Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1937 — Page 15

SATURDAY, JAN. 30, 1937

THE

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

You! He HAS A

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

LOOK AT Him! HES AS PALE AS A BOWL OF STEAMED | RICE—~~IF HE }7 NABBED A | GAT FROM ‘REDDY-TH-FOX 7 THEN A RABBIT CAN GNAW K

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777% M4 77 “4 4 wow! he’s J |

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AN 18 -CARAT |i | HERO, ALL | RIGHTS | tOOK AT TH' YELLOW STREAK DOWN HIS BACK!

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TAKING THE RAVE OUT OF

HIS BRAVERY= | |

INDIANAPOLIS With Major Hoople: SIDE GLANCES

TIMES

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A REL AI Sar

ST a ARG A ASR VP UNA NAAN A. EA Et to 0m YC. ANE SRN 1S VAS SEAR FSA

PAGE 15

By Clark

wo #2100 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T.M. REG. U. § PAT, OFF,

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“Let’s just follow that sight-seeing bus. Then we'll

be sure to see everything.”

—By Martin

WELL ,|F THAT DOESNT BEAT | ALL + SILAS AR PEG MARRIED! | | MARRIED! WHY, SHE NEVER GRUE HIM A [AN XL JUMBLE TILL SHE SAW THEM || TROVGHY ~ TWO OTHER GALS MARIN OVER HM THEN SHE ‘ WANTED HIM HERSELF ! THATS HUMAN NATURE FOR YE

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TO BE HAPPY

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a [orono sy JEN 50 GLAD HES GOW | SURE) |OON'T

SA-ARY | WHY J CONSOLE ME ?

LITTLE MARY MIXUP

1 was NOT: WE WERE OST FRIENDS,

| MAY'S AW. | ——— : ’

NOW! LET'S WEEP OLR MDS ON WHAT WE'RE POWNG + AND WN CASE NOU NEED YO 8%

REMINOED, OY

THEN Nou | SHROVLLO BE TILED To OEATH THAT! HES 6OING TO BE HAPPY AX 3

—By Brinkerhoff

! HY me pocror savs YOUR FOLKS Wiku BE LAID LP HERE

A = a

TIMMINY, MARY I'M GLAD TC SEE You.

IM GLAD You're NOT HURT, ANGELRACE

WASHINGTON TUBBS II

WELL, M'BOY.

FIGHT THE TIGER

/ WELLY WELL { SO YOU WANTA YUP. p— MAN, DO YOU?

pv WHAT \ A REACH! )

LOOK BIG HA

NAW, SIR, FOLKS YOU CERTAINLY | HEREABOUT ARE

SKEERED TO_FIGHT ENOUGH. EVER |ME, AHM A KILLER!

> am—

=] HMM?!

I JusT HAVE To START For

NEEDS ME

\ AROUND -~ )

A Ss

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TEXAS --MY DAD / say” we ‘re GOING To TEXAS, Too.

NN

I MAYBE MoM WOULD = = =

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Ss EN SN

=n ze lok]

—By Crane

BOOK! / Rev! THATS If A PERFECTLY

GOOD CROW- \_ BAR

E OUT. WHY,

I'M JouGH TO0/NOBODY KIN KNOCK ( M I CANT EVEN DO IT MYSELF,

tp WhoPt

1/72 A -

NOT HER FINANCIAL ADVISER. IF | SHE REFUSED YOU THE MONEY, i SLE SURELY MUST HAVE HAD 1 HER OWN REASONS? 4

GET $5000 POUNDS, OR /

MANY TIMES DURING PAST CENTURIES HAS THE VEAR. BREEN SET FOR. THE €ND OF THE WORLD.”

THE YEARS OF 992, Nae, 1335, 1524-, IS32, 1588, 1836, AND 1900 ARE SOME OF THOSE PREDICTED AS THE

END. Zz,

AUSTRALIAN

CROSSUMS HAVE

© 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.

MANY of the dates set for the end of the world were years on which it was known that several of the planets would be grouped together in one sign. Today, such a conjunction means nothing. Such a thing occurred in 1933, when Jupiter, Mars and Neptune huddled together in the Bign of Leo, but few people other than

astronomers knew about it. ; NEXT-=Is the moon of equal brightness in all quarters?

NURSE? COME QUICKLY! [| THINK SOMETHING HAPPENED TH OL LADY’

AND THEN, AS THE THREE HURRY TO THE LIBRARY, MYRA RECEIVES A SHOCK, AS LADY AINSLEY

I WAS IN THE PANTRY AND HEARD THE THUD, AS SHE FELL?

BRUNO? GET THAT FIRST AID KIT FROM mV ROOM! WURRY?

LET'S

Pp SPEAK OF "NATURAL BORN LIARS" 16 ; THERE ANY SUCH ANIMAL?

2 DOES NOT PUBLIC ABOUT CANCER, TUBERCULOSIS

._ ETC.GIVE MANY E a prices N FEARS AND ~

YES OR NO aan A GERMAN phychologist, A. Wenzl, maintains that in childhood truth-telling is due to the habits that are taught the child, but that in the adult truth-telling is a matter of clear thinking about what is true and false. All very (good, but Hartshorne and May, | psychologists, have showh that | some children naturally learn truth- | fulness more readily than others jand that the more intelligent they are the more readily they learn. While the natural-born liar is an exaggeration, yet, some people naturally lie more readily than others and some naturally tell the truth than others. ‘These

more read natural however, are

greatly influenced by environment

and education, 2 CLIFTON R. READ, Publicity Director of the Ametican So

ciety for the Control of Cancer, writes me, “This question is always being thrown at the society.” I have heard the same thing frequently about tuberculosis and other diseases, But, as Mr. Read continues, “The society's position is that cancer education must be sound and conservative; hopeful, but never misleading, and should

" 2 Ld

EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

killed thousands. Our motto Is “Barly Cancer Is Curable. Fight It With Knowledge.” n » o IT USUALLY works happily where the two can work as a team and the public applause is equally divided. This seems also to be true of writing where husband and wife collaborate, also in busihess where one is not boss over the other. But where an actor and actress marry, or where husband and wife each writes under separate names, or where one is the other's boss as in business, although they have common work, their unequal success has caused some notable cases of jealously.

Best Short Waves

SATURDAY Jary m.—Post

BOSTON-—-2 WIXAL 11.79 meg. GENEVA—4:30 p. m.—News, HBL, arn “'Charles the DON-—5:30 p. m.— King. GSD, 11.75 meg.; GSC, 9.58 meg.; GSB, 9.51 meg. BERLIN—6:30 p. m.—Third Reich. JD, 11.77 meg. Piteien) ARIB—T:16 h m.—Theatr Bonnet, toa-d 11.72 Hes 5 . N—8 p. m.—Dance OrchesrONGSD. wis meg.; 8C, 0.68 meg.; GSB, 9.51 meg. SUNDAY BUDAPEST—0 a. m.—Gypsy Band. HAS-3 15.37 meg. BERLIN—10:10 a. m.—Concert, DJD, 11.77 meg. PARIS 12 noon—Concert, TPA-3, 11.88 men. 1:05 _D. OME-2RO. 9.63 meg. BOSTON—5 bp. m.— World's Week. WIKAL, 6.04 meg. MOBCOW—86 Dp m.—Literary eves ning. WAN. 9

Box.

m.—Varied pro-

6 meg. inh N==6:20 p. m.—Ballad cons LON 11.75 meg.: GBC, 9.51 meg

replace blind terror with an alert, And fear os” have

Sound doctrine.

—Atlantie Nog: ol meg.; OJ

Three Networks to Mark President's ~ Birthday With Hour Program Tonight:

Executive's Mother to Be ‘Guest Star’ RADIO THIS EVENING T

(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in program ane nouncements caused by statity changes afer press time.)

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)

DIANAPOL WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)

CINCINNATI WLW 700 (NBC-Mutual)

CHICAGO Ww 2 (Mutual Net)

High School ”» ”» ”» ”» » »

Tow, Hatters Kindergarten

Toy Band High Hatters hinterzarten

Benay Venuto » ”" ” ” ” ”

Tea Tunes Tito Guizar Swing Session ”» » Sports Piano Twins News Concert " ”

Workshop

Bible Ins't. Top Hatters Alma Kitchell Sports

Lullaby Time Hampton Singers

Hamilton Fish Ed Wynn Wilson's Or.

R. Fk D. Hour Sports A. G. Karger

Sander’s Or, U. of Cinei. Donahue’s or.

Saturday Party ” ”

» ” » ”

Hamilton’s

Day's Close Harold Turner

Light's Or Melodies

Chuck Wagon

Sports

Orchestra

Tom, Dick, Harry Or. Dance Or.

BRR® | dye | cans | Taao | ates - res | mn wk | & es GEG2 | 5553 (5803 | 5858 | 5853

Speed Show Serenaders

Barn Dance ”» ”»

”» ”» » ”

Snow Village ”» ”»

Joe Cook ” »

Tribune-Sports Chicago , Sym.

” ”»

Hit Parade World Dances

Ice Carnival Irvin Cobb ”» ”»

” ”» » »

Irvin Cobb ”» »

”» ”» : » ”» ”» ”» ”»

Birthday Ball

”» ” ” »

Unannounced

News Birthday Ball

Birthday Ball

Birthday Ball

”» ” " »

Ind. Roof Lowe's Or. Tokyo Sym.

Shandor RBlaine’'s Or. Ostot’'s Or. " "

Paul Sullivan own Riyer

Sander's Or.

Field's Or,

Jurgen's Or, a "

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SUNDAY PROGRAMS

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)

Flanner House hythm

Rigblems WPA Programs Church of Air " ”» CBS Church ”» ”»

C. M. B, Class ” »

INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)

Silent ”» Nagle's Or. Church ”» ” Radio Pulpit ” » Youth Musie - -

CINCINNATI WLW 500 (NBC-Mutual)

Forum "

Children’s Hour ”» »

Cloister Bells Happy Jack Mission School

CHICAGO WGN 720 (Mutual Net)

Silept

Concert " ”»

cs

L258

sh Sart sd hk

” ” ”» ”»

Stardust

Church ”» ”» Meloay Hour ”» ”»

News H. W. VanLoon Rehearsal

Review Memory ,Lane

Warblers

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fh ts Whee} ey -,,S, ax= | Eun

gr az | wSud | STS | adn

WWW | MIS I01S | pt ps 2 |en=3 S| 3a

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”» ” ”» ”

Cupid Interviews

Bohemians ” ”»

Paris News Headlines

Theater Music ” ”n Gypsy Fortunes New York > ”» -~ -

Bl ” ”» ” ”» ” ”» »

Crazy Quilt Lombardo’s or.

Symph.

Musicale ” -

Dorothy Dreslin Strolling Tom Melody Matinee

Bowers’ Band Choral Voices Thatcher Colt ” ” Metro. Auditions

Civie Choir

Serenade ”n ”»

Sundav ,JFlavers

Magion Talley Stoopnagle-Budd

Cadle Choir Radio City ”n ”

Lutheran Hour ”» ”»

Smoke Dreams

M agleo

» a -

Key ”n

Rabbi Tarshish Echoes

Serenade Interiude

Listen to This Musical ,Camera

We, The, People Sing Time

Melodies Weems’ Or.

Comics »

Smoke Dreams ”»n ”

J. M. Phelps Church Musie Men of Destiny

Church Musie Ensemble Serenaders Alice Blue Dance Or.

Norvo’s Or, Truth Oaly

Weem’s Or. ” ”»

Martin's Or.

| OS ows | wIow

Joe Penner Rubinoff’s or.

Catholic, Hour

Band Concert ” ”»

Ray Knight

Human Relations

Ray Knight Milky Wav

aBED |r oh

nhl Lens

Prof. Quiz Phil Baker

Helen Traubel

Ind, Parade

Jack Benny

Reauty Strands Sunset Dreams

Kayelin's Or.

Evensong ”» ”»

2

- — HIS Wm

Nelson Eddy Eddje Cantor

Amateur Plays

’ ” ” ”

Amateur Plays ” -

” » ” ”»

Musie Today

Hamilton's or.

2

Sow

coco | Bnum | aaa rt | as

Detroit Symph. (With

Lucrezia Bori)

Community Sing

"” ”

Manhattan Familiar, Musie

Rochester Or. (With Kirsten Flagstad)

W. Winchell Shep Fields

Edwin C. Hill

” Jack Randolph Mysteries

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

Jurgen’'s Or. Sky Melody

News Pryor’'s Or. Harvey Hayes » ” News

w Lyman’s Or. El ,Chico

Tee Hockey

Paul Sullivan " " raver's Or. ’ ”

Tucker's Or. Martin's | or,

Indiana Roof Lopez’ Or. Jenes’ Or, ” ”»

Shandor Stern's Or. Barron's or.

Moon River Jurgen’s Or. ” ” » LL

Hamilton's Or. Hamilton’s Or, » ” ” ”

MONDAY PROGRAMS

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.) Chuck Wagon ” ”»

(NBC Net.) Bar Nothing

INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400

CINCINNATI (NBC-Mutual)

CHICAGO WGN 720 (Mutual Net.)

Sing Neighbor Silence News ”» ”

Early Birds Musical Clock » “” ” ” » » ”» ”

Parade Streamliners ” ” » ”

News Hy:nn Singer Apron Strings

Adela St. Johns

Chandler Chats Good Morning Post Office Wake U Cheerio " Golden Hour ” ”» ” ”» Lamplighter Good Morning

Lamplighter Kitty Keene

2 | x) | 2553 |5353 (58

Gold Medal Happy Lone id # Mary Baker Music Dreams

Children

Tw | osx ow | 22 Da

o SEZ

Gov. Murphy

David Harum Women Only Reveries Party Line

Magazine ” »

Come | we

Mrs, Farrell

“owe

Len Salvo

$l ren Harold Turner Cooking School

Get Thin

Linda’s Love

ag Gospel Singer Stock-News Personal Column Love Song Voice of Exn.

Love Song Don Pedro

Gumps Hope Alden elen Trent arling

Honeyboy Mary Marlin Linda's Love Farm Hour

| SSDS

ES te = | a

—— J | ct st Sus

We Are Four Tim, Dick, Harry Man On Street Len Salve

Girt Alone Tom, Dick, Harry Stocks Farm-Home Hour

Down East id " Farm Bureaus " " Farm Circle Reporter Life Stories Dan Harding

S233

Se es

: 3

: Forum 115 ” » 130 45

Bis Sister Se ool of Alr

a

Myri-Marge World Prayer

News Matinee Miniatures

00 15 130

McGregor low Bov Varieties ”» »

Education Curtain Calle Chicago Variety

Spitalny’s or. Follow Moon Harry Bason

Tea Tunes Talk It Over ” ’ " " Irma Glenn

Women's News Homestead

Wilderness Where to find other stations:

Shhel wren | wget !

Jane Courtland hn h

House

Yi }jeties Al Donahue

Texas Muste Wife vs. See’y. Markets Mid-Day Service

Ensemble Lawrence Salerno Painted Dreams Marriage Bureau

School of Air ”» ”

Pepper Young Ma Perkins Vic-Sade O'Neills

olly June Baker Len Salve Concert Or.

Way Down East Marv Sothern Good calth Dance Or.

Harry Richman Marv Sothern Betiv-Bob Samaritan

Harold Turner Laurier’s Or, Margery Graham

770, WENR 870,

Dick Tracy J. Armstrong Singing Lady Orphan Annie

Chicago, WBBM

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

Good Radio Music By JAMES THRASHER

Two important figures in contemporary musical history will have

a place on the week-end broadcasts. both renowed as composers, conductors and performs-

Georges Enesco, ers. Mr. Chavez will be heard on

They ate Carlos Chavez and

WFBM at 7 o'clock tonight while

Mr. Enesco, conducting the New York Philharmonic-Symphony, will come to you over the same station at 2 p. m. tomorrow,

Most listeners heard Mr. Enesco” with Yehudi Menuhin last Sunday night over WIRE, when he appeared as conductor, violinist and composer. Tomorrow he will conduct a first American performance of two excerpts from the opera, “De la Matei Citire” (“According to Matthew”), by his compatriot, the Rumanian Nonna Otesco. Other items will be the “Marriage of Figaro” Overture by Mozart; the same composer's G Minor Symphony and Schumann's Second Symphony. Mr. Chavez will play the dual role of pianist-composer on to= night's program, in which he is to be assisted by Nicolai Berezowsky, violinist. As solos Mr. Chavez will play his Sonatina (you may have heard Bomar Cramer play it here last year); “36”; a “Solo,” and “Fox.” He and Mr. Berezowsky will do his Sonatina for violin and plano, and “Two Spirals,” which Joseph Swigeti has played fre quently, It scarcely is necessary to tell an informed concert-goer that Mr. Chaves is Mexico's leading composer,

nificant in the field of composition as is Diego Rivera in the field of painting. The Mexican artist will succeed Mr. Enesco as the New York orchestra's conductor on Feb. 14. s #2 =»

For the second time this season the beloved singer, Lucrezia Bori, will emerge from retirement to sing

with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra on WFBM at 8 p. m. tomorrow. She will do arias from “La Boheme” and Donizetti's “The Daughter of the Regiment,” as well as a group of 50NES. 2 n uw Mme. Kirsten Flagstad, heard in this afternoon's “Siegfried” from the Metropolitan Opera House, will be back on the air tomorrow night. The occasion will be another of the “good neighbor” concerts which now and then replace Erno Rapee and his symphony orchestra over WIRE at 0 o'clock. This time it will be the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra, Jose Iturbl conducting, with the guest,

JR

Leading Dance Orchestras, Entertainers Booked For Performances.

By RALPH NORMAN

President Roosevelt's birthday will be celebrated by the three major networks with a full hour broadcast —10 to 11 o'clock tonight—which is to include a brief message from the Chief Executive, music by the nation’s leading dance bands and talks by officials responsible for the birthday dances. Almost every station not on emer= gency schedule because of the Ohio River flood disaster is to carry the birthday program. Orchestras to be heard will include Guy Lombardo, Eddie Duchin, Hal Kemp, Benny Goodman, George Olsen, Ted Fiorito, Horace Heidt, Leo Reisman, Glen Gray, Ted Weems and Gus Arnheim, ” » ” Joe Cook has a “scoop” over the older Saturday night variety shows by heading tonight's guest star list with Mrs. Sara Delano Roosevelt, mother of the President. Her interview with the master of ceremonies is to be followed by a dramatization of a boyhood adventure of Mr. Roosevelt. The Cook show will be carried by the NBC-Red network at 8:30 o'clock, and will include, besides Mrs. Roosevelt, Clyde Beatty, animal trainer; Nick Lucas, stage and screen vocalist; Bozo, a “talking” dog; Evelyn Tyner, pianist, and the Three Marshalls, song and comedy trio. There seems to be ne limit to the number of guest performers on a Joe Cook show, so there may be others. = ”n » A galaxy of popular performers is to be heard on three different programs tonight, in addition to the Cook assemblage. Saturday night, it seems, is not the barren radio evening it once was, when broadcasters assumed that everyone was out and radios were unused. At 7 o'clock over WIRE you may hear the pretty Kitty Carlisle, star of the musical success, “White Horse Inn,” who is to make her second appearance with Ed Wynn. If television were here, you would see Miss Carlisle tonight in a Tyrolean peasant’s costume, for she will hurry from the studio to the Radio City Center Theater for a stage performance shortly after the radio program, Nu » Others of fame on stage and screen you may hear tonight are Walter Hampden, not, for once, in “Cyrano de Bergerac,” but as master of ceremonies of the “Saturday Night Party,” a new role for the vet eran actor. Mr. Hampden’s No. 1 guest star will be the famous concert pianist, Mischa Levitzki, ; Floyd Gibbons’ guests for his “Speedshow” program (CBS-WFBM at 8 o'clock) will be Lupe Velez, star of stage and movies and wife of Johnny Weissmuller, who was 10 have appeared with her. Johnny has returned to Hollywood, though, and Walter O'Keefe will pinch-hit for him, » ” FJ We tried to foist this item onto the “Good Radio Music” depart - ment, but failing, we tell you that Minnie, the Singing Mouse, is to make her first sponsored network appearance on NBC's “Barn Dance” program which WIRE will carry at 8 o'clock tonight. And Minnie, through her sponsors, wi'l contribute the first $10 of her earnings to the Red Cross for relief of flood sufferers. So if you're interested in vocalizing rodents, Just tune in WIRE tonight. ¥ 8 =» Mrs. Virgil Lovelace, R. R. 5. will be Indianapolis’ first representative on Phil Lord's “We, the People” program when she faces the NBC microphone Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock, to tell of her experiences as a Nebraska homesteader years ago. Three other representatives of the people will describe their une usual — and usually interesting — experiences. You may hear Mrs, Lovelace and others over WLW af 4 o'clock tomorrow afternoon.

» ” ” TS is to be a week-end of celebration for two popular comedians, Shortly after Jack Benny. and. company. fete. the Fourth of July (read on and you'll see this isn't a typographical error), Eddie Cantor and stooges are to honor his 21st-plus birth day, at the same time saying fare= well to his old teammate, Parkyakarkus, who is to start his own program. : To explain Jack Benny's silliness —Jack is never on the air in the summer, and he says he has an overflow of unused Fourth of July jokes on hand and wants to util« ize them. We suspect there's another reason. He may aim his verbal pyrotechnical display at one Fred Allen, also a comedian, who has been fiddling with Jack's rep= utation as a violinist. Celebration schedule: Jack Benny at 6 p. m. tomorrow on WLW; Eddie Cantor, stooges and guest stars at 7:30 p. m. on WFBM.

rH JRE

Sunshine Biscuit Bakers present another fascinating story of country

life. Don’t miss it!

WLW 8 P. M. (C.5.T)

Norwegian Tr =|

EVERY SATURDAY,

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