Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 September 1936 — Page 24

* THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES | _ By Clark Roosevelt, Landon and Candidates WTA Ged 1 P42 4 | of Minor Parties to Be Heard in Broadcasts Tonight or Tomorrow

PAGE 28

TUESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1936 OUR BOARDING HOUSE § NES, 1's 11 navenT X77 i Horseshoe! JF 1D GO YOURS —~ ) YOU HEARD? ) £2 HE MUST HAE Xi PARADIN SEE, { SEEN BORNUNDER ) AROUND BUSY- A SHOWER OF INA BATH - METECRS ~~ IF ROOM MOTHER HE FELL DOWN A ) HUBBARD, 1D MINE SHAFT, 7 GET NTO << HED COME UP (RAPES Rival to Air Opinions WITH A THAN A GARAGE on Same Program.

GOW DOOR, AND GET | | BFF A218 W/L Ga TR | | : | -— = vt! i, (Ar Aan FS Ae] 3 n 1! : Sasa | President Roosevelt, Gov. Landon Fi NTH pis ate 40 = “Ye | \ Ef % > } & : | and the “field” entries in the Presie

CULL VILLAGE ROWDY | dential Derby all may be heard on : TANK / Tr wid

With Major Hoople

! | EVERY 74 VO DOLLAR OF ITM Feure = we | COMBED THE | CITY, WE { couonT § FIND A

-— a ir

| ; ‘Backers of President and

TEAMED FOR CARAVAN PROGRAM

J — p— MORE

THIS $50 A Prize FOR

EE-GAD/ MY WORD

per Of)

MAN IN

TOWN !/ the air waves in the next two days.

It will be the first time in history that the nation has been able to | obtain so complete a resume of di« | vergent political opinions from the {lips of the various parties’ standard | bearers. . { The Republican candidate will be | heard again tonight in another of his Midwest addresses, this time { from Des Moines, at a mass meeting lin the Iowa State Fairground. The | NBC-Red network will bring the | broadcast at 8:30 p. m. Z | The five minor party choices, | Norman Thomas, Socialist; D. {| Leigh Colvin, Prohibition; John | W. Aiken, Socialist-Labor; Earl Browder, Communist, and Wile . liam J. Lemke, Union Party, are to appear on the same program beginning at 7:45 a. m. tomorrow on the NBC-Blue network. The afternoon session will preseng these speakers: James A. Farley, John D. M. Hamilton, Arthur As Ballantine, Francis Marion Law, Miss Frances Perkins, Charles P. Taft, Theodore Christianson, Henry A. Wallace and Herbert Hoover. The theme for discussion throughout the day will be “The Political Issues Which America Faces in 1936.” The meeting will commence at noon on the Red network, with the Blue net« work carrying the proceedings from 1 until 2:55 p. m. President Roosevelt's address ig

scheduled for tomorrow night. Sports = zn a

Latest stars to trek across the air waves with Rupert Hughes’ Caravan are to be Barbara Stanwyck and Herbert Marshall, who will appear together in a dramatic sketch on WFBM at 7:30 o'clock tonight. Miss Stanwyck’s last picture to show here was “The Bride (s Out,” while Mr. Marshall was seen most recently in the film, “Girl's Dormitory.”

TUESDAY EVENING PROGRAMS

in program an-

“I raised my children and most of my grandchildren. I thought I did a good job, but none of them has enaugh sense to be trusted with my great-grandchildren.”

—By Martin

(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies nouncements caused by station changes after press time.)

INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI WFBM 1230 WIRE 1100 LW 00 (CBS Net.) (NBC-Mutual)

(NBC Net.) Patti Chapin ea Tunes

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

OM CORN —% v4 | CRAY AROUT |

CHICAGO WGN 20 (Mutual Net.)

Melodies

[ THANK Vou, {| DEAR

OH , AR CAN TAKE \T, voney! AR FOUND OUT \ ONG AGO, OAH AIN'T NO STYLE WR COULD DO MUCH FO ME , OR TO ME «S50 AR SBS QUT WORRVYIN'

YEP! 1 GUESS THIS JUST \SNT YOUR YEAR, OPAL ! YOU WOULDN'T LOOK S90 HOT IN : BLSTLE , YOU WNOW fer

ARENT THE NEW STVVWES FASCINATING 2 THE REAR WVEW SEEMS TO Bk QU\TE THE THING

Wise Crackers Merrell-Organ J. Armstrong Lowell Thomas

Flying Time Hymn Sing Jack Heller Cocktail Time

00 :15 :30

Singing Lady Renfrew Orphan Annie Wisecrackers Ensemble String Trio Ensemble

Johnsons Voice of Exp. Lum-Abner Crusaders

Easy Aces Music John Herrick Sports

I. U. Extension Chi. Science Lee Wiley News-3cores

Music Hall

Rubinoff

Reisman’s Or. Unnanounced i '

Rubinoff

© LITTLE MARY MIXUP

YES THERE 16 A = DORY- SOME ONE 15 THERE - MAYBE 1 SOMEBODY ELsE THINKS iT 18 A TREASURE SHIP,

WASHINGTON TUBBS II

LISTEN! SOME oME 1S CROPPING — LOOKING FOR. TREASURE - — LET 8 GO AROCARD AND HELP 'EM LOOK

LET RE REAL QUIET, TILL WE sEE WHO IT 1S =

or! WHAT AN AWFUL LOOKING MAN -~MAYRE WE BETTER NoT GO AROCARD-

© 1936 by United Feature Symdicate, Ine. Tm. Reg U. 8. Pat. OF. AN rights reserved

—By Crane

Ken Murray Ring's Or.

STEED | OUD olan EI eran oe os a

Waring’s Or. Vox Pop

Caravan Fred Astaire

adadstar

Nelson's Or.

Edgar Guest : "“ a Tom, Dick,

Harry

Quin Ryan Sanders’ Or. Heidt’'s Or.

Bernie's Or. ~ .“

Mysteries

March of Time Happy Days

G. 0. P. Talk Len Riley Lombardo’s Or.

Portraits ”n »

News-Bason Detroit Symph. Rubnoft

POTD | XErxx

Geo. Givot News Stabile’s Or.

00 115 130 145

Whiteman's Or,

Beecher's Or. » ”»

Henderson's Or.

B. MacFadden B. McFadden Songsters Neison's Or. Smoothies Pageant Hot Dates a "

Kyser's Or. Martin's Or.

Amos-Andy Queen's Minstrel

Men Only

Paul Sulivan Rapp's Or. Moon River

Field's Or. Fio Rito's Or.

:00 Ind. Roof :15 Sechreiber's Or, 3 Fisner’s Or, . 5 “os EL]

Dance Or.

Norris’ Or,

WEDNESDAY DAYLIGHT PROGRAMS |

Lewis’ or. Hetdt's or.

Sander's Or, Heidlt's Or.

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.) Chuck Wagon

INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.) Bar-Nuthin’

CINCINNATL

CHICAGO LW 7% N 720 (NBC-Mutual)

WGN 72 (Mutual Net.)

Cheerio Golden Hour

Early Birds Musical Clock "” “" "” “" LL] ”» - “"

News News-Devotions Varieties Hollywood Children

Happy Long

Magazine - " Mary Baker

Whistler

Timely Tunes Calendar

News A. Chandler Robinsons Calengar

Salvo-organ

Cillham-Piano Serenade

Lasry-Sye epper Young Jean Macy io ” House Party Cooking School Lucky Girl

Hymns Sweet Home Chandler-Organ

Harry Richman and Dick Merrill,

| probably as uncongenial a pair of

heroes as.ever conquered space and the Atlantic, will do a little hatchet burying and appear on Ken Mur= ray's program tonight at 6:30 o WFBM. : Ken rather “scooped” some of the more elaborate broadcast shows, whether he wanted to or not: Though he doesn’t go in for guest stars extensively, he is one of the not so many comedians who stil} broadcast a variety program from New York. So he got right in on the ground floor.

zn n td

Apparently sponsors thought! that tonight's Louis-Ettore scrap ' wouldn't last long enough to get! in a commercial plug. Anyway, ' there’s no broadcast scheduled. » = » =e We're going to have more bure lesque in the Stoopnagle-Bigld mane ner—we hope—on the new Fred Astaire hour. Fred is losing no time in getting under way with a take-off on the currently popular community sings. With the assiste ance of Charles Butterworth, Mr, Astaire will present “My Old Kens tucky Home” and “Good-by Fors ever” as the basis for concerted voe

(NO FOOD, NO MONEY AND NO POLICE) CAR — THAT'S THE LAST STRAW, HOLLIS WALLIS! THAT PESKY KID'S GOTTER GIT OUT! YOU HEAR THAT?

VES, JUNIORS FEET HURT, AND I—-AR-ALLOWED HIM TO TAKE THE

(LAND SAKES ! THEN TLL HAFTA eT AN THE CAR AN' GO CLEAR. : ONE! A SBE

GLORY BE! WHERE'S ALLTHE | WHY, JUNIOR \ BAH! THEN I GOTTER) I FORGOT TO

CHICKENS AND PIES 1 WAS / MENTIONED THAT| GIT SOME MONEY Mrs. Farrell

Topics

Voice of Exp. Children cal effort. ;

In.a serious vein, the celebrated Abbey Players of Dublin will do. . “The End of the Beginning,” by

Painted Dreams We Four Paul Small Kid Sister

Girl Alone Stock-News Gospel Singer Kid Sister

Jack-Loretta Mary Marlin Am. Legion

Am. Legion Montana Slim Merrymakers

I-AH- PRESUME HE ATE THEM,

hh SAVIN' FER — HE WAS HUNGRY / AND —

CAR, TOO. | |

WHY, PET!

% N © = \ fan @ 1936 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. i T. M. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF.

—By Thompson and Coll

LET GO, Nou FOOL! WHAT DID YOU SUPPOSE MY INTENTIONS WERE?

7

. yr 7) )

THIS CURIOUS WORLD

GRANVILLE Sl CURRENT

AS MYRA STRUGGLES MADLY WITH GARSTIN, SURGES THRU HIS VEINS.

UMPS FORWARD, AS THE

HIM AROUND. | e—————)

AND THEN ,WITH SHEER DESPARATE STRENGTH, MYRA WRENCHES THE FESSORS HAND FROM THE SWITCH AND SPINS

WITH A SUPER HUMAN EFFORT, SHE SHOVES HIM ONTO THE LAP OF THE MAN IN THE CHAIR,

PRO-

RN

SPIDERS DO NOT GET CAUGHT IN THEIR OWN WEBS BECAUSE THEIR FOOT | CONSTRUCTION MAKES IT POSSIBLE POR THEM TO REST UPON THE INDIVIDUAL THREADS / AN ENLARGEMENT OF A SPIDER'S ! FOOT IS SEEN AT THE RIGHT.

AN

VIRGIN HAS A HEAVIER. SNOWFALL. THAN PARTS oF ALASKA AND NORTHERN CANADA.

Ge PUFFIN mou A Portion

OF ITS BILL ONCE EACH

i The foot of a spider is covered in toothed claws, somewhat ss=mbling a comb. This arrangement makes it possible for the spider | mic statistics” — things that are > its feet on each individual thread of its web as it travels insects make no effort |the forecas entangled,

without

breaking the strands. Other

YEAR

§-.22 © 1936 BY NEA SERVICE, ING

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

BY DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

LIVE LONGER THAN THE UNMARRIED BECAUSE OF THE © BETTER CARE AND GENERAL HEALTH CONDITIONS OF FAMILY LIFE?

JES or NO 2

~, SN

ge

oR

a

~

“, ad NS

€ - i it 3 a = — i Pe

| have no doubt the president meant { this as a piece of humesr. It is only

A COLLEGE PRESIDEND

'STAIENC

ARE FACTS

COLLECTED To PROVE WHAT 16 NOT TRUE.

DO YOU AGREE? NES ORNO oe

THE 6

TUTE HALF © LANGUAGE. 15

EVEN college presidents some- and helpless without statistics. Of times get off a good joke and I | Course, statisticians often lose their | way and get off the:road, but then the road itself is tHe only road to

| truth.

by collecting facts and then subject- |

{ ing them to statistical analysis that | {| we can find out anything about eco- | | nomics, or social forces, or death { rates, or birth rates, or national inome and outgo, or tariffs. And in dhe realm of what are called “dyna-

changing—such as markets, prices; of crops and busi-

GH, NGUAGE 16 SAID TO LISE ay ABOUT 450,000 (2a. R +» WORDS BUT THAT ABOUT 50 CONG» £ ALL WRITTEN AND SPOKEN 414 BECAUSE THESE WORDS ARE THE MOST IMPORTANT? YES OR NQ eee

IT IS due apparently to two | factors, according to a recent { bulletin of the Metropositan Life Ini surance Co. First, strong, healthy | people are more likely to find mates {and second, married people live a ORY. : { healthier life. Since the

difference but these statisticians think the better care, greater amount of sleep, more regular habits and the like, account for much of the longer life of married people. Bachelors may think they can sleep more and not be disturbed by the wife, children, radio and dogs, but statistics are against this delusion.

CERTAINLY, if by the “most important” we mean the most frequently used. Such words as the, a, but, and, you, I, me, is, are, and the like may make up about 95 per cent of a sentence, although the two or three words such as constitution, army, battle, construction, may be the ones that give meaning to it. The other words merely act as connective tissue.

Next — Do most people die a natural death? ;

Best Short Waves

TUESDAY

SCHENECTADY—4:35 p. m —ShortWave Mail Bag. W2XAF. 0.53 meg. ROME—5 & m.—News in English. Symphonic Concert. 2RO. 9.63 meg. LONDON—5:30 np. m.— ‘The Grand Cham’s Diamond.” a Play. GSP, 15.31 meg.: GSD. 11.75 meg.: GSC, 8.58 meg. : : MADRID —8 p. m.—Orchestra. Music. Spanish Course. EAQ. 8.87 meg BERLIN—7:30 p. m.—Famous Musicians. DJD. 11.77 mes. CARACAS—730 p. m-—The Continentals. YV2RC. 5.8 meg. LONDON—8:25 p. m.— ‘Foreign Affairs.’ by Sir Frederick" Whyte, 15.14 mex.: GSC, 9.58 meg MONTREAL—8:30 _ p. m.—Lullaby Lagoon. CJRO, Winnipeg, 6.15 meg.

H n =

Winnipeg, 11.72 meg.

TOKYO—11 p. m.—Overseas ProIVE. NRK, 168 mek

Vagadonds

Golf Tourney an's Wife aym-fivme

Betty-Bob Cinderella John Watkins Betty Crocker

News Reporter Old Refrain

Big Sister Farm Bureau Farm Circle

Ih fr Wiss

Hi-Hatters McGrezors Harvard Varieties Alma Kitchell Jack Heller

Tune Twisters Horse Races

Ann Leaf Down East

News Gogo deLys

Fk fk ok z

String Quartet Polo Match Polo Champs

Hall's Or. Unnanounced

EEnn Enns aout ER3 | GER | 03h

Wiicerness

Hall's Or. Tea Tunes

ow

Flying Time Piano-Polo News-Songs Sketches

ed | sroooe | WB?

5253

Renfrew

Good Music

An intriguing winter pastime for one equipped with time, money

Mary Sothern Tom, Dick, Harry Mid-Day Service

Queen’s Minstrel Tom, Dick, Harry Stocks Farm-Home e a String Trio Way Down East Ensemble License Bureau

" .“"

Rubinoff Kitty Keene

Molly June Baker Salvo-Organ Baseball

Molly Ma Perkins Vic-Sade O’'Neills

G. Perazzo

ews G. 0. P. Talk Larry Duran

Betty-Bob Mary Sothern Singing Lady Orphan Annie

“"

After Ball Game Melodies

Singing Lady Orphan Annie

Toy Band Ralph Nyland J rmstirong Lowell Thomas

—By James Thrasher. |

and inclination, would be a ‘concert tour” of Chicago, Cincinnati and

St. Louis, between musical events in Indianapolis. : Each of these neighboring cities has an attractive list. of offerings in the way of concerts and operas for the commuting music lover. Announcement of the Cincinnati and Chicago opera seasons and the Cincinnati symphony season soloists already has appeared in this space, and

today we present news of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra's fiftyseventh season, which has just come to us. There will be 18 Friday afternoon and an equal number of Saturday evening concerts, beginning Oct. 30, as well as 10 high school and student programs and the usual special concerts. Five newcomers to St. Louis are listed among the 14 guest artists scheduled for appearance. are Serge Prokofieff, revolutionary Russian musician, who will be seen and heard in the triple capacity of composer, conductor and pianist; Ruth Slenczynski, 12-year-old pianist, whose precocity is as baffling as her name; Leon Zighera, violinist; Dalies Frantz, young American pianist, and Athur Fear, British baritone who was first heard in these parts as Hans Sachs in the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra's production of Wagner's “Die Meistersinger” last year.

They |

Other soloists are to be Jascha |

Heifetz and Scipione Guidi (the orchestra's concertmaster and assistant conductor), violinists; Sergei Rachmaninoff. Alexandre Tansman, Vladimir Horowitz and Corrine Fredericks, pianists, and Gregor Piatigorsky, cellist. Of the above soloists, Messrs. Piatigorsky and Horowitz will be heard in Indianapolis this season. Three tours are booked for the orchestra under the direction of Vladimir Golschmann, who is beginning his sixth season as conductor. The first, beginning Jan. 18, will bring the group here as a Martens Concerts offering. The second will start at Purdue (West Lafavette) in February, and include other concerts in Indiana, Illinois, Towa and Missouri. The orchestra is to make a tour of the South in March and April Mr. Golschmann has booked several novel or seldom performed works to supplement the standard repertoire. Among these are a presentation of Berlioz’ “The - Damnation of Faust,” with Rose Bampton, Paul Althouse and Chase Barom eo as soloists; “ s Feast, , Fear

soloist, and an appearance of Col. W. de Basil's Ballet Russe with the orchestra. 2 ” n Hugo Wolf's “Italian Serenade,” the only chamber music composition by the man whom Ernest Newman hailed as the greatest song writer, will be heard on the Kreiner String Quartet's broadcast tomorrow. Quartets by Rietz and Beethoven also are scheduled for the | opening program of their series, which will be heard at 2 p. m. over WFBM.

Cantor Sends Wife | Unusual Postcard

Probably you've seen the lifesize | placards of Eddie Cantor in local gas stations, bearing the legend. ; “I'll be with you every Sunday night.” while Mrs. Cantor was vacationing | in New York. So Eddie had one relettered and rushed by air express to his wife. : When she opened it she read, “I'll be with you every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday night —if you'll only come home.” Something new in the way of postcards, : » ” ” Columbia's Caravan program, heard each Tuesday night on WFBM, is “tops” with University of Southern California students in Or. Henry Lee Ewbank’s class on the technique and theory of radio. Smoothness of continuity and variety of entertainment were given as reasons for the selection in the recently conducted survey. Burns and Allen took second place. Added interest was given, they said, by presentation of motion picture stars; in dramatic roles. As part of their radio curriculum, the students attend broadcasts of actual programs. They also prepare and participate in their own, speaking into a microphone heard nonparticipating

by members

Ireland’s leading playwright, Sean =

0O’Casey. Una O'Connor (of “In- ’ former” fame), Barry Fitzgerald and Joe Kerrigan are to be fea-

! tured. :

Fred also has scheduled the Foure some, novelty quartet, and some’ songs from his new “Swing Time.” The program starts at 7:30 p. m. toe day on WIRE. : n » n Rupert Hughes, novelist, historian and present guiding spirit of the CBS Caravan program (WFBM at 7:30 p. m. today), received a fan letter that's worth passing alongs Says the writer: : “Whenever I hear your voice it-

takes me back to Keokuk. and this:

is why: Some years ago, when you were taking pipe organ in the First Presbyterian Church at Keokuk, I was at thag

time the boy who pumped the ore -

gan. “Speaking of organists, I believe you were the hardest one I ever pumped for. I think you must have pushed down all the

instructions on the

-

keys on the organ with your hands and feet at the same time, ~ In fact, I'll never forget the notes .

passed back to me—all reading ‘More wind. :

“P. 8 Your radio programs_are swell, and I'm sure nobody will eve”

have to pass a note up to you, saye ing, ‘Less wind.” ?

" ” i

= There's always been some

dis«

cussion about middle-aged Hamlets

and Juliets on the other side of 30," Juliet, as Mr.

something of a stripling youth. Yet

| Shakespeare connew | ceived her, was 14, and Hamlet was

|it always seems that when a player

achieves the mature artistry the

by.

roles require, the years have slipped =

We've been hearing lately that

orma Shearer, who is past 30 by

N the way,-was the first screen Juliet, _

But Beverly Bayne, of the early

silent picture romantic team

the time,

= = td

i Bushman and Bayne, really first _ | portrayed the youthful Capulet on. _ These figures came out |...) 15s And she was only 16 at

¢ 4

In case you want to check up

on this information, Miss Baynes

will be on Ted Hammerstein's

program at 6 p. m. today over . WFBM and she may answer soms questions . about her early career

as well as read Longfellow’s ot

“Psalm of Life,” which is her programmed part. : =

xz = ee

The British authoress, Mary Lyte ton, is coming to America on the Queen Mary to interview Red Nichols, radio maestro. At least

that's the chief business of her visit, ~

She is wriiing a book on

jazz, and plans to devote a whold chapter to the carrot-topped trume-

peter. = » = »

George Burns and Gracie Allen were all set for a vacation in Hawaii when their studios demanded

presence in Hollywood for a new .

picture, “College Holiday.” Then Gracie got laryngitis and went to. the hospital. New they are ng to get away soon—uniess the:

n”

gh