Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 October 1936 — Page 25
UMF wHAR-RUMF we AH-UM—-MY PLAN ISTO LET A SELECTED FEW IN ON MY BONANZA BEFORE SUBMITTING MY INVENTION
TO BIG MANUFACTURING
$50 APIECE, I WILL CUT YOU IN 10% OF THE PROFITS
DERNVED FROM SALES/ OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS BUT ONCE AT ANY MAN'S DOOR f
i
TH' LAST TIME JF YOU PLAYED J
THAT TUNE J
PRUMS, 1 LIFTED TH’
Blot TH RED INK OFF HIS LEDGER /
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MOS OFFERS SPACE OM THE GROUND FLOOR= =D
“LITTLE MARY MIXUP
SH! STEPHEN YOU ‘SIMPLY |
MUST GET OUT OF THE HART OF HANGING ARCUND THE LIVING ROOM, WRENN BOOTS HAS COMPANY ! COME NTO THE DEN» THEY WANT TO Bt ALONE
[ MOW , CORA, w CONFOUND
“r a say it’s worth exactly seven hundred and fity—not a
penny more.”
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OMH . RE WAS JUST BENG NCE
TT, DAMES AND I WERE HAWG A SPLENDID GAME OF CHECKERS wv AND. HE DONT MIND! IN FACT, HE’ ENJOYED 3) THOROUGHLY WE SRO
5 a
THE SHIP WAS ON TAR ROCKS ~- EVERY SEA WASHED ? THE. DECK. CAPTAIN TOM HAD To RE TAE LAST MAN OFF - sO He GAVE ME TAE ROX TO TAKE ASHORE I could.
WASHINGTON TUBSBS II
TAEN, WITH MY INTO THE SEA —
IN MY HANDS —
OWN EYes, IT SAW CAPTAIN TOM WASHED
THERE I WAS WITH A DEAD MAN'S FORTUNE
WHAT SHouLp I Dol
IF EVER I GOT TO SHORE IT Al DID NOT WANT & DEAD MAN'S MONEY — LEASTWISE, I. THOUGHT HE WAS DEAD. |
4 1 PRAYED FOR GUIDANCE —~ THE ANSWER CAME - — “You RAVE NO RIGHT TO THAAT MONEY -- hEAVE
IT ON THE DOOMED SHIP/ ")
MIND = we AT MEAN TacK MARLIN MIGHT GET To THE oLD WrREecK
gree Ze reroll Eris |
LOOK AT US! AFOOT IN TH MIDDLE OF A DESERT, ALL BECAUSE THE GREAT MASTERMIND PULLED A BONER,
YOUR BOOT, W BILL IN IT, OFF A TRAIN OF ALL TH
(Sens PUSHED YOU, AFTER THE a |Top GROWL 6
SHED MONEY IN THEIR FACES, IT A WONDER ey DIDN'T CUT YOUR
+ LAST, MYRA'S FEET AGAIN TOUCH GROUND AND SHE QUICKLY
HOSTILE TROOPS.
THIS CURIOUS WORLD By
mr jt” ”’
yr
RAO ION (£4 . SO PERFECTLY IMITATES v: THE ODOR OF CARRION THAT IT ACTUALLY
William Ferguson
KILL THEIR
BY SQUIRTING FORMIC
FENLIN LEAPS TO MYRA'S SIDE... AT THIS GESTURE, THE SOLDIERS FALL BACK RESPECTFULLY.
GOOD HEAVENS!
i THAT GIGANTIC THING
1 SAW FROM TH SKY... ITS MOVING! :
—By Thompson and Col
11:00
William Green and Other National Labor Leaders Are to Speck for
WIRE at 0 to Broadoast Knox Wisconsin Address.
ee Labor leaders. who favor re-elec~
tion of President Roosevelt are. to views over
cratic National Committee. In addition to a talk by William Green, national president of the American federaiion of Labor, listeners are to hear Charies Pi Howard, International Typograph= ical Union president; Robert J. Watts, Massachusetts State Feders
| ation president; Frank X. Martell,
Because both parties have bought largely of NBC-Blue network time tonight, WENR becomes a political debate platform. Lead-off men. are. Col. Theodore Roosevelt (left) speaking at 7:30 p. m. for
the Republicans, and Atty. ~gen; Homer S
crats at 8:30 p. m.
S. Cummings, for the Demo-
WEDNESDAY EVENING PROGRAMS
(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in program announcements caused by station changes after press: time.)
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1:30 (CBS Net.) Tea Tunes Ww men's: News A Bors 0 . Wilderness Lurline Flemfng Wheeler Mission i pelt or, . 4 Clark SIS is few Sports
Pop ey re Gove Cred News Y
(NBC Net.)
“Basy Aces Uncle Ezra Oliyer Skellet
Democrats Folies de Paree
Burns-Ailen King’s Or. ” » # ”
Kostelane tz’ Or. Col, Rodeheaver ;
Knox Democrats Republicans Miss Good Taste Willson’s Or.
Gang Busters
Democrat Talk Rubinoff
G. 0. P. Talk Democrats
COOL | WRXN | dladl | RRDRN | RAG | Bonn
pee Eis Face GEES | Bung | BEES | 5E03| Beta | suns
News-Bason . Levant’s Or. News / Casa Loma Or. Pryor’s Or. ”
Indiana Roof Nelson’s Or. Meeker’s Or.
Henderson’s Or. 11: 15 ” ” 11:30 Lights Out
11:45
INDIANAPOLIS ‘WIRE 1400
Community Chest,
CINCINNAT1 (NBC-Mutual)
Jud Bind trong rms Lad
or Annie Johnsons Amateur Show
Spores Lowell Thomas
Ame os-And gest noe ns" Randolph One. Family ”» ”
£ D! Lum J
. Tonic Time
Town Hall ” ”
» ”» » ”
Hit Parade » ”
” » ” ”
Paul Sullivan Minstrel Belasco’s Or. Moon River Elkin’s Or.
CHICAGO N 920 (Mutual Net.) McCune’s Or.
Singi Lad or an Annie
Ensemble Chusk Wagon
Sports Little’s Or.
Rubinoft Lone Ranger
: You, Never Forget
Tonic Time G. Heatter Tribune-Sports Stokes’ Or. Little's Or. Mariin’s Or. Edward .Hayes . Fio Rito’s Or.
Ravelin s Or. Jurgen’s Or.
Calloway’s or. Elkin’s Or. :
THURSDAY DAYLIGHT PROGRAMS
INDIANAPOLIS WEBM _ 1230 (CBS Net.)
Chuck Wagon Alm ¥ ” Hit Teather
Early Birds Musical Clock ” ”» ”» ”
” ” » ”n ” ” » ”»
(NBC Net.)
News Streamliners Varieties ” ” Hollywood Bett, -Bob _
Cinderella ® Rans-Grocker
Ee, t Fates :
| 2za% | aaa] ea «aS &353| 585868
Happy an Biker
hel roa
Neighbor Nell Brides School Honeymooners Day ssreams
292 | bore He
Prk pd dh
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400
CINCINNATY (NBC-Mutual) Fine. Time Chandler Chats
Postoffice Cheerio ” »
Hymns AR Gillham Aunt Mary Recipes
Stumpus Club
- ren : Vicki Chase
ildoats ao
Livestaskiows ! t Hi
ister » Gospel Singer z
CHICAGO WGN 720 (Mutual Net.) Golden Hour »” ” ” ”
Good Morning
Matinee ” ”»
Moments
ookery hildren
Get Thin 37 ” ”
Salerno
We are Four Bob - Elson
Kid Sister
=e 3| sits
mps Honeyboy ypey Fortunes Mary Marlin Cadets
Bs Farm Hour
Good Tare Pe Farm Bursa “ET Aer TN : : + Reporter Jack Turner
Big Sis Hughes Reel Way or East Culbertson New Women’s Clubs Happy Hollow Harry Bason
Democrats ‘Gregor House Al Pearee's Gang low Boys member? Varieties Music in Air Tea, Time
All Hands G. o. Club noo 1 } er “This
Girl Alone Democrats Reports Farm-Home
«-”n ”» ” “0
General Mills Molly
Air School (Drama Stories. History) Pepper Young Ma Perkins Vic-Sade
Wife vs. Sec’y.
' Melody Time
Markets Mid-day Service Ensemble Way Down East
Morgot Rebeil Len Salvo
June Baker
String” Trio
Painted Dreams Your Neighbor ’
Molly Serenade Stokes Or.
Q’Neills i Virginians
M Sothern Betty-Bob : Kitty Keene
Harold Turner Mary Sothern Memory Lane Margery Graham
1 HAVE IT! THIS MUST BE WHAT LEW WEN MEANT BY SHIFTING NOE MED
AT MARS - WHY, THE WHOLE | THING 15 UTTERLY FANTASTIC?
ENEMIES
LET S| EXPLORE YOUR MIND
BY DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM-
ston concluded, “crime has its roots ur’ignorance.” ! 8 = 3 WHEN YOU are over-strict or over-liberal with your child it
Jy pot cur to you iat you mey
na. next. eneration, but the
Tea Tunes Dari-Dan Talk It Over
1 Dowatown Chatter Dance Revue G. 0. P. Women Unannounced
SSIS | coga0000 | 20101010 | minstint | 10100018 GE53 | 5358 | 6358 | 5358 | 58
Where to find other stations:
Melodies . Wisecrackers Singing Lad) Orphan Ann
770, WENR
Wisecrackers Jack Armstrong
Singing Lady onbay Annie
Chicago, WBBM 870,
WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND 560.
Good Music
We don’t to be held in
—By James Thrasher.
many readers to be interested in a music festival co oity next July, what with election, the New York
Philharmonic. Symphony: broadcasts and winter in the offing. But because
this
t contains something new in music and concerns two
important figures in this continent’s art, we pass it on to you now. One of these important figures is Mrs. Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge, whose devotion to chamber music comes close to being a landmark in our cultural history. She has sponsored chamber music festivals in
Pittsfield, Mass.,
‘Washington, San Diego and other American cifies, as
well as in Europe. And she never has spared money, time nor ins
to give us the best in this branch of the
composer a hearing, Now Mrs. Coolidge has interested herself in the music of our southern neighbor, and is to sponsor the first Festival of Pan-American Chamber’ Music. . The other person whom our story particularly concerns is Carlos Chavez, who is to act as foreman of a jury which also includes Carl Engel and Hugo Kortschak. This group will select the winner of a Coolidgecontest. Mrs. Coolidge. is $500 for the best original Guartet submitted before next
| hating i examinations” at
art, nor to give any worthy
from the slough of pseudo-Latin |
sentimentality.
CBS, March of Time Sued for $100,000
Times Special NEW YORK, Oct. 28. Columbia
Detroit Federation president; D. B. Robertson, Brotherhood. of Firemen and Enginemen president, and Phil« ip Murray, United Mine Workers international vice president, are to speak. ” 8 » Principal Republican speaker to= night 1s to be Col. Frank Knox, wuose LaCrosse (Wis) address wilh oe neara over WIKRE at 8 o'clock. Other attacks on tne New Deal are to be made by Ouver Skellet; WIRE at 4:30 p. m.; Joseph W;: Bauey Jr. 1ormer congressman-at-sarge from 1'exas, Wel at 9 p. m., ana Congressman i'enerty of Xenns sylvania, WENR at 9:30 p. m. Fred warburg, Roger Straus and J. A. Harzfela are vo share with Col. The< odore Roosevelt tne WENR 7:30 p. m. spot. # ” ” Gov. Alfred M. Landon is to direct his remarks to naturalized citizens when he speaks from his room in the Murray dill Hotel: New York City, at 4:45 p. m, tomorrow. KYW and possibly WIRE will carry the talk. ; ” » 2
Homer Rodeheaver will take his program to the Luge Boston Garden
-lior his WFSM proadcast at 8:30
o'clock tonight. The Boston University Glee Club will sing Durp= ner’'s “Kyrie at Sea.” i Mr. Rodeheaver iad a New York shoe-shine. boy polishing shoes to music last week. Now comes Fred Allen with another shine boy, Frisco Bowman, New Orleans, who is to do a whole variety show over WLW at 8 o'clock tonight.
» » 2
“Moments You Never Forget” is the title of a new half-hour pro gram on WGN at 7 o'clock tonight, John. B: Kennedy and Lowell Thomas are to introduce Capt. Bob Bartlett, veteran of many polar. expeditions, who is to re-enact his most memorable experience. ” 8 "
Music Box, heard on WLW and WGN each Wednesday from 7:30 to 8 p. m., has changed both its name and theme song. With tonight’s broadcast, both become “Tonic Time.” Hefty Harold Carr, Virginio Marucci’s symphony orchestra, Nina Paisley and Ellis bt Frakes’ choir remain. ” » 2
a of ‘the thousands of per sons who disappear annually must vanish into a fourth dimension, thinks Arch Oholer. For WIRE’s Lights Out drama at. 11:30 o'clock tonight, he fis combine this weird theory with other ghostly ideas to create a pro= gram of “Halloween Horror.” . ” ” 2
Gracie Allen and Andre Kostelanetz have little in common, but tonight both of them will refer to Harlem on WFBM programs. 7 Gracie, recalling a Brooklyn bridge excursion she once made, wrote a poem about the Hudson “from the Battery up to Harlem and from the Fourth ‘of July to Labor Day,” to be read at 7:30 o'clock. Kostelanetz is. to play the lvely. “Bojangles of Harlem” on his pro gram at 8 o'clock with Nino Mar= tini. Mr. Martini will sing, possibly with nostalgia for his native Italy, “Santa Lucia kontana” (O Nap es, Far Away. : ” a ”» 8 3 Most people don’t care if the. house next door is vacant, but One Man’s Family, that of Henry Barbour, has discovered mystery in a neighboring dwelling to add excitement to WLW’s 7 o'clock program tonight. 1 2.8 = > ad Members of the cast of the farce, “Three Men on a Horse,” still pl ing in New York City, are to be Jimmy Hall's guests on WGN at a. m. Thlsday, » 8 7 WIRE officials are pleased with a recommendation Lenox R. Id NBC president, made to the eral Communications d this week. #5 Appearing at the commission's allocation hearings, Mr. Lohr recofiis mended that night power of regior
Broadcasting System, the “March of | tions be
Time” and its sponsor are defendants in a $100,000 slander action instituted by Don Jackson, University of North Carolina student. 3 ~The petition charges that a March of Time episode broadcast £veR CBS last, Pebinaty represeniod
Jackson as a culprit alleged the
Th TE ine “resulted from :
Super Power Radio Stations Predicted
Powe ot 000190 watt or ra casting ng was forecast this
SANDUSKY . Leave 10:00 p. Incianapali inte than 3 “Coach
