Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 January 1937 — Page 31

FRIDAY, JAN. 29, 1937 OUR BOARDING HOUSE

With Major Hoople

~ AA A >

77 Zi 77 ANOTHER “7 1 7 OANGLAND Fr 7] REVENGE Z 4 KILLING ~~ : LISTEN ZZ, A TO TRIS! Z A TR'VICTIM, Y NO DOUBT, | [ HAD BEEN RESPONSIBLE ) FOR TH’ CAPTURE OF SOME UNDER- | WORLD

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BEGAD TLL SEE THE CHIEF 3 AT ONCE, AND 3 DEMAND A J BODYGUARD /

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 31

SIDE GLANCES

don’t come along.”

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© 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T.M. REC. U.S. PAT. OFF. {

¥ i ©) 1937 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T.M. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF,

By Clark

Pye |

“You must be the life of these conventions when I

—By Martin

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5353863

WIRE May Stage Refugee Barn Dance;

Errol Flynn and Anita Louise Preview

Of ‘The Green Light’ to Be Broadcast

RADIO THIS EVENING

(The Indianapolis Times Is not responsible [or inaccuracies in program announcements caused by station changes after press time.)

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230

(CBS Net.) (NBC Net.)

INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400

CHICAGO WGN 720 (Mutual Net)

CINCINNATI WLW 700 (NBC-Mutual)

Archer Gibson WPA Randall Homes

Tea Tunes » ”

Women's News Wilderness

usie Sisters tead

Margot Reibel

Toy Band Sing ng Lady |

Jack Armsirong Story Lady

Orphan Annie Margery Graham

Bohemians Butler Program Bohemians Renfrew

Cub Reporters Jimmy Allen Carol Deis Sports

Johnson Family | Buddy & Ginger Harold Turner Orphan Annie

Johnson Family B. McKinley Bob Newhall Lowell Thomas

Mary Small Unele Ezra Terry-Ted Diamond City

Sports Popeye Kate Smith News

Amos & Andy Hot Dates Lum-Abner Singing Sam

Chuck Wagon

Melody Time Sports

3552355582523

Irene Rich Unannounced Jack Pear)

Varieties

Kemp's or.

so Ld

B. R. Pogue James’ Or. Death Valley

Hamilton's Or.

Lone Ranger i) "

Boliyniod Hetel “(With Errol Flynn)

Barn Dance

Bob Becker Diamond City Norvo's Or. Tribune-Sports

Chandler's Or,

Twin Stars

Philadelphia Sym.

Upton Close Virginia Verrill

Music Guild Varsity Show

First Nighter ” » Vaisity Show

Kavyelin’s or.

Behind Camera

Mortimer Gooch

ews Duchin’s Or. » "

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Amos-Andy News Harry Bason Gray's Or.

SoD | 0PVP0 | XRNX | Muda | On| Tar | akan hs wees | + ” = rm yo zg o

vt Bt - or

Hamilton's Or.

ecms’ Or, Good Earth

Paul Sullivan instrel Salute " ”»

Shandor Hamp’s Or, Kirk's or.

Indiana Roof Lowe’s Or. Ravell’s ,or.

— 3 5323

Moon River Hallett's Or. ” ” ” ”

Donahue's Or. Jurgen's Or.

SATURDAY PROGRAMS

INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)

CINCINNATI WLW 700 (NBC-Mutual)

CHICAGO WGN 720 (Mutual Net)

Chow Time

Chuck Wagon ” " Hit Leather

Swing Time

Silence " News ’

Early Birds » ”»

» ”» » ”»

Musical Clock ”» ”

» ”»

slat adr

Lee Erwin Go Morning °

Good Morning od J Cheerl » »

Wake Up Golden Hour

Fred Feibel Streamliners » ”

ran S352

News » Apron Strings i” Binebirds Richard Maxwell Let's Pretend

Hymns Mary Baker Manhatters

Children’s Hour

” ”» »

Music Club Bromley House Home Town Safety Clud

Rex Battle Farm Hour

Captivators Allen Villiers Hall’s Or.

i

American Schools

Breakfast Club "

Good Morning Jewish Service » yy

Len Salve A. M. Melodies Get Thin

Sweethearts Raising JParents

Music Clubs

Mark Love Harold Turner Betty Crocker Len Salve

Livestock Romance Melody Medicine Key Men

Youth Call Gerria Fonariova Farm Hour

Musical June Baker Man On Street Unannounced

Carnegie Sym.

Jack Shannon Farm Bureau Farm Circle Symphony

OLAS TD | eh et pt nt ES | £53 HER

dd Sk . or

Our Barn » ”

Musical Orchestra Markets Service

| =RUT THE BOY \ WASN'T HURT A BIT.

WHAT 4A Sash’ /

ALT WHERE 1s THE BOY 2?

-WHERE 5 ANGELFACE 2

( HE § DOWN THE \¢ ROAD THERE -- THERE DOESN'T SEEM T® RE ANY ONE TO LOOK ouT

AETER HIM... PooR XiD

STi

THEY TELL Me AS FOLKS ARE NoT BaowY HurT AND WiLL RE ouT IN A WEEY

—R - DAK ERNOER ~

—By Crane

HAT T MIGHT HAVE KNOWN THAT)

OLD WINDBAG WOULDN'T BET ON ANYTHING EXCEPT A SURE THING.

a

cS THE BUTTON, THE MAGNE EET AND THROWS HIM OFF

(2% THE ‘ENTIRE RING'S A MAGNET. Whu F

T GRABS A. X BALANCE, THEN EASY

TESSUP

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Na

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MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE

I MIGHT HAVE SUSPECTED YOUD WALK RIGHT IN,LKE THIS.

BUT I WAS AFRAID, IF I

PERHAPS YOU'D LIKE ME TO CALL THAT GENTLE LOOKING BUTLER YOU'VE SEEN.

"BUT I'LL GET My MONEY BACK, AND PLENTY MORE , BESIDES, YES, SIREE! CONTRAPTION SO IT'LL LOSE FIGHTS, As WELL AS WIN EM.

I CAN FIX THIS

CALL HIM, IF YOU MUST... BUT FIRST, GIVE ME A CHANCE TO EXPLAIN WHY I'M HERE! My PLIGHT 1S DESPERATE! T MUST S)

HAVE 50 THOUSAN POUNDS IMMEDIATELY?

Nl TT i pe

\ ” |

s a

I DON'T UNDERSTAND WHY YOU COME TO ME... SURELY, LADY

D AINSLEY..

MY AUNT REFUSES ME, OUTRIGHT! T THOUGHT YOU MIGHT PUT INA GOOD WORD FOR ME... SHE SEEMS TO TRUST YOU... TD MAKE SURE YOU WERE DOUBLY REPAID=—

"ARE HAPPILY MARRIED

LIEN TO MORE LE NG |

BE SONHAPPILY, MARRIED ONES;

)

GEORGE BERNARD SHAW savs his beauty secret consists in using only cold water, with no soap, on his face. It certainly has produced amazing results in his case—results, however, on which experts in pulchritude disagree. But, according to Joe Mozart, artist, and judge in the Atlantic City beauty contest, happy marriage is an excellent prescription for beauty. Beyond question urhappy marriage

tends to wreck a woman’s beauty about as fast as anything that has

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

KEEN TOO

RARD YO FACE, 16 IT A GOOD HABIT 70 SAY "I WON'T THINK ABOUT THEM NOW; I CAN FACE THEM " BETTER TOMORROW

YES OR NO cm 2

y \ S(T NOT SIGNIFY A HEALTHY Oa NATURE JO FEEL You

No Be

COPVRIORT BT SON Pid oy

IT IS A splendid habit, provided you apply it to problems

that do not have to be solved on the

spot and problems that no amount of worrying likely could solve. When you receive disturbing news from home or friends, if you can do nothing about the situation and can say “I will put off worrying about this until tomorrow” it will often act as a great buffer and often by tomorrow you will find you don't need to worry about it.

IT

ever been devised short of mutilation,

~~.

"SIGNIFIES a childish set

trait in one’s personality is more of a drawback in getting along with other people. You may think it is just a feeling you have toward this one person and that you have a right to “get his goat.” But it is an indication of a deepdown lack of emotional control and personality development in yourself.

NEXT—Are you a natural-born or just an educated liar?

COMMON ERRORS

Never say, “He went only that far”; say, “so far.”

I have the soul of a lyric soprano, a free, lilting soul. Not the cold, calculating soul of a colora-

tura—Amelita Galli-Curci, opera star, surveying results of her goiter operation.

If we cannot practice good manners in public life, democracy will

be in jeopardy.—Dr. Harold W.

Dodds, president of Princeton University.

Best Short Waves

FRIDAY ROME-—5 p. m.—News, Voice. 2RO, 9.63 meg. LONDON-—-5:45 bp. mn Symphony Concert. GSD. 11.75 meg.; , 9.58 meg.; GSB, 9.51 meg.

Midnight

MOSCOW—6 p. m.—Arctic Summer. RAN, 9.6 meg. BERLIN—17:30 Pp: m.—Works of Haydn and Mozart. DJD, 11.77 meg. LONDON—8 p. m.—Kipling's ‘Just So Stories.” D, 11.75 meg... GSC, 9.58 meg.; GSB, 9.51 meg. WINNIPEG—10:30 m.—Orches- . hy 6.35 meg.; CJRX,

Broadcast Shorts

The two harps, featured by Rex Chandler's Universai Rhythm orchestra (WLW at 8 o'clock), permit special sweeps and special string effects, but they never are used for rhythm,

Mr. Chandler uses an unusual method of rehearsal. Instead of conducting, he delegates the baton to an assistant and listens to the music from a control room, where it sounds as it does through your loudspeaker. When a number satisfies him, a record is made and the orchestra dismissed. Changes in the score are made from the recording to be used at the next rehearsal. n EJ n

Helen Broderick and Victor Moore, comics on WLW’s Twin Stars broadcast at 8:30 o'clock, have started revising famous love stories for radio presentation and under their editing Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Columbus and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Revere rise to new heights. Tonight they are to present a version of Josephine and Napoleon. The other half of the twin bill will be songs by Buddy Rogers and Mary Martin. n » on A change in the American sleeping habits has been noted by John J. Karol, CBS research director. “This change,” says Mr. Karol.” is due entirely to radio. Ten years ago America’s bedtime outside the big population centers was 9:30 o'clock. Now, because people stay up later to hear favorite radio pro-

grams, bedtime comes at about 11 |

p. m. for most of us.” 5 ” ” If you were listening to Fred Allen's feud with Jack Benny last Wednesday night you probably were

had no reference to any living person, etc. For a few moments even the studio audience didn't know what

to make of it and there was a

”» ”» ”»

Forum ro ”

Capers

mS

oh “SND

= >

Herman's Musicale ” ” ” ”

bot n

Won

ll uZ

Commerce Dep't. Revue

w = >

Carnival ” i » ”

lp - wew

Ann Leaf Spelling . Bee

Lu

Concert Gill's Forum Len Salve

Opera ” ”» »

Or. Or.

» ” »

Kay's Or,

» - ” Margot Rebeil - Len Salve » ”» LU ”»

Dance Or. Harold Turner Lanin’s Or.

2

High School . .

Kindergarten » ”n ”»

grb ran 53%

a. or

Toy Band Top Hatters Kinder garten

Herman's Or. ” ”»

Sterney’s Or.

Where to find other stations:

WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND 560.

Chicago, WBBM 1770, WENR 870,

Good Radio Music

By JAMES THRASHER

“Siegfried,” happiest and most heroic of the great music dramas that make up Wagner's “Ring of the Nibelungs,” is to be the Metropolitan Opera’s offering on tomorrow’s broadcast on the NBC-Blue network (we're not sure at present about WLW), The opera is scheduled to go on

the air at 12:40 p. m.

The current giants of the Wagnerian world, Lauritz Melchoir and

Kirsten Flagstad, .will be heard in® the principal roles of Siegfried and Bruennhilde. Also in the cast are Karl Laufkoetter, Friedrich Schorr, Edward Habich, Emanuel List, Kerstin Thorborg and Stella Andreva. Artur Bodanzky is to conduct and Marcia Davenport again will be the commentator.

“Siegfried” is packed with what might be termed ‘good theater” as are few other Wagner operas. There is the early scene in which the young hero reforges the broken magic sword of his dead father, Siegmund, and cleaves in two the anvil of his foster-parent, the dwarf Mime. Then there is the second-act battle between Siegfried and the “monstrous worm,” Fafner, who, in the shape of a dragon, guards the Rhinegold. After the taste of the dragon’s blood comes the beautiful and lyrical scene in which Siegfried understands the language of the birds. The third act takes “our hero” to Bruennhilde’s rock where, overcoming his divine grandfather, Wotan'’s, resistance, he pierces the magic fire and frees the sleeping goddess from her spell. So love comes to Siegfried and Bruennhilde (boy meets girl, even in heroic Teutonic legend) but the power of the gods is broken. 0, it’s a grand spectcale, no mis- | take. But it is an opera which must be—colloquially speaking—a pain in the neck for the stage manager. Often as not, something happens to the anvil in the process of being broken. Now and then it falls apart when the sword is several feet above

momentary silence until it was realized that Harry also was kidding |

Mr. Benny.

” #

=

Helen Hayes, actress on the NBC dramatic series, Bambi, has been selected to receive the National Speech-Arts Fellowship 1936 gold medal for the finest diction and most effective speech. When notified she had been so honored, Miss Hayes said that her diction is the result of much training. “I nearly lost a role that I wanted very much because I had a slight accent,” she said, “and I determined then to train my voice properly.”

TONIGHT UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO NIGHT ON

|

it. And at the recent Metropolitan

ne

BROADCAST EVERY WEEK FROM A DIFFERENT COLLEGE CAMPUS

performance, Mr. Melchior had to smite twice before he got any results. Quite a comedown for Wagner's stalwart “he-man.” The battle with the dragon also has been the cause of quite disrespectful laughter on many occasions. The fierce reptile has a way of looking like a monster replica of

the green paper “worms” which we used to blow out and scare the

girls with at parties. Of course, if youre a confirmed | and reverent Wagnerian these | things don’t bother much. Nor do | they bother if you have an ear, attuned to the truly god-like music | which fills the score. And this can | be enjoyed by radio without benefit of anvils or the scaly beast. | |

Boake Carter, CBS news analyst and commentator, has renewed his contract for another year. It marks his fifth year of sponsorship by the same company and his seventh on the air. Mr. Carter is available to local listeners at 6:45 Mondays through Fridays over WBBM. » » ” Vincent Lopez is well known for his version of “Nola,” but the piano-playing maestro very nearly passed up the number. That was in 1921. Mr. Lopez was running through a stack of music in a | publisher's files and went by the number. to try it. He made the number famous and it did the same for him.

om

The publisher urged him | |-

'Varsity' Hour to Be Heard From U. of Chicago Tonight.

WIRE likely will broadcast the weekly Barn Dance from the Fair Grounds refugee camp tonight, The necessary technical arrangements have been made and the matter is in the hands of relief officials at the Manufacturers Building.

Authorities there said they would welcome the program as entertainment, but fear that the arrival of more persons would cause too much confusion for proper presentation. The program is scheduled for 8 o'clock,

o 8 »

Fred MacMurray, who succeeded Dick Powell as master of ceremonies and singer on Hollywood Hotel, had one of the fastest rises to fame in motion picture history. Discovered in 1934 while playing a saxophone in a musical comedy, the tall actor has appeared in 13 pictures, usually opposite outstanding actresses. Tonight his guests on Hollywood Hotel (WFBM at 8 o'clock) are to be Errol Flynn and Anita Louise, presenting several scenes from their latest picture, “I'he Green Light.”

Mr, Flynn is a veter of Holly-

| wood Hotel, already having pre-

sented previews of “Captain Blood” and “Charge of the Light Brigade.” Mr. MacMurray will be supported in the musical portion of the program by Frances Langford, Anne Jamison, Igor Gorin and Raymond Paige's orchestra.

» # ”

Tonight's Varsity Show on WIRE at 9:30 o'clock is to be presented from the University of Chicago campus. John Held Jr, college life cartsonist, is master of ceremonies.

The varsity band, the glee club and the university mixed choir of 50 voices will be featured. Bob Fitzgerald, football captain, will accompany himself on the piano when he sings his composition, “Can Love Be Gone?”

Last week the same type program was presented from the University of Michigan. Letters were received indicating that many alumni clubs in all parts of the country had held gatherings to hear their Alma Mater on the air and join in the singing of the school songs.

a LJ ”

Hal Kemp and his orchestra are to be presented with a silver cup during their 7:30 p. m. broadcast over WFBM. Mr, Kemp's aggrega= tion recently was chosen as the nation’s most popular dance band in a poll of 1135 dancing academies. Arthur Murray, National Institute of Social Dancing president, is to present the award. During tonight's broadcast the orchestra will play “Hand in Glove,” one of numerous good tunes from this year's Princeton Triangle Club show, “Take It Away.” Kay Thompson and her Rhythm Singers are to sing: “That's What I Learned in College” and “Pennies From Heaven.”

Philadelphia Urchestra

Leopold Stokowskl Fugene Ormandy Conductors

Harper Sibley President, Ul. 8. Chamber of Commerce

* WFBM at 9

Columbia Network *

AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK

at Indianapolis

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

HAL KEMP and KAY THOMPSON

Chesterfield Friday Night Show