Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 March 1937 — Page 27

THE INDIANAPOLIS THES SIDE GLANCES By Clark

"WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24,1087 a OUR BOARDING With Major Hoople

{ . ( 7 7 “Zz 7 FUFF ~F-F-Fer A ® MAN OF MY | PROMINENCE | Z iL 0 wl 3 ; MN | SUBJECTED TO gr . RR ¥ ir |

PAGE 27 3 Networks to Carry 10th Annual Golden Gloves Boxing Bouts Tonight: Music Sequence Choice Difficult Job JIMMY ACTS FOR RADIO | Pioneer Glass.

STAY YOUR STEP, SIR LETHARGY =~ MISS SARCHET JUST CALLED AND ASKED ME TO RETURN THIS DRESS FORM 1 BORROWED, SO, BEFORE YOU START YOUR DAY OF DiLLYyDALLYING, SLIP AN ARM AROUND HER WAIST AND WHISIKL HER UP TO 1250 GARDEN sTREETS

PUBLIC GAZE, WITH THAT THING IN HIS EMBRACE ZT NEVER EGAD/ SPUTT-T =~

Pioneer Glass Blower's Life Is Scheduled for

Dramatization.

By RALPH NORMAN

Three networks will broadcast descriptions of the 10th annual In-ter-City Golden Gloves boxing bouts between amateurs represent= ing Chicago and New York, beginning at 10 o'clock tonight. Featured in the finals are to be right winners and eight runnersap selected from 21,000 competitors n the Chicago area (which included Indianapolis) matched against sight winner and eight runners-up from T7000 contestants in the New York area. Mutual-WGN will broadcast the bouts from 10 to 11:30 p m.; the New-Blue network will carry descriptions of Announcers Bob Brown and Lynn Brandt from 10 p. m. to the finish, and CBS-WFBM will carry a half-hour summary and description, beginning at 10:30 p. m.

RATHER WILL 1 FACE THE = ( FURY OF HER MOR 7° XL PO THAN SURRENDER TO SUCH HUMILIATION waa

Ss sft | MA 7, / : f = ee Se oe COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE. ING. =a 1 = SAND THEN HE RAN 0 Ds

a VN K) — / | AN - ne mT orR \o¢ >

24

“She has a nerve! Every time she calls him up she asks " #

him to see if I'm listening in.”

Someone some day may and should write a radio dramatization about the fellows who labor un=- { noticed to provide appropriate music | sequences for network dramatiza« tions. There is Don Voorhees, for instance, who checks 100 or more pages of music weekly in preparation for Wednesday night's *“Calvacade of America,” which CBSWFBM carries at 7 o'clock. “You must never use familiar music,” Don explained. “That might distract attention (rom the drama or send the listeners’ attention wandering trving to identify a melody that was vaguely recognized. “Often I can't find anything to fit and I compose it myself. Most conductors can do that, but I find that melodies on which great | geniuses have labored are more expressive and better than anything { we hastily turn out every week.

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

[1 TELL YOU, THE BOVa YOU SCAMPER | ARQUNO WITH AREN'T WORTH THER lL SAL

—By Martin

YOU'RE DOGGONE) RIGHT THEY OON

1. BET OLDER FOLKS SAD On, T TRIN THEV'RE x SAME THING ABOUT THE CURE! AND, ANYWAY, IT ONS You ALWANS HAS BEEN AS

NOU CLAM, RASNT TT?

SA SLLn

SHE NEVER HAD A DATE

USED TO DATE

—Times Photos.

The candid camera reveals Jimmy Scribner, the “one-man show,” doesn’t reserve his acting for audiences which see him this week at the | Lyric. He is shown above in four moods as he broadcasts “The John- | son Family” from WIRE's studios to the Mutual network. The pictures prove he gives his broadcasts, just as he does his stage performances, “all he’s got.” He does, in fact, 22 persons’ work, for he plays that manv characters, and for good measure, plays incidental music and manages sound effects. It was Lawyer Philpotts, Mama Johnson, Lucy and Pewee he was doing when the camera caught the above expressions. Jimmy, who broadcasts twice daily—at 4:15 p. m. for 13 Mutual stations and again at 5 p. m. for WLW and WGN, Monday through Friday—concludes his Lyric engagement tomorrow.

LITTLE MARY MIXUP

= I LIKE THE TRAILER ~— 1 '=BUT WOULD YOU MIND DRIN'—~ ING BACK TO OUR HOUSE--

\1 WANT My we

TELLHIM TO HURRY= WE'LL HAVE TO BE QN OUR WAY

BUT IF THEY BUY OUR TRAILER WE CAN GET HOME IN NO TIME

" un "

DELAYING us TERRIBLY

The maestro had trouble last | week finding authentic Huron or { Iroquois Indian music for his back{ground of a James Fenimore Cooper dramatization. — i = - ——— |W] heoted native music for the | Huron or Iroquois Indians,” he said, RADIO THIS EVENING [ “but all the music set down has been of Western tribes. No one seemed to take much interest in pre=(serving Indian melody until the { Eastern tribal music had been lost.

(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 700

CHICAGO VGN 320 little and

@ 1912 by United Feature Syndicate, Ine Tm Reg US Pat Of.—All rights reserved

WASHINGTON TUBBS II

v3

nv . ER 2A CR

—By Crane

AY?

LUC)

BELLE! )

( ARS YOU READY, MRS. WALLIS2) / i —— S— ~\ J) & 3

YER ©OL TOOTIN' TM READY.

DING WOT's THE

RULES?

.

"THEN BRING ON THAT CLABBER:) HEADED PELICAN AN' LES

(UBS Net.)

(NBC Net.)

(NBC-Mutual)

V (Mutual Net.)

Tea Tunes

Women's News Wilderness

Central College Wheeler ' Mission » »

Kifty Kelly

Dari-Dan Helen Behlke Wattanobe Vespers

Cub Reporters Jimmy Allen Little Theater Sports

Dick Tracy Jack Armstrong Singing Lady Orphan Annie

Johnsons Tommy-Betlly Sports Lowell Thomas

Dance Or, Bible Stories Three Graces Moaigery Graham

Johnsons Buddy-Ginger Singing Lady Orphan Annie

Bohemians » »

Gago deLys News

Cavalcade " »

Easy Aces Uncle Ezra Terry-Ted Diamond News

Beatrice Lillie

Amos-Andy Salute Lum-Abner Songs

One Family

Chuck Wagon

Concert Or. Sports

Lone Ranger " "

“We finally cheated a [got around it. Last Wednesday was St. Patrick's Day, so we announced the overture would be taken from ‘Natoma,’ the Indian grand opera of | the Irish-American composer, Vic- | tor Herbert, as a timely tribute.” [ Mr. Voorhees is not alone in his | tesk of fitting music to the mood of script—Howard Barlow arranges for (the “March of Time,” Mark Warnow for Helen Hayes’ “Bambi” series, and there are many others.

| You can imagine Mr. Barlow’s prob(lem, with the “March of Time” script being revised until a few minutes prior to broadcast time.

”n

MN, - ( 3701

THE BATTLE OF THE CENTURY!

LULL BELLE WALLIS WILL DISPUTE THEORY THAT WOMAN IS THE WEAKER SEX.

Burns-Allen King’s Or. Family Musie Family Musio

Gabriel Heatter Diamond City Sanders’ Or. Trib.-Sporis

Town Hall " ” » » » "w ”

Kostelanetz’ Or, Paul Whiteman

Beauty Box » "” ”»

Doubtless few listeners gave a moment's thought to Mr. Voorhees’ incidental music last week when he “bridged” scenes in the Cooper dramatization, But tonight, when the life of Henry William Stiegel, pioneer American glass blower, is re-enacted, vou might consider the musical director’s problem of finding appropriate backgrounds. Mr. Stiegel, “Cavalcade of America” will explain, was 200 years ahead of his time when he developed his “Stiegel Blue” and other beautiful colors in the pre-Revolution-ary days.

"

” ”» ”»

Romance " ’

Theater » ”»

| 9:00 Gang Busters 9:15 n n 9:30 9:45

Hit Parade Hit Parade Music-Flowers

Gladys Swarthout Music Moments " ”

Gladys , Swarthout

Poetic Melodies News Golden Gloves Oh

{ 10:00 10:15 | 10:30 | 10:45

Paul Sullivan Crucifixion Bestor's Or, Funk’s Or.

Amos-Andy Golden Gloves Music ) Harry Bason

Melodies

TIGER- MAN EASY TO CHAMPION CAUSE OF POWNTRODDEN HUSBANDS,

” ” ” ”»

\ - ; \_COPR. 1937 BY NEA 00 Moon River

Lucas’ "

Indiana Roof Busse's Or, 5 Irorsey’s Or. y 6

| 30 Lee's Or. 15

THURSDAY PROGRAMS

NDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI1 WEBM 1230 WIRE 1400 WLW 00 (CBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual)

11: » 11: 1 3% Lights Out Cummins’ Or. Or. 11: . » . "»

POOR MILES... HE SURE WILL BE BETTER OFF OUT OF THE INTELL!GENCE SERVICE! IF "THE CLAW BUT. KNEW THE INFORMATION HE HAS GIVEN ME «=

I'M SORRY "THE CLAW" USED YOU SO ROUGHLY, MILES BUT PERHAPS, T° /5\ = NEXT TIME. \ [A , (er ¥ «

THERE WILL BE NO NEXT TIME NURSE - WHEN 1 GET OUT OF HERE, I'M THROUGH WITH HIM AND HIS TERRORISM!

YOU MUSNI'T TALK LIKE THAT= IF ANYONE SHOULD HEAR YOU, IT WOULD MEAN

PRISON? I'D - KILL MYSELF BEFORE I'D LET THEM THROW ME INTO THAT ' TORTURE HOLE

HELLO, MYRA - I'VE ) BEEN WAIT- 7 ING TO ££ me CHICAGO WGN 520 [7 " (Mutpali Net.)

Silence " "

Sing, Neighbor News

Reveries

Chuck Wagon » 64 Devotions

” un

ADIO ROUNDUP — Dr. Cyrus | R Adler will discuss “Judaism | and the American Heritage” in an Hymns ry | NBC-Red program 3 5:9 oo OD Peo ; : | tonight. . . . Frank Parker will fly hony EE le [to Miami for Ben Bernie guest ap= ™ | pearances March 30 and April 6, re=- | turning to New York each Sunday | for the “Rippling Rhythm Revue.” Fred Allen plays the Easter | Sunny in “The Inside Story of an | Egg—Some Yolk” as part of “Town

on

Love Letters Larry-Sue Cheerto

Good Morning Wake Up Go den Hour ” »

Early Birds Musical ,Clock woo.

Jack Don News Serenade Apron Strings

Gold Medal ”» » ”»

” ”»

Streamliners » ”» Sunny Rave Mrs. Wiges Other Wife

Just Bill Children

Len Salvo Children Beauty Forum Cook'ng School

Linda’s Love Children We Live Again Wife Saver

\ £2\'s mura REACHES ATURN IN THE. i CORRIDOR, SHE 1S STARTLED BY THE

”»

APPEARANCE OF BREESE. INSTINCTIVELY,

HER EVES FALL TO HIS RIGHT HAND... David Rarum Melodies

Varieties

Get Thin Cactus Kate

Betty Moore Personal Column Gloria Dale

| 10:00 10:15 10:30

Milky Way Quality Twins

THIS CURIOUS WORLD By William Ferguson

ain

NN

\ 3 Ne

Ma

dl )

Fee TITLE OF THE

0 \

i

HEAD OF THE

SUPREME. COURT

OF THE

UNITED STATES

1S, THE

CHIEF JUSTICE oF ve UNITED STATES,” oo. NOT “CHIEF JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT."

Se —

RN

DICOTYLEDONOUS PLANTS, THOSE WHICH SEND LP TWO SEED LEAVES, HAVE THE PARTS OF THEIR. FLOWERS IN FOURS, FIVES, OR. Miil~ 7/RPLES OF THESE NUMBERS, WHILE MONOCOTYLEDONOUS PLANTS... THOSE WITH A SINGLE SEED LEAF...HAVE THE PARTS OF THEIR FLOWERS | IN THREES, OR. MiilTIRLES OF THREE.

© 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.

N—

LOP-EARED RABBITS HAVE BEEN

|

EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By DR. ALRERT EDWARD WIGGAM

THAT'S what I thought, but Prof. Ray Baber, sociologist, after conducting a six-year survey among men and women college students found that 80 per cent of the women demanded as high a standard of morals in their prospective husbands as they themselves had whereas this was true of only 71 per cent of the men.

DOES A—

EDGE

OF WHAT 16 RIGHT AND WRONG INCREASE THE TENDENCY To DO RIGHT?

2

5

ST

NL

15 IT TRUE THAT WERN & DOING" AND BY PRACTICING THE SAME THING OVER AND OVER AGAIN? YES OR

with W. C. Trow, psychologist, in giving a course of three weeks, 15 minutes each day, to a large group of boys and girls in the study of honesty. Elaborate tests of their honesty, “before and after taking” showed they cheated and lied just as much at the end of the course as at the beginning.

y “The Miracle of Learning” in | Atlantic.

| 10:45

Mrs Farrell

Party Line

Gospel Singer

| 11:00

11:15 11:30

| 11:45

the | He argues that, as I un- |

| derstand him, the thgory that we | | | learn by doing and learn more and |

|

more by repeating the same thing

over and over again, does not tell |

{us how we learn.

For example when I drive my first | -

golf ball I can't drive it. What

Yet I do do it the first time. Plain-

by repeating. In short how we

{ learn is still a mystery.

NEXT—Should young married couples borrow money in order to “get started?”

COMMON ERRORS Never say, “are you through writing the letter?” say, “have you finished writing the letter?”

Best Short Waves

WEDNESDAY

BOSTON—4 p. m.—Selected Subjects. WI1XAL, 11.79 meg. ROME—5 p. m.—News. Royal Carabinieri Band. Folk Songs. 2RO, 9.63 meg. LONDON—5:30 p. m.—Boat Race. GSD, 11.75 meg.; GSC, 9.58 meg.; GSB, 951 mez. HUIZEN, NETHERLANDS —6 p. m. —Happy Programs. PCJ. 9.59 meg.

MOSCOW-—17 p. m.—Soviet Opinion

| sense is there in telling me I learn | to do something bv continually do- | ing it when I ean't do it anvhow? |

ly I did not learn that by doing or |

|

|

Gumps Hope Alden Helen Trent Darling

Mary Baker Mary Marlin Linda’s Love Sen. VanNuys

Girl Alone Music Moments Reports Farm-Home

Miss Hewson Len Salvo Mark Love Man On Street We Are Four

lp — Ts

dd ES ¥

|

= n>

Way Down East Farm Bureau Farm Circle Life Stories Big Sister Air School

Farm Hour "» ,

Reporter Culbertson

”» Variety Time Bestor’s Or.

Serenade Wife vs. Markets Mid-day Service

Sec’y.

Musie Guild

Woman's World

Air School

Concert Or. Nally Nelson Painted Dreams

| the traditional procedure with the

Myrt-Marge Unannounced Tru'h Only

wt

| mm | SRE R —

Mbolly June Baker Relax Time Dance Or,

1 |

McGregor’s House Life Dramas Varieties ’ »

Pepper Young Ma Perkins Vie Sade O’'Neills

News Relax Time Remem ber? >

iD Sls na

Wwe

G. A. R. Program Westminster Choir Army Band

Way Down East Mary Sothern Good Health Len Salvo

Arthur Chandler Mary Sothern Betty-Bob Guiding Licht

Fashion , Show

no

Follow Moon Harry Bason

www Ww =D ow

Toy Band Jack Armstrong Singing J).ady

2

Tea Tunes Dance Or.

Chatter Wilderness Road

Berlin Symph. » »”

Harold Turner

Orphan Ann.e 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

Watianobe Vespers

ei ee - n>

Six Bach broadcasts by the Westminster Choir, on successive weeks, |

will begin tomorrow with the singing of the familiar motet, “Jesu, Priceless Treasure.” The broadcast will begin at 3 p. m. on the CBS network, with WFBM picking up the final quarter hour at 3:15 p. m.

{ night

| Hall Tonight” (WLW at 8 o’clock) | and Portland will recite an Easter | Ode. . . . Paul Whiteman marks his | birthday with a full-hour gala pro- | gram on the NBC-WIRE network at | 8 o'clock tonight, the maestro’s or= | chestra joining the NBC Symphony | for a program of outstanding Amer- | ican compositions. . .. Ed East (formerly of Bloomington) and Ralph | Dumke will present original musie and comedy on their new NBC-Blue evening series which premieres April 12. . . . Phil Lord returns to CBS=- | WFBM'’s “Gang Busters” at 9 o'clock tonight, taking up where Col. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, guest director | during Lord's vacation, left off with the story of the notorious Emery | Connell. . . . WLW and WHN, New York, are exchanging programs, the New York station originating late dance programs for the Cincinnati outlet. . . . Rex Chandler's Friday “Universal Rhythm” show | moves to Saturday night April 10: renewals of this and the Al Pearce | show, sponsored by the same coms= | pany, are expected shortly.... NBC's | “National Barn Dance” crew will tour the East in May, broadcasting each Saturday evening from the | network's Eastern stations.

During the series four of the five a cappella motets for double chorus |

which Bach wrote will be heard. In aadition, two broadcasts will de devoted to music from the “Passion According to St. Matthew.”

Tomorrow’s program will follow | a ses

the Boston Symphony Orchestra

| miss in the matter of program reSo all I can tell you about

| *

| Playing by Carl Weinrich, organist, is that it is scheduled for a broad=- |

| |

“ 3 | of the choral prelude, “Jesu, meine | cast from Symphony Hall in Boston

Freude,” which is based upon the | : on NBC's chorale of the motet. 3 110 Pn. 'omorow,

John Finley | ] : h Williamson, the choir’s founder and | Blue network stations. The orchconductor, will direct the series’ | estra is down for an hour's broad-

| cast, with Serge KoussevitzkKy con-

| Gladys SWARTHOUT

FRANK CHAPMAN and A FAMOUS

PRODUCED WITH TWENTV-SIX-INCH EARS. | 2 r Does this mean that teaching young people about right | {and wrong has no effect? No. It |

and World Affairs. RAN, 0.6 meg. | broadcasts. CARACAS—8:15 p. m.—Tziganos. | YV2RC, 5.8 meg { [only means that some methods of | LONDON--8:40 p. m.—‘“Goodnight, ||

| s | n . . } o% | teaching may have no effect, | Vie a Re GSC, 3.58 BERLIN—-9% »p m.—Ballads Songs by Edvard Grieg. DJD, 1 meg. WINNIPEG—11 p. m. Orchestra with soloists and Count Pravda, CJRO, 6.15 meg.; CJRX, 11.72 meg. mA

ORCHESTRA

Sponsored bv the country's leading Ice and Tce Refrizerator Companies. WIRE-WLW., 9:3 :

| Looks as though the women were | ducting.

ALL angiosperms, or enclosed see : w ; | more particular than the men about he Get DING, Vie World ver, tone | the morals of their future mates.

under either the dicotyledonous or the monocotyledonous class. No matter from what part of the world a plant comes, the botanist knows under | : which class to place it. Of course, much more classification is necessary | THIS immensely important |

: is : : question in building character | before the plant is placed in its prepise Lone can only be answered by exact ex- | ored doctrine in psychology,

i periments. Drs. Hartshorne and but James L. Mursell, ychologis Milne Charnley at the piano. NEXT-—Where does all power eome from? May, Yale psychologists, co-operated | stoutly disputes it in a aa ol NBC continues to be rather re-

{ i \ ’

» ”

” Tomorrow's NBC Music Guild pro- | B® = Palestrina’s Mass of Pope Marcellus | and Beethoven's Sixth Symphony-. the “Pastoral”—are on the Eastman / School of Music's program at 2:30 | p. m. tomorrow. This broadcast also |

comes over Blue network stations.

| gram, which comes over WIRE at | | 1 p. m,, will offer a program by the | | Perole String Quartet and songs | by Mme. Raymonde Delaunois, with

» »

and . 1.77

~ i

| .

BROAD RIPPLE ICE THIS has been a time-hon- | re »

IRVINGTON ICE & COAL Co.

POLAR ICE & FUEL CO.