Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 December 1936 — Page 15

SATURDAY, DEC. 2%, 1036 OUR BOARDING HOUSE

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BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

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THOSE ARE HARSH WORDS, BROTHER, BUT 1 EXPECTED YOU'D TRY TOSTUFF * TH GOLDEN HEN INTO YOUR SACK!

7A EVER SINCE You

TOOW TH' MUMPS FROM ME, AT THREE, YOWYWE FED VYOURSELF UP WITH TH’ DELUSION THAT You COULD PUT TH CLUTCH ON EVERYTHING THATS MINE

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TM. RES. Us. PAT. OFF © 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.

“But, madam, this is the cloth you picked out of the samples.”

~ —By Martin

NOY THAT \I MATTERS ~- BUT

WHY TH MO00 \WO\GO ? — ;

(1 GOT MISERY, BABY ~~ IN) BATCHES AN) GOBS ! THERE HUST AW'T NO PAY OFF! AS \F THINGS WEREN'T BAD ENOVGH AROUND HERE .BOOTS' BROTHER BILL HAD TO CHECK N' GOSH ~~ NOW, T NEVER WILL SEE ‘ER

( MEBBE NOT = [UT NE\TRER WILL WHROST ! RAVE Y'TROVGHT OF THAY ¢

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MY” sucH A MEAN LOOKING MAN’ -T WONDER WHAT HE WANTS

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GEORGE I18NT POULTRY -HES A NICE FELLA

You ADMIT, TREN, THAT You 'RE KEEPING AN OSTRICH/Z — THE LAW READS - NO POULTRY IN A RESTRICTED NEIGHGOR-

I 8AY HE'S POULTRY. IT'LL GIVE You THREE DAYS Te GET RID

RM TARINIFE NEF = D 1936 by United Feature Syndicate, Tha. Tw. Reg. U. 5. Pat. OT. —Al rights reserved

A WILD ANIMAL ACT ~THAT'S WHAT THIS SHOW NEEDS, COME ON, BOYS, LET'S GET

THAT TIGER INTO HIS NEW wy

LOOKOUT, THERE! HE'LL BITE YOUR. |

LEG oft I=

A TOOTH IN HIS HEAD.

NOT HIM, BOSS! THERE AINT

(BUT, GREAT \ THEN MAY SCOTT! THEY | FALSE TEE

P's MORE ) NO FOOLIN', BOSS, YOU BE ASET OF Yio s Nol " OL

Purine THE CONFUSION, IN THE DARKNESS OF THE COUNCIL MEMBER'S HOL ISE THE (ONSTABLE TACKLES THE

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MOTION PICTURE ILM, o WHEN CONFINED,

HONORABLE INSPECTOR OPEN REAR DOOR FOR LEE HING -HE STILL

TS INSPECTOR EMPTREE ' OH, INSPECTOR! TELL ME - IS THE MINISTER ..ER. WHY, THAT'S STRANGE =

HE DIDN'T

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

BY DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

cE

OF REFERENCES IN CONVERSATION TO CLASS {CAL LITERATURE AND HISTORIC PERSONS INDICATE LACK OF INTELLIGENCE OR LACK OF EDUCATION? YOUR ANSWER

Op 16 ROMANTIC LoVe

A SAFE BASIS FOR MARRIAGE? nN ; YES OR NO cen : ~ road | ae '

abled man to rise above the apes end use tools and thus build civilizations. Science News Letter tells cf the motion pictures by Drs. Gesell and Halverson, in which they show | just when a baby begins to use its | thumb freely—usuaily at about 1 | vear of age. | gins to handle things gracefully and | get away from his awkward fum- | biing.

It is then that he be-

COMMON ERRORS

i

PAGE 15

‘Do You Want to Be An Actor? to Go On Air for Second Time Tomorrow at *

7 P. M,, Offers Something Different

RADIO THIS EVENING

(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in program ane

INDIANAPOLIS

WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)

INDIANAPOLIS

WIRE 1400 (NBC Net)

pouncements caused by station changes after press time.)

CINCINNATI WLW 700 (NBC-Mutual)

CHICAGO

WGN 720 (Mutual Net)

High School » ” ” ” ” »

Top, Hatters

Dance Revue Bible Ins't.

Ton, Hatters Kindergarten ”» ”

Basey's Or.

Sterney's Or. “ "

Tea Tunes Tito Guizar Swing Session Bohemians News Workshop Football Revue

Barron's Or. H. V. O’Brien Sports Song Stores Hampton Singers Rubinoft Ed Wynn Willson’s Or.

R, F. D. Hour U. of Cinci. Sports A. G. Karger Week's Or. Lights’ Or, Arnheim's Or. Saturday Party

Serenade Wintz’ Or, » "

Serenade Chuck Wagon

Sports Ensemble

Tom, Dick, Harry Rubinoff Dance Or.

Speed Show Serenaders » ”

Barn Dance ” ”» ”» » Ld ”

Ed McConnell Chateau

Tribune-Sports Norvo'’s r. Martin's Or,

cove | Buen | gua | saan | suse | aeas SECS | 6853 | 888 sans | suns | 1858

Hit Parade World Dances

Un announced Irvin Cobb ”» »

”» » ”» ”»

Irvin Cobb ”» »

Kavelin's Or. Jurgin's Or. ance Or.

Goodman's Or,

News Olsen's Or.

News Rapp’s Or. Morgan's or.

Barn Dance ”» ”»

”» ”» » ”

Hamilton's Or. Ted Weems’ Or, Martin's Or.

| were

ind. Roof Lowe's Or. Harris’ Or.

Blaine’s or.

Reser’s Or, ” ”»

Sullivan

Paul M River

Weeks’ Or.

Hallett's Or.

Jurgen's Or.

SUNDAY PROGRAMS

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)

INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)

CINCINNATI WLW 700 (NBC-Mutual)

CHICAGO N 720

WG (Mutual Net)

5353 | 53

Flanner House Rhythm

Problems Grenadiers Church of Air

Silent

Nagle’s Or. Nothing Like It Church "

Forum

Children’s Hour

Silent

| SSDS | PO VD 0830 3% Vay mE 4 oan ad nS

£853 | 5358

Entertainers ” ”

C. Mm B, Class

Stardust

” ”» ” »

Salute "

Radio Pulpit ”» »

Old Instruments

Church ”» ”» Meloay Hour ”n ”

Caprice Viennois ”» »

Cloister Bells Sweethearts Ensemble

News Alistair Cooke Rehearsal

Cadle Choir Radio Clty

Concert »

Review Memory Lane Sacred Music Singing Canaries Melodies

Weems’ Or.

“ ed a od sd

pp Nowe S853

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Rhythm

Melodies Home Fires

Theater ,, Music

Gypsy Fortunes New York Symph. (With Josef Hofmann)

”» ”» » ”» ”» ”» » ”»

Organ Rhapsody Lombardo’s Or. ” ”»

Nothing Like It Conressions Melody Matinee

Bowers’ Band Cheral Voices Thatcher Colt

Metro. Auditions Civic Choir

Serenade ”» ”»

Sunday Players . » »

Marjon Talley Stoopnagle-Budd ”» ’

Lutheran Hour Smoke Dreams

Magic Key

Rabbi Tarshish Echoes

Interlude Songs You Love:

Listen to This Musical , Camera

We, The People Sing Time

Comics Unannounced Let's Talk

Church Musie Men of Destiny

Church Susie

Alice Blue Dance Or.

Norveo’s Or. Truth Only

Weems’ Or.

Martin's Or, - ”»

de | Sone

Joe Penner Rubinofl’s or.

Catholic Hour Band Concert ”» ”»

Benny Rubin Human JRelations

Benny Rubin Milky Wavy ”» »

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Prof. Quiz » ”» Phil Baker

Nelsen Eddy Eddie Cantor

Detr i} Symph. Mr. Melchoir)

Community Sing ”n » News Pryor’s Or.

Gov. McNutt Freeman °s or,

Helen Traubel Ripley “

Musical Comedy

D eams ”» »

Manhattan Familiar Musie ”» ”»

Rapee Symph. Ezio Pinza)

News Nothing Like It El Chic’ or.

Jack Benny Beauty Strands Sunset Dreams

Amateur Plays

W. Winchell Whiteman’s or,

”» ”» ” Edwin C. Hill ”» »n Mysteries Paul Sullivan

ravers’ Or. Trask’s Or. ”» -

Kavelin’s Or.

Evensong » id

Hamilton's or,

Jurgen’s ,, or.

Tribune-Sports Norvo's Or. A. 8S, Henning Jurgen’s Or.

Sky Melody » ”» Hamilton’s Or.

» »

Martin's Or, Weems’ Or. ”» ”

Indiana Roof Lopez’ Or. Stabile’s or.

Shandor | Goodman's or.

Moon Riyer ”» » Little's ”»

Brandwynne’s or.

Hamilton's Or.

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MONDAY PROGRAMS

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230

(CBS Net.) Chuck Wagon Early Birds » ”»

INDIANAPOLIS

WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)

Chow Time Hit Leather

Musical Clock » ”

CINCINNAT1 WLW 700 (NBC-Mutual)

Brass Concert News

Chandler Chats Postoffice Chegrio

CHICAGO WGN 720 (Mutual Net.) Silence "

Wake Up Good Morning Golden Hour

i | OOOO | POP DO | 0WN®W | art | AD

ph | hw

News Varieties ” » ”» ”» Gold Medal » rr ” » » ” Magazine ”n » Mrs. Farrell ” »

Gum Brevities elen Trent Darling

Streamliners » ”

Adela St. Johns

Havnvy Long Mary Baker Music Dreams Children

David Harum Bible Ins’t. Day Dreams Party Line

Honeyboy Marv Marlin American Ins’t. Noining Like It

Hymns Art Gillham Lamplighter Carl Freed

Stumpus Club

Gospel Singer Stock-News Personal Column ve Son Voice of Exo. irl Alone ack-Loretta

Stocks Farm-Home Hour

”w ”» ”» ”»

Lamplighter Good Morning

Len Salve Children Get Thin

Cooking School We Are Four Love Song Len Salve

Don Pedro Melodies Man On Street Your Neighbor

po ut put nos Ea | IS rt S302 | PT ne | mune or 8 | 5353 | 5353 | 5353 | 5353 | 5853 | 5353 | 5852 | 5353

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Never say, “His remarks were ir- | revalent”; say, “irrelevant.”

Down East Farm Bureau Farm Circle

Big Sister Romany Trail Science Program News Al Pearce Concert ”» » Education Curtain Calls Chicago Variety » » Tea Tunes

Women’s News Wilderness

! Where to find other stations: WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND 3560.

Farm Hour Revorter appy Jack Forum ”» ”»

Jane Courtland Hugnies Reel

McGregor House Tow Boys arieties ”» » Spitainy’s or. McDonald Says

Talk It Over

Dance Band Three Scamps

» ”» ” ”»

Meroff’s Or. Moliv

Unannounced

”» ”» ”» »

Pepper Young Ma Perkins Vic-Sade O’'Neills

Harry Richman Marv Sothern Betiv-Bob Kitty Keene

Toy Bard J. Armstrone Singing Lady Orvhan Annie

exas Music ife vs. Sec'y. Markets Mid-Day Service

Ensemble Lawrence Salerno Painted Dreams Marriage Bureau

Molly June Baker Len Salve Harold Turner

Way Down East Mary Sothern Good Health Serenade

Margot Rebeil Unannounced Melodies Margery Graham

Chicago, WBBM 770, WENR 870,

Good Radio Music

BY JAMES THRASHER

‘Many Repetitions of the Program May Get Tiresome, Belief.

BY RALPH NORMAN

The second edition of “Do You Want to Be an Actor?” will be broadcast over WLW from NBC's Hollywood studios at 7 o'clock toe morrow night. This program, which on a moment's notice last week res placed the “Good Will Court,” of= fers listeners something different, if not something better. “Do You Want to Be an Actor?” is presided over by Haven Mac» Quarrie, who rehearses would-be actors and actresses in brief skits, Then the skits are repeated with= out his interruptions and there's your program. The opening night's playlets were clever and amusing, but many evenings of this sort of thing, we believe, will become rather tiresome. Two of last Sunday's performers selected by a movie scout (here's where Warner Brothers get their publicity) for screen tests— the lucky two were Beth Langford, who did a part identified as “the girl on the park bench,” and Mich= ael Rand, who presented the por= trayal of a boy of 19 whose mother was killed in a traffic accident, Both performances were good, ale though we thought the English woman who played the mother role in a skit with her husband and daughter deserved some reward,

» ” »

Tonight's guest starring will be done by Lanny Ross, who will de= sert the decks of the mythical “Show Boat” to head the “Saturday Night Party,” and by Frank Crumit and Julia Sanderson, popular musical comedy and radio song-and-patter team, who will be heard with Ed Wynn, On the “Saturday Night Party,” which WLW will carry at 7 o'clock, Lanny will sing two solos, and then will join Jane Pickens in a duet, “Merry Widow Waltz.” Miss Pickens also will be heard in solo numbers, The Crumit-Sanderson team (in private life they are husband and wife) will interrupt their first va cation from the microphones in seven years for the engagement tonight with Comedian Wynn (WIRE at 7 o'clock). The couple first went on the air in 1929, and was heard at least once each week until September, when their vaca= tion started.

Ld ” ”

~The 1936 “Football Revue” will be concluded on CBS and WFBM at 7:30 o'clock tonight by Ed Thorgers= sen and Kay Kyser's orchestra. Dee parting from his custom of presente Ing persons prominent in sports, Mr, Thorgersen tonight will review highe lights of the past season and dise cuss games yet to be played, include ing the Sugar Bowl contest at New Orleans and the Rose Bowl game-af— Pasadena, = ”n n @

One of the best-known radio voices in the Middle West will be absent from the airways after toe morrow when Paul McCluer retires after eight years as master-of-cere« monies of his “Sunshine Hour.” Mr, McCluer originated the “Sunshine Hour” as a feature of station WENR on March 15, 1928, later was heard on KYW, and since Dec. 9, 1934, has been on WMAQ.

u ” ®

Network comedians, it seems, are not content to sit idly by waite ing for the CBS and NBC vears end reviews of important news, Phil Baker at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow (CBS and WFBM) hopes to “scoop” his network with a special edition of “The Gasette,” in which, assisted by Bottle and Bettle, he will review important events of 1936. ¥ Stoopnagle and Budd will go the networks and even Mr. Baker one better by predicting the outstanding happenings of 1937. For this’ Sunday afternoon nonsense, try WIRE at 4:30 o'clock.

One of radio’s most popular Voe calists, Harriet Hilliard, will return to the networks for a brief engages ment when she joins her husband, Ozzie Nelson, on Bob Ripley's pros gram which WIRE will carry at 6:30 p. m, Movie contracts will take her back to Hollywood in February for a new picture, her first since she was the singing star of “Follow the Fleet,™ which featured Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. Production of the

| new movie was scheduled to begin

late this fall, but was delayed. ” = n

The always -delightful “Hans Brinker and the Silver Skates” will be presented by the Children’s Civie Theater over WFBM at 11:30 a. m, tomorrow on the “Community Sa= lute” program. The story, as yom | likely know, concerns the adventure of Hans and his sister, Gretel, two A Dutch children who help their father recover his lost health and = fortune. " ” =

Beethoven's Ninth Symphony will consume the entire broadcast hour | of the Radio City Music Hall's program tomorrow. If Erno Rapee con- | | duets you are likely to hear an outstanding performance of this monu- | mental work. He has done it before, and very nicely. | The soloist will be Jan Peerce, tenor; Jennie Fourel, sopranc; Edwina met. |! Eustis, contralto, and Robert Weede, ®— | baritone. Then there will be the turbi's guest with the Detroit | Radio City Symphony and Chdrus Symphony Orchestra on WFBM at —in fact, almost every one but the 3 oO om might. He will i Rockettes. clock orrow sing two Strauss Lieder and the| announcements, are listed in the

PARIS — 7:15 p. m. — Theatrical 5 nn 2 BT metal po L72 uet. The eminent Josef Hofmann is to | Forging Scene from Wagner's, program schedules on this page. “Siegfried” The orchestra will be -w

—8:15 ». m.—Gay Christ-

BERLIN mas Evening. DJD. 11.77 monic-Symphony and John Bar- anus’ Overture; Granados’ Interbirolli tomorrow, playingg the Sec- mezzo from “Goyescas”; the Ber- | ond Piano Concerto (F Minor) by! couse and Finale from Stravinsky's Chopin. Radio appearances by the “The Fire Bird,” and the “Tannveteran virtuoso, author and edu- | j..user” Overture. cator are rare. He played once on Erno Rapee's Sunday evening pro- " 4 = gram last season, but we don’t re- Having given a highly successful | call his appearance with orchesira joint recital in New York last week, | | in some time. Elizabeth Rethberg, soprano, and an eéavesdropper. r | Mr. Barbirolli, whose musical Ezio Pinza, bass, both of the Metro- Also on Monday morning, Dr. H | archaeology has been unearthing | politan Opera, are to appear with low Shapley, Harvard College C | Rossini overtures all year, comes Erno Rapee on WIRE at 9 p. m. servatory director, in a progn up with another for tomorrow's tomorrow. | sponsored by the American Ins! concert, that to the opera, “La |of Science over NBC-Red a ‘Ladra.” He also will con- . 8w | WIRE at 11:30 o'clock will d For the fourth time

| t the First of Sibelius in recent | astronomy. Lm : . 9.58 meg.; at on RE To ok weeks, John McCormack will be, Dr. Howard E. Enders, Pui B meg.

heard on the NBC networks when | University School of Science ¢ RU TR 3; DoRebert Scho- .- en he solos on tomorrow's Magic Key will speak on CBS at 2:30 © : Lauritz Melchior, Metropolitan

Herbert M. Glossbrenner’s topie at 8 o'clock tomorrow morning on WFBM’s “Solving Today's Probes lems” program will be “Strong and Mighty.” Merle M. Sidener’s sub« ject for his 9:30 o'clock broadcast tomorrow morning over WFBM will be “Forgetting the Past™ Other religious broadcasts, for which we have received no further

IS VERY ExALOSVES/ IT MUST BE AIRCOND STORAGE.

Best Short Waves

SATURDAY

GENEVA—4:30 p. m.—News. 9.65 meg.

BOSTON—4:45 p. m —Problem the Pacific. WiXAL. 11.79 meg. 5 N—5 p. m.—Grand Christmas Pantomime. GSD, 11.75 meg.; GSC, 9.58 meg.; GSB. 9.51 meg.

1S THIS (DEA OF GRALE CORRECT? YES ORNQ a 3

mira

ciety, Paul H. Landis, Washington State University, says, “The weaknesses of romance as & paste for marriage are numerous. 1 and selfish, to be highly

LONDON — 9:05 p. m. — “Trini Bouse.” GSD, 11.75 meg; GSC, 558 MONTREAL — 9:30 _p. m. — Plays. CRCX, 6.09 meg. ; , 6.15 meg; CJRX, 11.72 het. - SCHENECTADY —11 »p gages to the Far North. 6.14 meg. SUNDAY BUDAPEST. 8 a. m.—Gypsy Band. , 15.37 meg. BERLIN—-10:10 a. m.—S honic Concert. DJD, 11.77 meg. yup :30 p. m.—Musical Comedy. A-3, 1188 3

meg. BOSTON—4:15 % m.—Pan-Amer- i ican Conference, 1XAL, 604 meg. BERLIN—5:15 p. m.>Sunday Concert. DJD, 11.77 meg

W-—=6 m. —Pamous Soviet Writers. RAN. se meg.

LONDON—6:05 p. m —Cambrid Heath Salvation Army Band. GSD, meg.; GSC 58 GSB,

Monday daylight programs which we have been asked to ¢ your attention includes a new corded series on WIRE at 10:45 m. each week-day morning exe Saturday called “Monticello | Line,” presenting humor and d in the lives of residents of a cal village of Monticello as heard

m.—MesW2XAP,

It seeks bliss, supreme pleasure, to force existence into a

i

SATURN revolves around the sun once every 29% since the plane of the rings is inclined to the plane in planet is moving, we see first one surface and then the each for a period of about ¥5 years. :

years, and, which the

over WLW at 1 p. m.|Monday afternoon in a pr ‘other guests Mill be the dealing with work of the

32