Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 April 1937 — Page 21

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 1937

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OUR BOARDING HOUSE

= HAW «vr BUSTER , THE MORE 1 THINK OF IT,

THE LEss 1 REGRET THE MISFORTUNE OF LOSING MY CIRCUS ~~ EGAD, THE WORLD NEVER CAN REGAIN THE LOss IT INCURRED WHILE 1 DEVIATED FROM SCIENCE AND INVENTION TO FLIT AWAY MY TIME ON FLEAS —— HAR-R-RUMF —~~ LIKE THE FIELDS IN SPRING, IDEAS ARE STARTING. TO BUD AGAIN IN MY

FERTILE BRAIN f

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SE \ ) \ \

E HAS BEEN # \ NEGLECTING HIS PUBLIC= BS

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BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

SHORT RATIONS,

YEH1'LL BET TH! SQUIRRELS IN YOUR BELFRY HAVE BEEN ON

SINCE THEY HAVEN'T HAD ANY NUTTY

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

By Clark

SIDE GLANCES

4-29

aa - EG. U. S. PAT. OFF.

{ __T.M. REG. COPR.1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.

“Yes, and if he knew

what we were talking about he

would agree with me.”

—By Martin

1 HAVEN'T HAD A ME EVTRER' BUT.10e :

AUNT PENNY OUT | OF OUR SNOTEMS swe

OH NOW REALLY w WE SHOLLO BE A B\T ASHAMED'AFTER ALL, AUNT PENNY WAS 7 45 OR GLESY 7 “ oO

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WAS, OR 1S 2 \F YOU CAN CONC) VINCE ME THAT SHE W TLL RETURN WIWLLINGLY

SO, FOLKS AROUND TowN THINK "Boy's DapPDY 15 AFRAID TO sHOW WP IN THIS TOWN-. EH Z AND THEY THINK TL SHOULDN'T B= PLAYING AROUND, 1S BARY/

ALL RIGHT — DONT sr=AK IF You DON'T

0 ® 1937 By. United Feature Syndicate, ne. a Tm. Reg. U. 8. Pat. OfT.—All rights reserved

IN THE Rack WAY--T THINK THAT MEAN AUNT 15 HERE

Go

ALL RIGHT, IF You THINK ILM NOT a FIT NURSE For 1 "Boy", L'LL QUIT-- You CAN TAKE HIM OR SEND HIM TO AS FOLKS IN ROXBURY-

You cAN TAKE Hh RIGHT Now [| =I'LL GET #is

F OO YOU SEE | BLAZES! SO THIS WOT I SEEZ/\S ‘BARNACLE BEACH?

N RN \ NN R IN N NY © N NR RX AA LK NN \ > SEN AR NY Ra 3

NUP. AND PARADISE COVE'S JUST A ms he « COUPLE SPLASHES ; : = \ ACROST THE

_MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE

THIS WAY, PLEASE .... WE MUST FLY FOR Tee ORDEAL

OON THE HIGH-POWERED CAR WHICH LEW HAS PROCURED IS BUMPING PERILOUSLY OVER

BORDER BEFORE CAPITAL AGAIN OF THE CHANGES HANDS... SEARCH IT MIGHT BE AWK = i OVER, or WARD TO SECURE OUR FRIENDS NEW RELEASE AT LAST STEP

3 PAPERS / FROM THE WW

GENERALS HEADQUARTERS, THEIR HEARTS SINGING WATH

FREEDOM.

(ROWE

— A THRILLING

SPORT IN CANADA/

IN ORDER TO QUALIFY AS A“MOOCSE RIDER” A CONTESTANT MUST LEAP FROM HIS CANCE TO THE ANIMALS BACK. , AND REMAIN MOUNTED LONG ENOUGH TO HAVE HIS PHOTOGRALLH TAKEN

“Wane >

GENTIAN

NEVER OPENS ITS BLOSSOMS. SOMETIMES THEY § ARE TORN

Lotte,

AVERAGE OF 2,500, 000 TINY ‘PARTI PER cuBIC INCH 7% OF AIR. 4

MOST of the particles which clutter up the air we breathe are not goot and dust, but tiny particles less than one millionth of an inch in diameter. New York City air showed 7,900,000 to the cubic inch, Pitts‘burgh, 5,850,000, and a test made over the ocean showed 32,000. In a ‘city, some 900,000,000 of these nuclei pass through our lungs every minute.

* . *

Azjecs make of the black widow

-. §

NEXT~What use did the ancient

THE SHELL-TORN ROADS...

ER

THREE CHEERS FOR) OBOVY, BARNACLE BEACH. MAD AT

iy CONGRATULATIONS ON SUCCESS IN OBTAINING | STEEL GAUNTLET FROM HAND OF HONORABLE CLAW”, TRUST SAME

THINGS ToeeTHER!

THEY'RE GOING TO Take You AwaY FRoM

—By Crane

C'MON, Ny BOYTER

I AINT \ GIT HOM

2) I LOOK, THERE'S POPPER-

7 GOSH, LEWGOT! MAY |

N. MANTLE WiTH TENNIS

HE DIDN'T ) HEAR YOu.

I ALMOST FOR- \ =EE IT PLEASE?

AWOY, VE GOL DURN) vell\ LAZY WEASEL! A AAN) COMN GIT ME! NR : »

MYRA! THE CAPTAIN WAS RIGHT ! THERE'S A ROLE OF ONION SKIN PAPER INSIDE THE CUFF. WHY, IT CONTAINS EVERY BIT OF INFORMATION I WAS

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

OULD DISPUTED PUBLIC QUEEN Be SCHOOLS S N INTELLIGENTLY READ THE DAILY NEWSPAPERS ? ? YES OR N

® SELF", pushes : coNES *ro

ONE THINKING ABOU

HIMSELF? YES OR NO

MANY times more likely. According to the Colgate psychologist, Dr. Donald Laird, the psychoanalysts .think this is due to the fact that many women have strong sex natures but feel guilty in having such violent sex urges and feel that they will redeem themselves to respectability and possibly reform the criminal if they try to help him by sharing his punishment. Many women of social and professional prominence defy all conventions and reject respectable and wealthy suitors to marry some thief or murderer. We never hear of men doing this. Probably the psy-

choanalytic explanation is as near the truth as any other.

YES, most emphatically. Speaking on this point before the Junior High School Conference of the New York University School of Education, Professor Robert K. Speer said—paraphrased—high school boys and girls are denied a vital part of their education if such topics as communism, labor disputes and national problems are not openly discussed with the teacher, not as the judge but as the mere leader. Otherwise the front pages of the newspapers will read to these pupils like a foreign language.

8 8

3 NOT ALTOGETHER. He is thinking about himself in a gen-

a particular way with others—making a blanket judgment of himself and comparing this with some detail in others. He may feel shabbily dressed or halting in speech, or under or oversized, and he compares this one item with the totality of the other person. Self-conscious-ness is almost entirely due to comparing ourselves wrongly with other’ people.

Next—Should we have courses in marriage in our public schools?

COMMON ERRORS

Never say, “One was an American, the balance were Italians”; say, ‘the rest were Italians.”

Can you imagine the flapper wearing woolies?—The Rev. Alice P., Aldrich, of Chicago woman's court, who contends return of women’s woolen underclothes signifies national upswing in morals.

Best Short Waves

WEDNESDAY

Ri

OM Opera. Sports. meg,

E—5 . m.—News. Vocal Concert. 2RO, 9.63 MOSCOW—6 . m.—“Yakutia in 1917 Fy 19317.” PRAN, 9.6 meg. HUIZEN, Netherlands—6 p. Happy programs. PCJ, 9.59 meg. BERLIN—7:30 p. m,—Press Review, DJD, 11.77 meg. CARACAS—7:45 p. m.—Popular Orchestra. YV5RC, 5.8 meg. BERLIN—8:30 .p. m.—Opera by Gretry. DJD, 11.77 meg. ; LONDON—8:55 p. m.—Revue. GSF, 15.14 meg.; GSD, 11.75 meg.: GSC, 9.58 meg.

m.—

PARIS—9 p. m.—Gramophone Records Concert” TPA-4, 11.72 meg. ALGARY—

6.15 meg.; CJRX, 11.72 meg.

eral way and comparing himself in

C Y—10:45 p. m.—'Wood-~ Ouse and Hawkins in Nitwit Court.’

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PAGE 21

Carlotta Dale to Sing at Bedside Mike Accompanied by Flying Orchestra; Andre Kostelanetz Hollywood Bound

RADIO TO GIVE CROWNING NEWS

Radio goes to the Coronation, as network engineers survey the procession route and inspect Westminster Abbey for suitable microphone locations. The Coronation procession will be on its last lap when it

passes from Hyde Park through the

tion Hill and thence to Buckingham Palace.

arch, pictured above, into ConstituThe NBC engineers

shown above are looking for a microphone location near the arch. NBC alone will have 50 microphones in the Coronation circuit, to be used in describing the ceremony for American listeners on Wednesday, May 12, and CBS and Mutual likewise are making elaborate plans to bring the Coronation to your living room.

RADIO THIS EVENING

(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in program announcements caused by station changes after oress time.)

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.) Tea, Time News-Varieties News-Sports Ind. Central

=D nwouns

Jim Farley ” ”

. INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)

CINCINNATI

WLW 7 (NBC-Mutual) Toy Band Tommy-Betty Unannounced Lowell Thomas

CHICAGO GN 20 (Mutual Net.) Swing It Buddy-Ginger Singing Lady Orphan Annie

Wheeler Mission

Buddy Clark News

Easy Aces Uncle Ezra News-Sports Jimmie Allen

RTA Y oe a

—-——-.D PIE

Johnsons Mrs. Roosevelt Lum-Abner Bob Newhall

Pickards |

Concert Or. Sports

Cavalcade

Ken Murray King's Or.

HID od DD NDR

Merry-Go-Round

One Family King’s Or. 1) " ’ »

Family Music Lone Ranger

Kostelanetz Or. Rep, Ludlow

’”

S333

[SPN PRIN J

-~D —-

Jessica Dragonette ” ” " ” ”

Town Hall » ” ”» ”

Whiteman’s Or.

Family Music Tomorrow's Trib,

Gang, Busters Hit Parade

Babe Ruth oo ” Morris-Nell Carlotta Dale

Hit Parade Sanders’ Or.

”» ”

Theater Macy’s Men » ’"

Poetic Melodies Len Riley Reichman’s Or. Social Security : ” 1

Amos-Andy James Farley

con | ®REeP ms | mom NSNS | S03

H. Kinz's Or. Martin's Or. Kyser’s Or.

Amos-Andy Madhatterfields Osborne's Or.

Music-News Harry Bason Joe-Roy-Cal

News Fiorito's Or. Roller Derby Dorsey's Or.

Ind. Roof Eldredge’s Or. Chiesta’s Or.

Inside Story Panico’s Or. Pendarvis’ Or.

Duchin’s or.

Whiteman's or.

P. Sullivan May Paxton Los Amigos

Moon River Martin's Or.

Pendarvis’ or. Sanders’ Or.

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM_ 1230 (CBS Net.)

Chuck Wagon Sunnw Raye

Devotions

Early Birds Music Clock ” ” ” ” » » ” ”

atadalel | DD -3a 2 nS

-— =D NSN

Feature , Time ” ” ” ”

Mrs. Wiges Other Wife Plain Bill Children

WVRRXRX -— WNDU

David Harum News-Hymns McGregor's Song Minister

Milky Way Quality Twins Kitchen ,Clinie

Unannounced Health Talk Varieties Party Line

The Gumps Edwin C. Hill Helen Trent Our Gal Sunday

S=S23 | voor

kid Beacabnn WSUS | DRS | HSLS

Way Down East Hope Alden Sunny Serenade Aunt Jenny

Big Sister Farm Bureau Farm Circle Myrt-Marge

Mary Baker an Harding Linda’s Love Farm Hour

Markets

kh hf | fo ok tk | rh ek pd pd (ITT | ech fod ik it

S353

News Light Opera Apron Strings » 9?

Do You Remember 2 »s ” Cabelleros

rd od fk pk on 5 = HE52

INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)

House We Live Again

PROGRAM

CINCINNATI | (NBC-Mutual) Cheerio

CHICAGO WGN 720 (Mutual Net.) Golden Hour

Devotions Peter Grant » MA Aunt Mary Good Morning Chandler Jr. id ”

Len Salve Melodies Beauty Forum Next Door

Get Thin Children Grimm's Daughter Melodies

Next Door

Linda's Love Personals

Gospel Singer

Girl Alone Markets Gloria Dale Wife Saver

Wite-Secretary Paint Parade June Baker We Are Four

Serenade Unannounced Service Markets

Three Spades Mooris-Nell Markets Farm Hour

” ” ” »

Chandler Jr. Betty-Bob

Concert Or. Painted Dreams Way Down East Truth Only

Wife-Secretary June Baker Relax Time Leadoff Man

Pepper Young Ma Perkins Vic-Sade O’Neills

Lorenzo Jones Windowwashers Follow Moon atinee

Archer Gibson Carol Dein Melodies Drake Univ.

News-Varieties

Relax Time Kitty Kelly Army Band

5353

Questions Music Clubs:

Children’s Corner

Tea, Time

bi WWww WW

PD | nm D RSnS | ABS

Interviews Unannounced

News Camp Fire

Where to find other stations:

Ralph Nyland Bitty Rone ollow Moon © Guiding Light ” ” Mary Marlin of 3 Mary Sothern ” ” Singing Lady 4 : Orphan Annie 3 »

Mary Alcott Tommy-Betty Unannounced Lowell Thomas

Chicago, WBBM 770, WENR 870,

Baseball |

Swing It Melodies Singing Lady Orphan Annie

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

Good Radio Music By JAMES THRASHER

A major network symphonic broadcast will originate in Indianapolis

for the first time tonight when the

National Symphony Orchestra con-

cert is picked up by NBC from the Indiana Theater. The program will be heard from 9:30 to 10 o'clock on the Red network. If the program remains in its present arrangement, listeners probably will hear two solos by Dalies Frantz, Liszt's “Sonetto del Petrarca” and the same composer's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 12, followed by the orchestra playing the Coronation Scene and Love Music from Mussorgsky's

“Boris Godounov.”

Hans Kindler will be the conductor.

Mr. Frantz won the National Federation of Music Club's Young Artists competition in 1933, and since then has enjoyed considerable success. His tour last season included

72 recitals. ” ” ”

For the convention's concluding day both CBS and NBC will be on hand. The former network is to carry 15 minutes of the program by the State Teachers Vesper Choir of Hattiesburg, Miss. Numbers by Grieg, Nikolsky, Candlyn, Cain and Dickinson are scheduled. The broadcast will be at 3:15 p. m. on WFBM. The concluding concert by the National Symphony Orchestra will be broadcast by the NBC Red network at 10 o'clock tomorrow night. 2 ” 2 The Beethoven Sonata Op. 28, subtitled the “Pastoral,” will be heard in Frank Black's string orchestra arrangement on Dr. Black's NBC String Symphony program at 7 o'clock tonight over WIRE. The work is in four movements.

A Bach chorale is to open the pro-

gram, and Dvorak’s ‘Serenade Suite” is scheduled ‘to follow the sonata. 2 ” ” Lauritz Melchior, famed “Heldentenor” of the Metropolitan Opera, is booked for a brief solo appearance and doubtless some product indorsing on “Your Hit Parade” over WIRE at 8 o'clock tonight. What is probably the first weekly broadcast series of Bach's choral music, that by. the Westminster Choir of Princeton, N. J., will come to an end with a half-hour program at 2 p. m. tomorrow over CBS. John Finley Williamson, founder and director of the choir, again will conduct and comment on the music, and Carl Weinrich will be the organist. | The series, of cumulative magnitude, is to finish with excerpts from the great Mass in B Minor. Four of the five a cappella motets for double chorus were heard on the first three programs. 2

<

Guilio Marconi, Son of Wireless Inventor, to

- Visit Radio City.

By RALPH NORMAN

Give a radio engineer a blues singer, a dance band and a network and youll likely get a radio program. If the blues singer is ill in a hospital and the dance band is high above the city in an airplane, the result will be the same—you’ll still get a radio program. The blues singer for tonight’s: No. 1 radio stunt is Carlotta Dale, who is ill in a Philadelphia hospital. At 8:45 o'clock, she will sing into an NBC-Red network microphone placed at her bedside, and her orchestra, the Top Hatters, will play her accompaniment while riding in a TWA plane above the city. Miss Dale will hear the band, which will broadcast over the airplane’s shortwave transmitter for rebroadcast by NBC. and following an instrumental introduction, will sing with it. A special “mixer” at Philadelphia station KYW will blend her voice with the orchestra, and you will hear—or NBC engineers hope you will hear—a blues - singer accompanied by orchestra. The undertaking is expensive and complicated and it shows the trouble to which the networks gc to make J evenings by the radio interesting. Of course there's a good chance adverse atmospheric conditions will upset NBC's well-laid plans. If not, the program may be heard at 8:45 p. m., Indianapolis time.

2 ” ” 4 WIRE will go to considerable trouble tonight, too, in order to bring listeners Rep. Ludlow’s NBCRed network address, “Ballots

Before Bullets,” which will be car=____

ried by the network at 5:30 p. m. Unable to broadcast the talk at that hour, the station will record the Congressman’s words as they come into the station via NBC, and will rebroadcast the address at 7 o'clock tonight.

u un 2

Like Rudy Vallee, Andre Kostelanetz plans to be absent from his network show, but while Vallee travels east to London and the coronation,” Kostelanetz will travel west to Hollywood and the movies. TE The maestro will leave New York shortly after his CBS-WFBM 7 o'clock show tonight, traveling by airplane. He will spend 10 days in the film capital, completing his assignment in Paramount’s musical, “Artists and Models.” Harry Hoffman, violinist in his orchestra, will direct the CBS program next ‘Wednesday. . Edgar Bergen will head Vallee’s show tomorrow night. On May 6 and May 13 the “Variety Hour” will be shortwaved from London, to be rebroadcast by NBC for American listeners. ” ” ”8

NBC's Radio City, the world’s finest broadcasting unit, is the next stop for young Guilio Marconi, son of the man who gave us wireless and subsequently modern radio. Twenty-six-year-old Guilio Marconi has completed surveys of broadcasting facilities in England and Italy, and he will spend a short term in each branch of American radio. : ” ” 2 Defying time is common practice with Phil Lord's “Gang Busters” production staff and cast. Several times in recent months an entire show has been discarded at last minute to substitute a dramatizaetion of timely interest. It was done last week, and may be again any time, for it's part of Lord’s plan to keep “Gang Busters” timely as well as dramatic. - : The prepared script for tonight’s

| CBS-WFBM 8 o'clock presentation

concerns the famous Chicago “Devil Murders,” which shocked the entire country back in 1919 with a dozen or more killings. The initial episode will be heard tonight, and two additional episodes will be broadcast. on subsequent Wednesday evenings. : Less dramatic and perhaps of more interest to many listeners will be such broadcasts as Babe Ruth’s baseball predictions, which may be heard on CBS-WFBM at 8:30 o'clock (Bud Hassett, Brooklyn Dodgers’ first baseman, will be Babe’s guest tonight to—I hope CBS is not spoofing us—sing), or Mrs. Roosevelt's NBC-Blue network program at 5:15 oclock.

Mrs. Roosevelt will have Mrs. Malvina Scheider; her personal secretary, in the studio tonight te help her tell of “A Typical Day in the White House.”

2 » =

IZ wager you can't name the highest-paid person on the air today, figuring on a per word basis. It’s Marlyn Stuart, who opens the Ken Murray show with the famous “Mama, oh, Mama, that man’s here again,” and closes the program with a similar line. : Marlyn has been signed for three years to read (or recite, perhaps) these few words. The former “Sketch Book” star also will appear: soon in the movie, ‘Broadway Jamboree,” with Murray and Oswald. the stooge. The Murray show may be heard

over CBS-WFBM at 6:30 p. m. each

Wednesday, an hour earlier than formerly.

STUDIO NAMED IN COPYRIGHT SUIT

By United Press a

HOLLYWOOD, April 28—In a copyright infringement suit on file against Paramount Studios today, Annie L. Miller charged that the film, “Behold My Wife,” contains ideas from her story, “Unknown Friends.”

DE MILLE AIR FAN

Cecil B. De Mille, producer-direc=-tor of “The Buccaneer,” is a pioneer aviation enthusiast and owned the

first commercial aviation company in America.

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