Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 February 1937 — Page 19

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WEDNESDAY, FEB. 24, 1937

OUR BOARDING H

INSTEAD OF TOTING THAT PIE UNDER YOUR ARM, WHY DON'T YOU TRIP THROUGH HERE POSED As TH' DISCUS THROWER 2 WE'LL BE UP FOR A BEDSIDE SEAT, AND HELP YOU TOSS IT POWN TH’ HATCH FOR A NEW

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With Major

Hoople |

OUSE

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HOME WORK, w~ | “THESE ARE SOME NEW SWING RECORDS, == NOSEY/ AH

LAN &

WORLDS RECORDS

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4 FOR THEM = 777

©1937 BY NEA

1 WNOW TH Tune YOU CHANT WHEN YOu USE YOUR FANGS FOR A NEEDLE AND PLAY A PASTRY DiS =~ HOW ABOUT PLAYING THREE PIECES AT ONCE, FAT2 A LITTLE CLOSE TY Ter AST

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74 RVI NM, REG, U.S,

SIDE GLANCES

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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PAGE 19

By Clark

10 FILM PORATION

CASTING DIRECTOR

| OF NEA SERVICE WC PE; 11S PAT OFF

“Now, remember, dearie,

he’s every bit as scared

as you are.”

—By Martin

(1 ADORE COOWNG 1N)

WATCHER EVERYTHING 19 60 HANDY ! THERE'S RUNNING WATER , A STOVE AND REFRIGERATOR, FOLL OF FOOO + FROU\Y, FRESH VEGETABLES ==

TRS TTL E

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oO by United U.S Pat

WASHINGTON TUBBS II

Featare Syndicate, Ine. ON. Al rights reserved

HE WAS NICE TO COOK US A MEAL-~ WHEN WE DO BUY A COOKER WE'LL. BUY IT

[OR JUST ANYTHING TO || 50 YOU'RE STI. THROW | BUB's BACK

HERE LEH ? J06T MY LOCK

AA 7 19 ; © 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T.M, REG. U. 8, PAT, OFF

—By Brinkerhoft

\'T WASN'T

HAD AT

THE FRIED CHICKEN WE WOULD RAVE AUNT HATTIE'S, BUT IT

WAS A MEAL =

LIKE

“WHATLL WE DO

[HEY, STOP HER! SHE'S CUTTIN' TH | FIRE HOSE. Te J —r—N{ X

pre BY GUPPY, I'LL LEARN 'EM ge) : rds

THA. en NN

7 WATER ON A IN SNL

TO SQUIRT) TAKE THAT!

AND THAT’

MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE

OUCK! NEL

SO, WERE SPENDING OUR LAST TWENTY CENTS FOR GAS —

I DON'T KNOW= BUT WE'LL BE TWELVE MILES NEARER HOME

WHEN THAT'S GONE?

LOOK! 1SKE'S WHIPPIN' THE P? / FIRE DEPART -

BUCKAROO! { Np, TOO, |

rr

» 5

- EAN

JUST A MINUTE, VER LADY- | SHIP ~ 1S THAT THE WILL N [WHICH VOU LEFT EVERY: | THING TO MVYRA NORTH?

ANSLEY HOPES 70 CLEAR HERSELF WITH

JEPSON ®

Le

N77 2

WO

THE SAME, MR. JEPSON - AND WY GARDENER WITNESSED ny

Rs

THIS CURIOUS

THE BIRTHPLACE OF THE RMODE. ISLAND RED BREED OF FOWL.

RLD By Willia

WAS THERE EVER A ZERO"

YEAR ™

Tn 1900, there was considerable discussion as to whether that vear was the last of the 19th century, or the beginning of the 20th. However, since there was no intervening vear “zero” between A. D. 1 and 1 B. C., it follows that the first century ended with the completion of the year A. D. 100, and the 19th century ended with the completion

of 1900.

ey

NEXT—What bulb can be used as cake of

RECKONING TIME BY INSERTING A

soap?

Waa

SAY. THAT'S THE PAPER | STOPPED BRADFORD FROM BURN ING, THAT NIGHT’ | HID IT IN THE BUTLER'S

Ferguson i 2

SHE'S A RAMPAGIN'/ THERE 1 SAFE

AINT BUT ONE PLACE, BOYS. HEY, QUIT CROWP!

RR (4 \ () 1937 BY NEA SERVICE. |

Ia), 5 THE YELLER-BELLIED JACK-RABRITS — \ AINT NOBUDDY LEFT TO FIGHT,

“TF M_REC. U.S. PAT. OFF. J

/ AH, WELL! AT LEAST I BLOWED OFF A WEAP O' STEAM. HERE, BUDDIE,

THERE Ny CCE HAVE A CIGAR.

oN

—By Thompson and Coll

PANTRY?!

/ 1 FORGOT ALL ABOULT

AA JOB, SEARCHING

WILL HAVE A FINE

TO OME TO THE Al PANTRY * 1

A DETECTIVE TO | NVESTIGATE A CAN | PUT ON THE SHELF y UPSIDE DOWN .. I'VE KNOWN FOR DAVS, THE

LOCATING WOMEN 1© A CINCH! = 7

{

/ ,

ARE MISSIN

«foe! MORE DIFFICULT TO

ND THAN MISSING REN VES ORNO—

S

COPYRIGHT ISBT JONN Dial Cb

AS ELIZABETH CLARK explains the work of Daniel Bisenberg, head of the Skip-Tracer’s | Co, women who have decided to fade out are vastly harder to find than men. A woman, Mr. Eisenberg main- | tains, is naturally a better actor than a man and she has the aid of { beauty parlors, hair dyes, facial | make-ups and radical changes of

| dress which mere man cannot | utilize.

"8 & NOT VERY OFTEN. As Mar-

# jorie Hillis suggests, even sel-

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

~~

. > A

BRAVE UNSELFISH IF THEY WERE ABSOLUTELY SURE NOBODY WAS WATCHING Tuan? YES OR NO ee.

royou THINK BETTER

NING DOWN, (TTING

5 YOUR ANGWER

————————

in the same way unselfishness and bravery are chiefly efforts to main. tain what we call our self-respect,

but which is 90 per cent the re-

spect and approval of others. Of course in time we grow oertain habiis of wR By bravery or selfishness, ete., but when it comes to a pinch the desire for approval of others and the inner feeling that somehow some. time people will “get on to us” are

the chief things that keep us re. |

spectable human beings. » ” ”

DONALD LAIRD has shown by extended eyperimeny sha

oR »

Be

we do our Keenest thinking while lying down. { According to Edward Pendray, | this may indicate that it was a mis- | take for man to evolve into a standling posture and that those people | who keep their feet on the table in | order to think philosophically are

| | justified. Should this column show

| sudden improvement it may be be- |

| cause 1 have taken to writing it in

NEXT—Are you because vou lack self-confidence

COMMON ERRORS

“I invited Jones, Smith but neither could but none of them could

self-conscious

| | !

Never sal | and Browi

{ come’; sa) | come.”

| If there is one chance in a hun- | Jred of discon ering the causes of | abnormal weather, the effort is | worth making, for agriculture, business, and the whole nation would gain thereby —Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace.

Best Short Waves

WEDNESDAY 5 p. m.—News. 2RO. 9.63 meg. 5:30 p. m. —Recital : ws GSC, 9.58 meg. gg TR 6.05 meg. VEN Netherlands—86 p. m. DG rogram. PCJ. 9.59 meg. M OW 6D m,—Red Army Day. Soviet Opinion and World Affairs. RAN, 9.6 mee

8:15 p DID. 25.4

8:20

ROME— Symphonic

Concert.

of LONDON B.

m. ~-Music and m.. 11.77 meg. — “Food for meg.: GSB,

BERLIN Drama. LONDON Thought.’ 9.51 meg. VANCOUVER

Medicine Showe OJRX, 11.72 mek.

p.m. 9.58

D. Olde CJRO, 6.15 meg.

] |

‘Women’s Clubs to Honor S

ix Leading

Radio Programs After Member Poll;

Hawaii to Salute Roosevelt

REMEMBER THEIR FRIENDS

Between rehearsals for their new NBC-WIRE program Gladys Swarthout and her husband, Frank Chapman, make phonograph re=cordings of their voices for presentation to their friends. Miss Swarth= out and Mr. Chapman are heard in solo numbers during their radio programs which WIRE carries at 9:30 o'clock each Wednesday evening. Tonight they will sing two duets, “Du Du Liegst Mir in Herzen,” a German folk song, and Jerome Kern's “I've Told Every Little Star,” from the musical show, “Music in the Air.”

RADIO THIS EVENING

(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in program announcements caused by station changes after press time.) INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI WFBM 1230 WIRE 1400 WLW 00 (CBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual)

CHICAGO WGN 20 (Mutual Net.)

Dance Or. Bible Stories Doring Sisters Maigery Graham

Dick Tracy Jack Armstrong Singing Lady Orphan Annie

Tea Tunes Airbreaks " " " »

Wattanobe Homestead

Women's News Wilderness Music-Flowers Wheeler Mission " ”

Cub Reporters Jimmv Alen Court Poll Sports

Johnson's Buddy-Ginger Ninging Lady Orphan Annie

Yohnsons Tommy-Betty Sports Lowell Thomas Amos-Andy Revue Lum-Abner Songs

Renfrew Spor; Popeye Labor Talk News

Easy Aces Chuck Wagon Uncle Ezra 4 7 Terry-Ted Diamond News

Beatrice Lillie One Family Lone Ranger " " n " n

King's Or.

00 Cavalcade (5) ” n 180 Family Music 45 " ”

Burns-Allen Family Musie "» " " vr

Gabriel Heatter Diamond Cily Norvo's Or. Tribune-Sports

No Kostelangtz’ Parade Town Hall 15 " ’ " " "

“30 Beauty Box 45 " ” » »

9:00 Gang Busters

Roosevelt Salute Hit Parade Golden Gloves

00 9:3 NEA Program Gladys Swarthout Gladys Swarthout Theater 9:15 " " " " VY v n "

Hamilton's Or, Martin's Or, Kvser's Or.

Paul Sullivan Mary Paxton Bestor’s Or. Fonk's Or.

00 Poetic Melodies 15 News 360 Pryors Or

Amos-Andy Mh sic tarry Bason Ash's Or.

Golden Gloves

indiana Roof

Rilev's Or. Dorsey's Or. n

Moon River

Ligats Out Cammins' Or, Lueas' Or,

URSDAY PROGRAMS

INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI CHICAGO WIRE 1400 WLW 500 WGN 20 (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual) (Mutual Net)

T

INDIANAPOLIS WEBM 1230 (UBS Net.)

Silence

Chuck Wagon

Unannounced . Neighbor Devotions

Larry-Sue Postoffice Cheerio

Good Morning Wake Up Go'den Hour » »

Early Birds Musical Clock

Hymns Hope Alden Tom-Retty K.tty Keene

Streamliners

hapel You Like Tt ’ News Good Morning Apron Strings " id

Alela St. Johns Linda's Love Children Betty Moore Wildeats

Gold Meant

”»

Len Salve Children Beauly Forum Cook'ng School

Sunny Ray Hawaiians Hcaith Talk Children

”» ” ”

10:00 Milky Way 10:15 uality Twins 10:30 rs, Farrell

Livestock-News Get Thin Personal Column ie ” Love Song Gospel Singer

David Rarum Women Only Miniatures Party Line

Love Seng Miss Hewson Len Salve Mark Love Man On Street Nerenade

Garl Alone Quartet Reports Farm-Home

Mary Baker Mary Marin Linda's Love Farm Hour

Gumps Hope Alden + Heten Tremt 45 Darling dd Studio Or. n Wife vs. Sec'y. Markets Mid-day Service

Way Down East Farm Bureau ys ” Farm Circle Reporter Aunt Jenny Cuthertson Big Sister Air School

Sketches Bestor’'s Or.

Ensemble Sally Nelson Painted Dreams Trath Only

1:00 1:15 1:30 19

Music Guild Air _Schoal

Woman's World dd n Legislature McGregor's House Pepper Young Life Dramas Ma Perkins Varieties Vie Sade n » O’Neills

Myrt-Marge ” ”»

Molly June Baker Relax Time Dance Or.

2:00 2:15 2:30 2.45

News Happy Feet NEA Program Musicale

Arthur Chandler Way Down East Mary Sothern Mary Sothern Betty-Boh Good Health samaritan Harold Turner

| 83:00 4 3:15 ds 3:30 Army Band 3:45 3 sid

4:00 Tea Tunes

| 4:15 | 4:30 Chatter | 4:45 Wilderness Road

‘Fashion . Show

Follow Moon Harry Bason

Toy Band Dance Or. Jack Armstrong " ”» Singing Lady Orphan Ann.e

City Sleeps Wellesiey Choir Wattanobe Helen Beheke

Len Salve Margery Graham

| Where to find other stations: Chicago, WBBM 770, WENR 870, | WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND 560,

| |

Good Radio Music

| By JAMES THRASHER

| Operatic activity, one might be led to believe, is moving eastward | | from its traditional centers of Italy and Germany. Since the American | performance of Shostakovich's “Lady Macbeth of Mzensk,” we are hear- | ing more of the Siavic. Balkan and Soviet music aramas. Georges Enesco presented, on each of his two broadcasts with the New York Philharmonic-Symphony, excerpts from operas by his Ruman- | jan compatriots. And tomorrow we shall hear a half hour of a Bulgarian | opera being performed in Czecho- —— | slovakia. The program is scheduled | row afternoon. At 1 m. on WIRE. oe p. m. on NBC-Blue network | vy “may hear P Mendelssohn's | ’ x . blgall stn 4 | Quartet, Op. 44, played by the] whe oR NA tragic Oper, Guar Stradivarius String Quartet. Two Kalojan, writen by Dan ol of its members, Alfred Pochon and Wiadigeroff. It a how | Ivan d'Archambeau, formerly were joe Municipal Theater in rati- | Lombers of the great Flonzaley slava. ‘ { Mr. Wiladigeroff is 87, a prolific | QE, by Schubert and Walter | |composer and former collaborator | piston will be presented by the | with Max Reinhardt. His apera is| gap)jdge String Quartet on WEFBM | said to be a varient of the Joseph land Potiphar's wife motif, set | against a colorful background of

represented by the Quartet in G| Minor. Mr. Piston is well known |

. | |

- | M. MecKissick,

at 2:45 p. m. The former will be | WN

| Byzantine pageantry and Bulgarian | folksong.

" " ”

| Another trans-Atlantic broadcast | will take up 15 minutes of the | American School of the Air” program on WFBM at 1:15 p. m. tomorrow. The Boys’ Choir of St. Ladislaus High School and the Girls’ | Choir of the State Normal School in | Budapest will be heard in a pro- | gram of six Hungarian folksongs.

The first two will be sung in their | original versions, the rest in ar-

| rangements by Zoltan Kodaly. 2 B® B® | Both local stations will chamber music broadcasts

| |

|

as a composer of chamber music and larger orchestral works, and as a member of Harvard's School of Music faculty. He also is one of the six artists on the Columbia Composers Commission. His. Quartet No. 2 will be heard. » =» » The career of Lillian Nordica, America’s first great native-born | prima donna, will be dramatized on | tonight's “Cavalcade of America” | program (WFBM at 7 o'clock). Agnes Davis, young American so- | prano, is to carry the singing por- | tion of the role. The actress for

carry | the speaking part has been

din

Tonight

End of Benny-Allen Feud In Few Weeks Hinted.

By RALPH NORMAN

Women's club members, ed- | ucational and social leaders, dra= matic and music critics and listeners { generally are being polled by the | Women’s National Radio Commit- | tee preparatory to announcement on March 31 of its annual awards. Although opinions of listeners, as reflected by the poli, are considered, final decision rests with an awards committee, and .isteners’ choices may be overruled. The variety pro= gram will be recognized this year for the first time, and excellence n five other divisions--music, drama. news, children's entertainment and adult education—will be rewarded. The comedy award has been dropped, the committee helieving varietv program recognition covers this field, since most comedians frequently feature guest stars.

” u

A musical salute to President Roosevelt will originate in Hawaii at 9 o'clock tonight, and will be carried locally by WIRE. Leading Hawaiian musical organizations, including United States Army, Navy and Marine bands there and the Royal Hawaiian Band are to be heard. The program also is to be short-waved to South America and Europe. | You may have noticed that | Hawaiian broadcasts are free of the static which frequently interferes with

n

other {ransoceanic programs. Honolulu stations are linked with American networks by wire, and are, when receiving or originating programs, as much a part of the networks as are stations in this country. Programs originating in South America, Europe or the Orient are shortwaved to this country and rebroadcast, static often making rebroadcasting difficult or even impossible. "

The person who said that crime | doesn’t, pay didn’t know about current radio programs which make a | business of converting others’, | crimes into profitable shows. Murder is the stock in trade of “Gang Busters,” presided over by | Phil Lord and broadcast by CBS- | WFBM at 9 o'clock each Wednes=- | day night. Cattle rustling may have | been a dangerous enterprise in the old days of the West, but it brings | Joe Granby of the “Lone Ranger” | cast a fat weekly pay check. Alfred | Shirley, menacing Dr. Moriarity of | “Sherlock Holmes,” and Leo Curley, | who gets a part in almost every | crime story dramatized at CBS, are | others whose “nefarious” activities pay and pay well—and the police | aren’t hunting them | Crime, whether you like it or not, | forms a good part of the weekly | radio offerings, and many of the programs are indorsed by law enforcement officers. Mr. Lord's “Gang Busters” is to be presided over temporarily, after tonight, by a former superintendent of New Jersey State Police, Col. H. Norman Schwarzkopf. Mr. Lord leaves this | program and his Sunday “We, the People” for a month's vacation. | Mr. Lord is to begin tonight a | dramatization of the life of Clifford Colorado ‘super | bandit,” and Col. Schwarzkopf will carry on the story next week.

" "”

u ” u

ANDOM notes on the BennyAllen feud-—A “talking violin,” played by Bobby Gilbert, well known in vaudeville, will ad hb at “Town Hall Tonight” (WLW at 8 o'clock) for the benefit of Mr. Allen, but not, I presume, for the venefit of Mr, Benny. Two days after Mr. Allen offered S75 reward for the return of Jack's “stolen” fiddle, he began to regret his joke. He received from listeners 14 real violins, 11 tov fiddles, a badly damaged ‘cello, and a primitive home-made instrument bearing the inscription, “Jack Benny, A. D. 64.” Benny's neighbor children have profited by the feud, for almost every mail brings Jack trick violins and toy bees. The youngsters get them all. The Benny-Allen farce probably will end with Jack appearing on the | “Town Hall Tonight” program in a | few weeks. Mary Livingstone already is in the East, and Jack is

| contemplating a New York trip.

” ” NTERESTING Thursday daylight programs — Al Goodman's Orchestra will serenade early morning listeners in a Mutual program at 8 o'clock. Other attractions of this “Morning Matinee,” will be an

| interview with Betty Lawford, for- | merly of the movies and now of the

cast of the Broadway play, “The Women.” “How Restricted Is the Life of a Patient With Heart Disease” is the title of an “Academy of Medicine” talk to be made on CBS at 1 p. m. by Dr. Ernst P. Boas, associate physician of Mount Sinai Hespital, New York City. A summary of proceedings at the National Education Association convention in New Orleans may be heard on CBS at 2:30 p. m.,, and at 4 p. m. Congressmen will discuss legislation now being considered at Washington. The program, which is to originate in Secretary of the Senate Edwin A, Halsey's office, will be broadcast by CBS.

1 Star of Opera,Radio and Screen FRANK CHAPMAN

“Noted Baritone and A FAMOUS ORCHESTRA

we a Sponsored the Country's Leads w Joe and J Bly Soni

» WIRE—-WLW—-9:30 Irvington Ice & Coal Co. Polar Ice & Fuel Co.

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