Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 March 1937 — Page 47

FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1937

OUR BOARDING HOUSE 774 AFTER ALL THESE YEARS, : HOOPLE, Cuck-CLiKK), T'D 4 SAY YOU HAVEN'T CHANGED i MUCH ~~sSTILL TRYING TO FORE A HOLE IN SOMEONE ELSE'S BANK ROLL WITH TH' SAME OLD AUGER =~ THAT OLD GREASE-SPOTTED VEST MUST HAVE AN ELASTIC BACK ~L SEE IT COVERS TH 10-INCH EXTENSION YOU'VE ADDED ONTO YOUR

BAY ©

wiNDOW / 7

rl

With Major Hoople

WELL, TOM, 1'D RECOGNIZE YOU IN “THE DARK “UME « 1 NEVER COULD FORGET THE WAY YOU CLICK YOUR FALSE TEETH EGA OF A TRUTH, YOU OUGHT TO SEE ADENTISTS! 1 DETECT A SLIGHT RATTLE, LIKE MAYRE ONE OF YOUR IMITATION TuSKS ISA LITTLE LOOSE, OR IS THAT HIGHER UP IN YOUR HEAD 2

JUST TWO TURTLE DOVES BILLING AND BociNe

7,

A FEW CRACKS

FROM TWO OLD MUGS ==

=

3511232 BY

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

SIDE GLANCES

at

——————

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 47

By Clark

:

T.M. REG. U. 8: PAT. OFF. . © 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.

“If I can’t claim exemption for these dependents, then I'm not going to help you with that tax return.”

—By Martin

OH DEAR! 1 WAIT! TL TURN THRE HAD NO \DEAL LIGHTS ONL SHH A = WE WW WAS 50 MUSTINT AWAKEN LATE AUNT PENNY

3

STEPHEN !! WHAT ON EARTH ~ 2

WE'D STARVE IF WE DIDN'T-WE HAVE ONLY A LITTLE MONEY /

ve WE'RE SMART Bd TO BUY THINGS OF

WASHINGTON TUBBS Hi

BEEN IN OUR TRAILER! IT'S ALL MUSSED UP

z (ox 0oten.

fh FILLES Bo 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.

HEAVENLY ORY! SWE MOVED EVERY STICK OF FURNITURE

T.

—By Brinkerhoft

LOOK, THIS SEAT

PULLED OFF --HE WAS LOOKING FOR SOMETHING, JIMMINEY ! WHAT'S THIS

1 FE

PULL IT

HAS BEEN / _ gee | OUT QUICK!

~~

—By Crane

IF YOU NEED ANY | VOU | THANKS) MAN, THATLL MORE DOUGH, BOW | BET. | BOVS, / BE THE FIGHT

WOW, JUST SAY AL "ey THE WORD. i C NN —

J)

} L 7

2 Yad 3

. | : \

2 SRN | 7

MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE

IT'S A NATURAL! TIGER. | LULU BELLE'S MAD, | MAN VS, THE FEMALE J B.\W, HAS HER THINKIN' THAT EASY

QF THE CENTURY CATAMOUNT. HAW HAW S— ——— ; \ WRECKED HER HOME, pr——

[ HAW HAW! SHEW TEAR HIS EVES OUT.

LEAVE \T | PILE ON THE

SURE, BOW |

PUBLICITY, | WOW CAN BOVS. WELL / TRIM THE ALL CLEAN / SHOW OWNER UP. | AND WE'LL CLEAN THE OTHER.

THERE SURE BETTER NOT BE ANY DOUBLE -/ BELLE DON'T WIN,

Y |

YEAHY (F LULY

HO. .” BROTHER, YOU'RE

Knute Rockne to Receive Tribute on ‘Varsity Parade’s’ Notre Dame Visit; Bertita Harding to Be Interviewed

| SETS NEW STYLE

IN ANNOUNCERS

Because television

announcers

must be pleasing to the eye as

well as to the ear, NBC engaged pretty Betty Goodwin for recent

tests in New York,

Betly is shown here as she appeared on the

screen of a television receiver after her image was broadcast from

NBC's television studio in Radio City.

RADIO THIS EVENING

(The lodiznapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in program anaouncements caused by station changes aiter press time.)

INDIANAPOLIS WEBM 1230 (CBS Net)

WIRL (NBC Net f:00 1:15 1:30 1:45

Archer WPA Music Wittanabe tiomestead

Tea Tunes " "

Women's News Wilderness, Wheeler Mission Butier ¥rogram Bohemians Renfrew

Jimmy Allen Wildcats Basketball

6:00 Spo:ts 6:15 Bohemians 6:30 Buddy Clark 3:40 News

Uncle Ezra Terry-Ted Mamond City Irene Rich 1h Loren Dalton Kemp: Or Jack Pean

100 Varieties

- i ‘ ‘ ‘

Hollywood Hote! (With Victor MeLagien)

R00 R15 R30 Barn Dance 3:4) y " 00 Philadelphia Sym 15 » y rs McAdoo Varsity Show Virginia Verrili ” o

930 Senator 45

INDIANAPOLIS 1100

Gibson Cul Reporters Anythine Happens Ameos-Andy

Waltz Time

CINCINNAT) WLW S00 (NBC-Mutuah

CHICAGO WGN 20 (Mutual Net, Concert Or Singing Lady

Toy Band Jack Armsirong Story Lady

Grphan Annie Margery Graham

Johnson Family Carl Freed Bob Newhall Lowell Thomas

Johnson Family Buddy & Ginger Harold Turner Orphan Annie

Chuck Wagon

”"

Cummins’ Og. Lum-Abner minging Sam B. R. Pogue Bestor's Or. Death Valley

Sports

Himbers’ Or Lone Ranger

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

Chandler's Or

Twin Stars " “

First Nighter Golden Gloves

Varsity Show + Behind Camera

0 1 30 13 Indiana Roof Lowe's Or. Shaw's Or

Mortimer Gooch News Freeman's Or. A "

Amos-Andy Music Harry Bason Basketball Deutsch’s Or. Pearl's Or.

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1:36 (CBS Net.)

WIRE {NBCU Net

Wildcats Devotions

Musical Clock

630 Chuck Wagon 6:15 ' 4 7:00 Early Birds 3:15 ! . 1:30 1.45 : "

Fred Feibel

News 8:15 Apron Strings

’”

SATURDAY PROGRAMS

INDIANAPOLIS 1100 J

Streamliners

News Golden Gloves String Quartet ’" 3 Salute n "

Moon River y i) " ’ " Bestor’s Or. Lucas’ Or, Cummins’ Or. » "

CHICAGO WGN 20 (Mutual Net.)

CINCINNATY WLW 700 (NBC-Mutual

Swing Time Silent News Lee Erwin Good Morning Good Morning Wake U Cheerio Golden Hour Co " ’ ”"

Breakfast Club "n

Good Morning

"» "

Synagogue

Hymns Vass Family Mlanhatiers

4:00 9:15 9:30

Your Home Richard Maxwell Let s Pretend

—Bv Thompson and Coll

- NOW THAT WE WAVE LEFT FOF LJ YRA YOUR POSTMAN FRIEND, L CLINGS | 1 SHALL DRIVE NOU TO HER || STRAIGHT TO MV PLANE VAGUE | JUST OUTSIDE FOLKE - SUSPICIONS | IF 5 % ABOUT AUTON | |” = BREESE, Y ALTHOUGH THE AN WHO RESEMBLES HUSTER 1S AN

ACCREDITED

VOU MEAN 3 A YOU KNOW. /{? ABOUT MY if LETTER FROM™”

<TH ~~ iL

THIS CURIO A 21}

L\eOUT TWO MILLION SPIRAL NEBULAE HAVE BEEN DIsCOVERED IN THE HEAVENS, AND EACH ONE CONTAINS THOUSANDS OF MILLIONS oF STARS/

ARE THE MOST IMPORTANT FAMILY IN THE ENTIRE PLANT KINGDOM.

© 1937 BY NEA SERVICE. INC,

BoTH THE MALE AND FEMALE PIGEON PRODUCE THE SUBSTANCE KNOWN AS “W/GEONS MILK) ON WHICH THE YOUNG BIRDS ARE FED. 8s

THE grass family is spread over most of the earth, and it includes plants ranging in size from tiny species no larger than moss, up to the bamboos. The roots of grass hold the scil together, making it possible

for larger vegetation to grow. Most of man’s food is provided by mem-

bers of the grass family, such as corn, wheat, rice, etc. * J %

ee a Te s #7 . " - Y¥ : GE Se RSE,

COURSE..I1 WAS | NSTRUCTED TO AID VOU IN ANY MANNER POSSIBLE, IN SEARCH FOR MONSIEUR,

fl |

oe / i

THEN YOU'VE HEARD THAT JACK 1S “ER ..LOST NN MORENTIA? THAT HE WAS SENT HERE TO SECURE SOME NAVAL SECRETS WHEN THE CN\IL WAR BROKE

MY DEAR, LOST 1S A VERY OPTIMISTIC WORD TO USE al IN A CASE OF THIS ND! JE Sl wert,

[vou SEE, WERE FAIRLY | CERTAIN HE HAD FALLEN | INTO THE HANDS OF "THE CLAW, THE MOST NOTORIOUS SPY KILLER 4 N EUROPE’ ; > So

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM —.

WHICH HAS

ae NANS

WORK OR

WOMAN'S?

I SHOULD say man’s work. About all that labor-saving machinery has done for woman has been to take her work out of the home, with its endless hours, and put it into the office and factory with limited, regular hours: but it has still left her with a vast lot of cooking, sewing. mending and, above all, caring for the children. You can't wash a baby cor clean a bathtub or kitchen sink by machinery, and only few women can afford machinery for washing dishes or clothes. Farm women especially, have to work nearly as hard—not quite—as their grandmothers did, while the farmer rides about on a tractor. & i

ES IS

| A line drawn from iop to bottom | through the middle of the heart

9:45 10:00 Children’ Hour 0:10 2 oe Music 5 Jerry 4 Home Town

Club

Mary Baker Safety Club

Glee Ciub Orientale Hail’s Or

{11:00 | 11:15 11:30

1:4 Farm Hour

) Jack Shannon 5 Farm Bureau ) 3

Hi 9:31

Farm Circle News

American Schools Livestock

Brannon

Campus , Capers ’ »

Len Salvo A. M. Melodies Ed Fitzgerald

Sweethearts Raising Parents

Music Clubs

Ge. Thin

Betty Crocker Len Salvo

Minute Mcn Medicine Women’s Clubs

Melody Vime Jue Baker Man On Street Lanin's Or.

Youth Call Gerria Fonariova Farm Hour

Harold Turner Markets Midday Service

Our Barn

Meditation Tennis Meet

1:00 1:15 1:30 1:45

Buffalo 4

Melodies

Broudy’s Or Concert Or. Forum

Opera

Calvary Hour

Commerce Dep’t Tone Tours

Rene "

Gill's Or Kay's Or, Margot Rebel Len Salve

Captlivators ”

Tennis Meet " n 3 Spelling Bee

Sec. Wallace

Concert Or.

Lana's Or String " n

High School

hindergarten : oy

- Where to find other stations:

WMAQ 670; Louisville, WIIAS 820:

Good Ra

By JAMES

Toy Band Palmer's Or Austin Wylie " Kindergarten Berren's Or

Chicago, ‘WBBM 130, 'WENR 870,

Detroit, WJR 750; Gary. WIND 560.

dio Music

THRASHER

©

| would leave almost precisely | sa | Probably the belief that it was on | the left side arose from the fact that |

i more easily on the left than on the | right side.

pleasant memories than men?

COMMON ERRORS |

{ Never say, “He has nothing and | never will have”: say, “never Will] have anything,” or “He hasn’t any- | thing and never will have.”

| |

eee

The right sort of parents are | those whose love is unfailing and | sensible; whose patience is even

| tempered and untiring; who deal |

| with their children as growing per-

| sons—rather than as dolis—or ani- | mals.—Dean Luther A. Weigle, Yale | Divinity School. A FINE thing. As Carl Glick. writing of this amazing move- | ment, points out, very few of us fit | exactly into the mold of life into which we have been forced by cir- | cumstances. We all long at times’ to escape into an idealized world. where things are “nearer to the; heart's desire.” Good plays furnish us that world. All over the country business men and women are taking part in ama- | teur theatricals in order to find this escape from life's hard realities. It would be difficult to devise a better cure for worry, depression and lone- | liness.

Best Short Waves

FRIDAY

n.— News.

ROME- WE Voice

Rome's J meg MOSCOW--6 Farmers. Songs. BOSTON---6:45 0p. program. WIXAL, 6.04 LONDON-—8:00 GSD. 11.7 meg.; GSB, 9.51 meg. CARACAS—8:30 pn. m.—Dance Music. YV2RC, 5.8 meg. VANCOUVER—9:30 p. m.— the Waterfront. CJRO, 6.15 CJR 11.72 meg. PARIS--9:40 pn. m.—Theatrical program. TPA-4, 11.72 meg. Pl URGH al h to the Far North. W8

3 Concert fidnight 2RO, 9.63 5 m. -- Collective RAN 9.5 meg m.—Australian meg m.—Variety

asc, 9.58 meg.;

--I Cover meg.

” is almost ex- | middle of the body.

m.—Messages

» ” NO. The heart XK. 6.14 meg.

actly in the

the ! me amount of tissue on each side.

we can feel and hear it beating |

NEXT—Do women have more { Mr. Kullmann, a Yale graduate ®—— . { who started out to be a physician, | cago for some time.

i » morrow’s performance, and other

The most admired debutante of the current Metropolitan season seems to be Bidu Sayao, young Brazilian soprano who will be heard as Vialetta in Verdi's “La Traviata,” over NBC-WLW at 12:55 p. m. tomorrow. Charles Kullman, American tenor, will sing Alfredo Germont in this ever-popular musical version of “Camille.” New Yorkers and the Philharmonic-Symphony’s radio audience , heard and liked Miss Sayao three times last year when she appeared | as soloist with the New York orchestra under Toscanini's direction. Her previous operatic experience includes engagements with all the important French, Italian and South American companies.

Miss Della | Chiesa, who is 21, got her start on a small Chicago station and quickly advanced to an opera debut

also scored successes under Toscanini’s baton. This was at the Salz- | burg Festival last summer, where he appeared at the Italian conductor’s

invitation. Boheme.”

Burns and Allen Register For "Hollywood Hotel’ Appearance.

By RALPH NORMAN The stirring Notre Dame “Victor) March,” heard on the networks so frequently during the football sea-

t son, will lead the NBC-WIRE “Var- | sity Parade” to South Bend at 9:30 i o'clock tonight.

| successfully

- | the Grass.”

last November as Mimi in “La

This is the first of the series to be broadcast from an Indiana university. Tonight's program, coming a day after the 49th anniversary ol Knute Rockne's birth, is to include a tribute to the famous coach. Joseph Zwers, 1937 football cap-tain-elect, will be heard in a humorous skit, and other students will participate as vocal and instrumental soloists and as members of the glee club, choir or 100-piece band. Five thousand Notre Dame students, faculty members and alumni will see the show as it goes on the air in the Notre Dame gymnasium. and alumni groups have been asked | to hold special meetings to hear it

un = »

The “March of Time” last night postponed celebration of its sixih anniversary, relinquishing its 9:30 o'clock period to President Roosevelt. In these six years, there have been 418 broadcasts, totaling 141 hours on the air. Two of the present staff, Frank Readick and Bill Adams, participated in the initial broadcast. Westbrook Van Voorhis, narrator, joined the program in its third week. The “March eof Time” launch its seventh year Thursday over CBS-WFBM.

a”

will next

= 2

Tonight's movie parade opens ai | 8 o'clock with “Hollywood Hotel's | presentation of Victor McLaglen,

— | Peter Lorre and June Lang in scenes

from their new film, “Nancy Steele | Is Missing.” Mr. McLaglen may be | seen at the Circle, beginning today | in “Sea Devils.” Gracie Allen and George Burns have strayed from their Wednesday i night spot, and are programmed for (a “Hollywood Hotel” skit tonight | Gracie, you will recall, recently and burlesqued “Hollywood | Hotel.” Perhaps. she will ridicule | her own show tonight

n oa ”

Broderick - Victor Mocre show, minus its maestro, Buddy Rogers. who is mm England to fulfill a filin contract and possibly to marry Mary Pickford, will be heard on NBC-WLW at 8:30 o'clock. Don Ameche and Barbara Luddy will present another “First Nighter” dramatic skit on NBC-WLW at 9 o'clock, and at 9:45 on NBC-Blue Elza Schallert will interview Chester Morris, who played at Loew's recently in “Devil's Playground.”

I'he Helen

" ROUND the Dial Tonight—Mrs Bertita Harding. Indianapolis writer and traveler whose books include “Phantom Crown.” “Royal Purple” and “Golden Fleece,” will be interviewed at 5:15 o'cleck over WFBM by Prof. George A. Schumacher of Butler University Irene Rich's radio play for her NBC-WIRE breadcast at 7 o'clock will be Arch Oboler's “Snake in It is the story of a small-town girl seeking radio fame and fortune. Gen. Hugh S. Johnson, whose | daily articles appear in The Times, lis to speak in favor of President | Roosevelt's proposed judiciary | changes. NBC-Blue at 9 o'clock. | Rep. U. S. Guyer (R. Kas) will oppose the plan on the NBC-Red network at 10:30 o'clock

”n 4

THE PNHADELPMIA ORCHESTRA

LEQROLD STOKOWSn, EUGENE ORMAN ».

Conductors

i i } { i Py i | 1

"What's Ahead in Washington"

W. M. KIPLINGER

w

WFBM at 9

Columbia Network

American National Bank at Indianapolis

Member

Federal Deposit

Insurance. Corporation.

Ettore Panizza is to conduct to-

be Thelma Angelo |

principal singers will Votipka, John Brownlee, Bada and Norman Cordon. s 8 ® j resent Gay and tuneful music is scheduled by Eugene Ormandy for tonight's Philadelphia Orchestra broadcast on | CBS-WFBM at 9 o'clock. There | will be the sprightly Overture to | “The Secrets of Suzanne’ by WolfFerrari, Weber's “Invitation to the | Dance” and the Introduction and Wedding March from Rimsky-Kor- | sakov’s “Le Coq d'Or.”

on n n | A new series called the Chicago plus

| Symphonic Hour is to be inaugurated tonight. It will be on ile { NBC-Blue network stations at 10 | o'clock. WENR in Chicago probably ! wiil carry it. Vivian Della Qpera soprano; Edward Davies, | baritone; Charles Sears, tenor; Noble Cain's A Cappella Choir; the Mundelein Verse Speaking Choir and a staff orchestra of symphonic proportions are to be the artists The solo songsters have regular NBC attractions out of Chi-

Chiesa, Chicago

Paige and his Orchestra

pzen

HOLLYWOOD HOTEL & 20th CENTURY-FOX

A THRILLING COAST.TO-COAST SROADCASY OF THE SMASHING SCREEN DRAMA

‘NANCY -STEELE IS MISSING"

with these stars from the picture

VICTOR McLAGLEN, WALTER CONNOLLY, PETER LORRE, JUNE LANG

WARDEN LEWIS E. LAWES of Sing Sing and the entire Hollywood Hotel Cast

headed by LOUELLA PARSONS, FRED MacMURRAY

Frances Langford, Anne Jamison, Igor Gorin, Raymond

Produced by William A. Bacher

WFBM TONIGHT 8 P. M.

p