o—Tea Time Tunes. 4:4s—Musical Menu.
Fishing the Air
Singin’ Sam will revive another oldtimer from his repertoire of minstrel songs when he offers. ‘'lt's Your Move Now.” ala Bert Williams, during his WFBM and Columbia network program of songs at 6 p. m.. Monday. Rhoda Arnold, soprano, and Charles •Carlile. tenor, will be featured in duet selections from the musical comedies of Romberg and Herbert when they appear as soloists with Howard Barlow and the Columbia Svmphonv orchestra. Monday, from 6:15 to 6:45 p. m. over WFBM and the Columbia network. HIGH SPOTS OF MONDAY NIGHT’S PROGRAMS S:3O—NBC (WJZ)—The Two Marx Brothers. 6:4s—Columbia—Fray and Braggiotti. NBC tWJZi—Phil Cook and the Shavers. 7:OO—NBC (WJZt—Minstrel show. 7:3o—Columbia —An Evening in . Paris. B:oo—Columbia—Oountry Club, golf lessons. B:3O—NBC (WEAFt— Cabinet series. B:4s—Columbia Columbia s y m - phony. 10:45—NBC (WEAF)—Hollywood On the Air. Mac McCloud's solo of “Alexander’s Ragtime band” will be a feature of the Greater Minstrels program over WLW and an NBC network at 7 p. m. Monday. Special arrangements for string orchestra bv Josef Pasternack of Beethoven's Minuet, the traditional “Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes," and “Indian Love call.” from Friml’s operetta “Rose Marie.” will be features of the Melody Moments program over WLW and an NBC network at 7:30 p. m. Monday.. Mary McCoy, soprano, and Woods Miller, baritone, will romance in script and song to the accompaniment of Nat Sbilkret’s orchestra during the Monday presentation of “An Evening in Parts,” to be heard over WFBM and the Columbia network at 7:30 p. m. Monday. Three numbers from the musical hit, “Strike Me Pink.” will be heard on the program over WLW and an NBC network at 8 p. m Monday. William O'Neal tenor, will entertain with a short program of romantic ballads during his recital to be broadcast over WFBM and the Columbia chain Monday from 9:15 to 9:30 p. m. Masons to Play Cards Center lodge, No. 23, Free and Accepted Masons, will Hold a social and card party at 7:30 Wednesday night in the Masonic temple, North and Illinois streets. USE A SWAP AD to get needed articles for which you can not pay cash. The cost of a Times swap ad is only 3 cents a word. Ri. 5551. Ask for special four-day offer.
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actual knowledge gained comes into use.Educators formerly believed that studying Latin, for example, improved one's general “faculties” of “analysis,” “judgment,” etc. Or that mathematics improved our “powers'* of “reason,” “comparison,” and so on. This doctrine was proved unacceptable when Woodworth and Thorndike, two noted psychologists, in 1903, showed that high school Latin students excelled non-Latin students only slightly in freshman college English, and after that there was no difference, even in English, let alone in general mental powers. They showed that learning to estimate the length of lines twelve inches long did not greatly improve the ability to estimate lines tw r enty inches long. Numerous experiments have confirmed this in a general way. The result has been that educators have sought to train pupils in things they will use, and this has brought much richer mental rewards than the old sterile doctrine of “mental drill.”
s:3o—Aunt Dessa & Uncle Connie. s:4s—Dinner Melodies. 6:oo—Knothole Gang. 6:ls—Harrv Bason. 6:3o—Recordings. 6:so—The Sportslight. 7:oo—Silent. B:oo—The Voice of Courage. B:ls—Vaughn Cornish. B:3o—The Old Pathfinder. B:4s—Masters Music Room. 9:oo—Hanoiness Parade. 9:ls—Art Berrv's orchestra. 9:3o—Connie's orchestra. 10:00—Little Green Valiev Boy. 10:15—Morrie Brennan's orchestra. 10:30 —Radio Rangers. 11:00—Morrev Brennan’s orchestra. 11:30 —Art Berrv's orchestra. 11:45 —Sign off. WLW (700) Cincinnati MONDAY P. M. 4:oo—Dance orchestra (NECK 4:ls—Becker, Newman and Greuter. 4:3o—Joe Emerson. 4:4s—Lowell Thomas (NBC>. s:oo—Amos ’n’ Andy (NBC). s:ls—Gene and Glen. 5:30—80b Newhall. s:4s—Dr. Glen Adams, dog talk. 6:oo—Crosley Salon orchestra 6:3o—Detectives Black and Blue. 6:4s—Chanau. the Magician. 7:oo—Weiner Minstrels <NBC). 7:3o—Melody Moments (NBC). 8:00 —Morgan L. Eastmans orchestra (NBC-Red). B:3o—Puddle Family. B:4s—Orchestra. 9:oo—Plantation Days. 9:ls—.Johnny Hamp's dance orchestra. 9:3o—Tales of Terror. 10:00—Ralph Kerberv (NBC). 10:30 —Hotel Roosevelt dance orchestra. 11:00 —Serenade. 11:30—Jimmy Van’s dance orchestra. 12:00 Midnight—Riff Bros. A. M. 12:15—Johnny Hamp’s dance orchestra.
01 I , and table uses. Ihere'i a Jack Frost Sugar for Every Purpetat Granulated Powdered Brown—Confectioner's xxxx-^ Tablets and the Trump Novelty Package You can get them at your grocer’s in clean* convenient* sanitary packages. Be sure of the sugar you buy. INSIST ON JACK FROSTS Refined by The National Sugar Refining Cos. of N. J. ns-a
Kitchen Ceiling Lights SI.OO Complete, ready to attach. Have large, white glass glob*. V ONNE GUT’S Downtown. Irvington. West Bido Fountain Square .•
PAGE 7
NATURALISTS TO INSPECT CULVER BIRD SANCTUARY Visit to Be Made During Audubon Society Session. V.y Timet i Special CULVER. Ind., May B—Culver Military academy's 200-acre bird sanctuary, which will be visited by the members of the Indiana Audubon society next Saturday, is one of the most complete bird havens in the country. The sanctuary grounds cover a beautiful woods with adjoining field and thicket near Lake Maxinkuckee along State road No. 10. Since its development was begun two years ago, it has attracted many tourists coming over this road as well as bird lovers and students of nature. The rustic architecture of the entrance and painted wooden birds used for signs to direct visitors to the observation houses, and birdfeeding station inside, lure many persons. Used by Woodcrafters Far inside the sanctuary are twd observation houses—built primarily for use of the beys in nature study classes of the Culver woodcraft school—from which one can observe the birds at close range, unnoticed. The two observation houses have long narrow slits in the walls from which one is enabled to get a view F of the entire feeding circle and to | watch the birds as they come here | for food. A new r fence, around the circle, made of metal, mesh and ! barbed wire, is being completed this week. It is vermin-proof, going sixteen inches into the ground and ; standing high enough to protect the birds and the food placed there from ; small animals and insects. The sanctuary lies in the path of i birds’ flight north and south, and , has an abundance of w r ild berries, seeds and other food upon w'hich birds thrive. Retains Natural Beauty Except for hundreds of bird houses, there is little else in the sanctuary that is man-made in this birds’ paradise, every effort having I been made by the academy in developing it to retain the natural beauty of the sanctuary. During their visit the members of the Audubon Society w'ill conduct some round-table discussions and hear an address by Joe R. Euans, member of the staff of the Culver Summer Woodcraft school, on "Bird Life About the Academy and Surrounding Area.” Following their early morning visit to the sanctuary, they wall have breakfast in Maxinkuckee inn on the lakefront. They will return to Rochester, Ind., the meeting place, for the afternoon session of their two-day program. Four Held in Slugging Case Police arrested four men Saturday night after Ray Bell, 525 North New Jersey street, complained he had been slugged at 1527’.* Madison avenue. Those held are Berl Adams, Jerry Griffin and Warren Depew of the Madison avenue address, and Lewis A. Bly, 262 East Raymond street. Purse Snatched by Negro Miss Lottie Wallace, 2351 Shriver avenue, told police she w r as returning home Saturday from a grocery at Twenty-fifth street and Northwestern avenue, when a Negro grabbed her purse from a paper bag she was carrying. It contained $5,
rrnra||j mmm CLOTHING ON EASY CREDIT ASKIN & MARINE CO. 127 W. Washington St.
