Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 January 1937 — Page 34
Tl Ting ans Oy . ~ FRIDAY, JAN.
Toy ERATION
51987 Ee UR BOARDING HOUSE
LA
—
Lo DETR BT TOG eT AT __ THE INDIANAPOLIS
SIDE GLANCES,
TIMES
CHEERIO, MENS HAW, WHAT
STOP HOOTING, A GLORIOLS :
YOU BiG POND CROW, OR YOU'LL HAVE EVERY OWL. IN TOWN FLYING AT us!
RE RRR
ASN RS 3h
ey Lad
NAN & A WE Nr% Bn se UL (7
ZZ.
AN
——
eo With Major Hoople
THERE THEY ao, TH BIG GYPS, AS CROOKED AS TWO PRETZE\S/ TH MAJORS AN EXPERT SKIER ALL RIGHT wr 0 | sLDNG IN AN' OUT OF F\ swiNnaiN’
~ TH! SNOW WILL HAVE TO HAVE AS MUCH CRUST AS HE HAS, TO FLOAT ™' BIG SIBERIAN
alin HE HOOPLES GET THE ICY STARE =
SILAS. CULPEPPER “'! TELL ME ABOUT WIM L ARE WS i} PARENTS teens © 0
TUE RAISED TW YOUNG WHELP SINCE HE WAS KNEE HIGH TO A CRICKET ove AN WS TH ONLY | S08 TLE EVER DONE THAX ; 4 WRC || YM ASHAMED OF
SSN
BUY , oH DOESN'T
WHY! MARY” - WHY DON'T WE THiNK OF THIS REFNREZ LET § TAKE OUR TRAILER AND VISIT AUNT HATTIE IN TEXAS - -sHE ‘s ALWAYS ASKING 71 US TO COME ft
I HOPE TEXAS 1S AWFUL FAR =I WANT TO RIDE LOTS IN OUR NEW TRAILER
.
® 1837 by United Fea ne. !
LOOK, MARY. WE LL HEAD SOUTH, DOWN THAROUEH HERE - THEN OVER TO HERE “TAEN WEST AND --
HOW ‘& THAT, Rat
ture Syndieste, ne. ma. Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. —All rights reserved
WASHINGTON TUBES I
oe AR As HAVE ANNONE we - §
By Clark
ot - fu wrt E NEA SERVICE..INC. T. M. REG. U. 8. PAT. OFF,
O93
“Did you ever stop to think what might happen to you, going at that speed on the wrong side of the road?” ~—By Martin
[HIS ONALE 16 AS NEAREST WIN=OLD J 50 «ww THAT 1) ° RNR LTHIS'S HIS HNOLSE [| EXPLAINS WHY] ’ NO ONE WAS
O\STORA TH DUST HE'S (NY OR HEAVEN ONLY KNOWS 2 WHERE, RIGHT °} Now :
—By Brinkerhoft
I'M PACKING UP TQ START’
—By Crane
TH' AI'DIENCE DOESN'T KNOW THAT OLD METHUSELA RUBBER ~CLAWED AN' TOOTHLESS, LOOK! pian is IN _THINK EASY SAVED THEIR LIVES, 7 x & Fi “BY rN red C WEY © RI] A ir 2
r YW ent Ay Cl
CM ag id
("GREAT JEROSEPHAT ! CALL THE NEWSPAPERS, IT'S A CHANCE TO PULL A BARNUM. PULA BAR
MYRA NORTH, SPECI
1 INSIST YOUR THEORIES JUST THIS, PROVE NOTHING AGAINST ) DR.LEE HING. ME ~ YOU HAVE YOUR. - 7 A GLASS OF MURDERER » WHAT 4d, WATER PLEASE GOING TO
[T Awmost ONE THOUSAND MILES oF "STANDARD, GAUGE , RAILROAD TRACK. WAS LAID IN FRANCE' DURING |l THE WorLD WAR, ‘WITH MATERIALS . SHIPPED FROM
T. M. REG. VU, S,'PAT. OFF.
Ze NSIT / MOUNTAIN “TAZ AEC RIA > IS AFRICA'S RAREST ANIMAL. 4 ONLY ABOUT F/F7Y OF
THESE ANIMALS NOW REMAIN ON EARTH.
© 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC,
THREE SMALL ONES; AND TWO ENORMOUS ONES,
SOUTH AFRICA’S beautiful mountain zebra seems doomed to quick extinction. A few years ago there were about ‘2000 of these animals alive, and a law was passed to save them. But the law was ignored, and now only two small herds remain. vie - NEXT—Is Great Salt Lake as large, now as ever?
py % 9
== THIS IS SOME OF THE MEDICINE == YOU GAVE TO INNJISPECTOR EMPTREE DURING HIS STRANGE E—— ATTACKS..AND YOU ARE Crm
WT
FIST, HE KNOCKED OUT A MAN-EATING TIGER?!
(BY JINGO! THAT'S. WHAT
8 -
—By Thompson and Coll
MYRA! 1 DISTINCTLY SAW You DROP A SUGAR PILL INTO THAT GLASS! J
OF COURSE! IT WAS A BLUFE JACK BUT IT WORKED!
1 BELIEVE THAT WILL BE ALL THE EVIDENCE E'LL NEED MISS HOUSAND
Radio Version of ‘Three Smart Girls’
PAGE
‘Headlines Air Attractions Tonight; - Youthful Singer Is Included in Cast
LAP emg > 3) we
W 4 &
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
IF YOU mean taking a couple.
already in love and giving them some fatherly and motherly advice that will cool their overheated blood to temperature of ice water— no. But if you mean we can train young people in the fundamentals of character, in what makes a good man or woman, teach them by example and precept, as they grow up, what are the traits in each other to look for as a basis for romantic attachment, what are the characteristics that wear well and last through life—yes.
” ” 8
IN THE article by E. L. Thorndike, psychologist, I mentioned
| yesterday on the “Psychology of the "Profit Motive,” he says (slightly
5 *
cond Tie WORL Ore ron INELN IF EVERY BOD COMPLETELY ONCECHONE
2 YES ORNO eee
MORE i 9E SURPRISE —
abridged) “a world run by benevolence alone is as impossible as a world in which men should be fed on coal and sawdust. One would require as radical a change in men’s characters as the other in their digestive apparatus. If it could be attained, it would be difficult to live in with everybody doing what he thought the world needed instead of what he himself wanted to do or what somebody with a genuine want would pay him to do.” . Let
those ' who would - eliminate the}
profit motive from business—in-
stead of educate it—answer this— :
if they can.
. ® 8 3 BRILLIANT FATHERS have a Rant higher proportion: of brilAni sons than do dull fathers, yet
since children of able fathers tend to revert to the general average, owing to the laws of heredity, it always comes as a greater surprise to most people when an able father has an able son than when a dull father has a brilliant one. This is partly because most béople are naturally democratic and like to believe in the- under dog and see him come out on top.
NEXT—Are people as hardboiled as they used to be? .
COMMON ERRORS Never say, “My sister and myself
can go to the party”; say, “MY sis- |e
ter and I can go to the party.”
re There are fashions in politics, too . . . but where an unsatisfactory article of clothing can be thrown
|away in the middle of the season,
an unsatisfactory administration must be endured for four years.— Mrs. Edna Woolman Chase, Chicago fashion authority.
Best Short Waves
FRIDAY
ROME—5 p. m.—News. Royal Oppera. 2RO, 9.63 meg. variate are 5:45 p. m.—Variety Art1900 RD, 11.75 meg.: GSC, 8.58 meg... GSB. 9.51 meg. deast 1 MOSCOW—6 p. m.—Broadcast for Shop Assistants. ' RAN. a ne, Toi 7:30 p. m.—Falry ale by Manired Kyber. DJD, 17 ner. BOSTON—7:45 p. m.—Wor 0! Poetry, W1XAL. 6.04 ep . m.—Program_ © NSc itary Band. GSD
LONDO! 5 marches. 8 meg.;. GSB, 9.51
“11.75 meg.; GSC. 9.5 meg. PARIS—9:40 D. m.—Theatrical Program, TPA-4, 11.72 meg. WINNIPEG—9:30 nr m.—Orchgstra With Solosist, , CIRO. 6.15 meg.: CJRX, 11.73 meg. :
—
| startling hi weekly listeners with
Wher Helen Broderick is pointing ought to be Victor Moore, her co-star ir NBC's new variety show which WLW carries at 8:30 p. m. on Friday . Also on the “Twin Star” program is Buddy Rogers and his
orchestra,
STARS IN NEW VARIETY SHOW
-| movie-goer knows.
RADIO THIS EVENING
(The !ndianapolis Times 1s not responsible for inaccuracies in program ane nounceme; is caused by station changes after press time.)
INDI NAPOLIS WFI M 1230 (CE ; Net.)
WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)
Archer Gibson Club Cabana Randall Sisters Homestead
Tea Tunes y ”»
Wom n’s News Wild rness
on no
pr SemS
Cub Reporters Jimmy Allen Carol Deis Sports
Boh¢ nians Butl: r Program Boh¢ nians . Rent pw
Mary Small
Spor 5 Uncle Ezra
Pope e R. ! eatherton
Terry-Ted New:
Diamond City
Irene Rich Mershon Jack Pearl
cals Soro Neto D | oD GELS | esn
= *
Vari: ties ” ”
os = oo Sw
Kem ’s Or. »” ”
or
Holl: ¥00d Hotel Barn Dance EH ’ ”
(} ‘ith ia Dea) na Durbin) ¥ of
orm | Bas
= o
Phil: delphia Sym. Music Guild ” ” ” oo Sterling
Inte: aational Four Showman
Virg aia Verrill
ki " i 2 8: 8: 8:3 8 9: 9: 9: 9
5853
. Amos-Andy News Harry, Bason Gray's or.
Mort mer Gooch News Duc! n's, Or.
5858
ee S222 or
Shandor : Hamp's Or.
Indi: na = Three T's or. ]
Low¢ s Or. Stab e's or.
”"
Snowe
oh dtd tt ns
INDIANAPOLIS
CINCINNATI WLW 700 (NBC-Mutual) Toy Band Jack Armstrong Singing Lady Orphan Annie Johnson Family Ellis Frakes Bob Newhwall Lowell Thomas Amos & Andy Hot Dates Lum-Abner Singing Sam Unannounced
Death Valley »” ”» Chandler's Or. Twin Stars ” ” First Nighter
Joe Sanders Week’s Or.
Paul Sullivan Minstrel Salute Moon River ” ”
Meroff’s Or. ”» ”n
CHICAGO WGN 720 (Mutual Net) Margot Reibel
: Singing Lady
Margery Graham
Dream Shi
p Buddy & Ginger
Unannounc Orphan Annie
Chuck Wagon
Melody Time Sports
Hamilton's Or. Lone Ranger Jergen’s Or.
Diamend City Nervo's
Tr, Tribune-Sports
Kavyelin’s or. Behind Camera Hamilton’s Or, Weems’ Or. ; Martin’s | or. Dance or.
Jurgen’s Or.
SATURDAY PROGRAMS
INDIA VAPOLIS WEF VM 1230 (CE
Net.) (NBC Net.) Che
Chow Time
Wagon aK Hit Leather
Early Birds
Mugical Clock
Fred News Vari; ies Blue! rds
Rich: rd Maxwell Let's
Feibel Streamliners ”» » ”» ”»
Hymns Mary Baker
Pretend Manhatters [1] ” ”
Child ‘en ” ” oY » ”» »”
Louise Essex
SSDS | PP 0 | www»
ft fd i
Home Town Safety Club ” »
Farm Hour ”» ”»
A Ci pella Choir Cha; es ,Heurter
Hall! = Or. 5
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400
Bromley House .
" CINCINNATI WLW 500 (NBC-Mutual) Swing Time News Lee Erwin
Good Morning Gale,
Breakfast Club ” ”
Jewish Service
Sweethearts Raising , Parents
Musie Clubs
American Schools Livestock
Romance Melody Medicine In Orient
"CHICAGO GN 720 (Mutual Net)
Silence n ”»
Good Morning ake Dn Golden Hour
”» ” ”» ”»
Good Morning » »
Len Salve . M. Melodies Get Thin a > ”»
Mark Love Harold Turner Betty Crocker Len Salve
Youth Call Gcenia Fonariova Fars Hour
Melody Time June Baker Man On Street Your Neighbor
” ” ”» ” Fara Bureau if 2 arn Circle Reporter Buff: lo. Presents Cr Capers
Medi ation Danc¢ ‘pators Ens¢' nble New:
go bus | S853 | S253 | B8EE
-
bh fuk fu bud | fk fk nd pt TOISAS AD | ob po pk pt
g|&
Buffalo
Continentals
Jot Bo
Melody Time Orchestra Markets ” ”»
Gill’s Or. » ”»
Organ Recital Ensemble
Hern m’s Musicale
EF EHEEY
Tone Tours . Revue ” ”_. ”
Kaye's Or. Ramblers Gracey’s Or.
Capt rators 4) »”» » ” ”»
” ”»
Ann Leaf
1d Eton Boys Go en
Melodies ”
” Dailey’s Or, » ” 3
Concert Or, ”» ” ”» ”»
High School ” ” ” ”
Top Hatters ”» »
Kindergarten
i | Lesto0 | WNW | pi a Jad H203 | H35LS
oD | heh
” ”» ” ”
Kin dex za rien
Melodies |
Harold Turner Melodies
Where to find other stations:
WMAQ 67! ; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750;
Chicago, WBBM 770, WENR 870,
Gary, WIND 560.
Good Radio Music By JAMES THRASHER =
The n¢ vly wedded Rosa Ponselle, undismayed by all that was said
about her (‘armen last year, will retu
tomorrow { ) portray again Bizet's Gypsy cigaret girl.
cast the op raat 1 p. m There's objections
little doubt ‘that the Metropolitan management raised many ;0 Miss Ponselle’s reappearance.
rn te the Metropolitan Opera House WLW will broad-
Critical opinion may be
potent, bu it hasn't a chance against box office figures. And the glamorous |tosa really packed them in the popi lar work last season. There wil be a new Don Jose tomorrow, | Sydney Rayner, the young ‘New Drleans tenor who made his debut at the Paris Opera Comique ar | went on to success at the Paris Q jera and various Italian opera hous is. Natalie I odanya, a native New Yorker and noted NBC networker, will be the Micaela. Escamillo will be sung by Ezio Pinza. Other familiar nam s in the cast are Helen Oelheim, C 2orge Cehanovsky and Louis D’An elo. Genaro Papi will conduct & d Marcia Davenport comment. ” ” ”
Eugene : C rmandy certainly isn't
much untricd music. For instance, he will op n tonight's program— WFBM at ¢ o’clock—with the Prelude to Act : [I of Wagner's “Lohiengrin.” The | comes the thrice-fa-miliar air ‘w iich seems destined for immortality "as “Handel's Largo”; George Sch mann’s. “Dance of the Nymphs an: Satyrs” and Sibelius’ “Finlandia.” For those Wo haven't thought
i
about it, there is a “commercial” Sibelius as well as the Sibelius who has given us some magnificent symphonies. “Finlandia,” the “Valse Triste” and their like are of the readily saleable variety. = » ” Abram Chasins ends his lectures] piano recital broadcasts tomorrow morning at 11 o’clock on the NBCRed network. He will play his own composition, “Parade,” which was the first American-written work that Arturo. Toscanini ever conducted. After that, if we were Mr. Chasins, we'd have the score stuffed and mounted and kept under glass. The conducting number will be a transcription of the Bach Passacaglia. The pianist assisted by his 12-year-old pupil, Constance Keene.
The last scheduled broadcast in a series of programs sponsored by the Mid-West Council on International Relations, which has its office at 8 E. Market St. is to be carried by WFBM at 9:30 o'clock tonight. Council officials request interested
again will be |]
New NBC Programs Are Found Tuneful but
Lacking in Humor.
By RALPH NORMAN A re-enactment by Deanna Dur-’ bin, Binnie Barnes, Alice Brady and Charles Winninger of -their new film, “Three Smart Girls,” on “Hollywood Hotel” (WFBM at 8 o'clock) headlines tonight's radio’ entertainment. Listeners to Eddie Cantor’s Sun-: day evening programs already are familiar with 13-year-old Deanna
Durbin’s beaufiful voice. Deanna. is the second child star developed - by Mr. Cantor in the past year— Bobby Breen, singing star of “Rain-"
‘| bow on the River,” is the other.
The Misses Brady and Barnes and Mr. Winninger, who will be heard. tonight in their movie roles, every “Three Smart : Girls” is now on the Apollo screen. Tonight's “Hollywood Hotel” broadcast likely will be Dick Powell's last, although CBS program notes for next week list his name at the:
carried in this space earlier this week, indicate that Warner Brothers - - will allow the singing master of ceremonies no more time on the air; although he may be heard in a War-ner-sponsored program or on Sundays, since his movie contract is day. : Doubtless announcement will be made tonight indicating Powell’s successor on this CBS feature program.
» ” ” We also call your attention to two new NBC programs which were premiered last week and which will be carried by WLW
tonight. The first, Rex Chandler's “Universal Rhythm,” will be carried at 8 o'clock. The other, starring Victor Moore and Helen Broderick, may he heard at 8:30 o’clock. Mr. Chandler's network premiere was sufficiently auspicious to indicate listeners may expect a tuneful half-hour of modern music, but without, we hope, some of the mediocre comedy which added nothing to the opening performance and detracted somewhat from its enjoyment.
# un. 2
Like some of the new CBS offerings, the Moore-Broderick show
features excellent talent, but falls short of excellence because of poor lines. Even the very funny Mr. Moore, who stole scene after scene in “The Golddiggers of 1937,” can’t be amusing when his lines are dull. He can, perhaps, in the movies, but not at the microphone. : The real star of the opening “Twin Stars” show was not Mr. Moore nor Miss Broderick, but Buddy Rogers, whose band is lively and whose vocal solos always sound good over the loudspeaker. Both - Miss Broderick and Mr. Moore are éxcellent entertainers, and if given a chance, doubtless will brove it to listeners. ; 2 #8.»
Listeners may have been surprised to hear Mutual's recorded broadcast at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening of President’s Roosevelt’s message to Congress. The British Broadcasting Co. regularly rebroadcasts important daylight speeches for benefit of evening listeners, but this was the first such undertaking by an American network. ; Mutual, incidentally, is the only network which uses recordings, although many individual stations do so. These programs sometimes called “electrical transcriptions” are . sent to stations in the form of rec- : ords similar to those phonographs. ”n » 2 Meri Bell, featured singer with the CBS “Five Star Revue,” which is heard on a partial network at 12
nesday and Friday, attributes part of her network success to Frank Sharp, WFBM manager. She Was singing at the local station when Mr. Sharp introduced her to Guy Lombardo when the maestro made
studios. Guy liked her voice, and recommended her to Gus Arnheim, who
‘| engaged her to sing with his band. -
More luck came her way when she visited the NBC New York studios and failed to squeeze into a crowded elevator. On the next car she met a friend accompanied by an an-" nouncer introduced as Dell Shar-’ butt. Today, Dell is her husband. Meri Bell's mother, Mrs. Myrtle Balsley, formerly of Indianapolis and now of New York, is visiting® here this week. -
a-~ wv
Philadelphia Orchestra
Leopold Stokowski Eugene Ormandy Conductors
YY. J. Cameron “Business and Society”
WFBM at 9
Columbia Network
w
AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK
‘at Indianapolis
. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Oorporation
persons to call or write WFBM urging continuance of the series.
head of the cast. Reports from . Hollywood by Ruth McTammany, = .
said to permit broadcasts on this = *
Mr, °
used on
to 12:15 p. m. each Monday, Wed-
a CBS broadcast from the WEFBM
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