Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1937 — Page 39
"FB DAY, APRIL 50, 1937
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
EGAD, TWY HEAD ZZ . 1S SPINNING FR HOURS OF INTENSIVE C ENTRATION, CALCULATING THE MERITS OF EACH ENTRY AND APPLYING MY EXPERT KNOWLEDGE AND SKILL AT APPRAISING HORSE FLESH ~~ KAFF ~KAF -F UMP-F 1 HAVE A PROPOSITION TO MAKE ~~ WE WiLL FORM A POOL ON THE DERBY— YOU GENTRY DONATE THE MONEY, WHILE 1 NAME YOU THE WINNER, AS MY CONTRIBUTION f
11 INNINGS TO A TIE, “SLUGGERY COE TOOK
AT TH’ BALL AND; ON TH’ THIRD CALLED STRIKE, HE SOCKED TH UMP FOR A SECTION
Row
Ya,
MATOR, ITs A GREAT He PROPOSITION=
i
' BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
TWO WHIFFS
OF FRONT-
With Major Hoople 7
YEH wA1 WAS THERE WHEN TH'/ 10 000 FANS CHOSE UP SIDES AND PLAYED TH OTHER UMP, USING POP BOTTLES FOR BALLS, WINNER TAKE ALL TH! UMP MADE A HOME RUN ON TH FIRST PITCH AND WAS STILL IN TH LEAD WHEN TH’ SPEEDIEST FAN WAS TRYING TO TAG HIM OUT WITH A BALL BAT!
Z|
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES SIDE GLANCES
= SX +N 3 = COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T.M. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF.
PAGE 39
By Clark R
\
“I don’t mind your picking over the vegetables, if yo don’t spoil my color arrangement.” :
—By Martin
STEPHEN ,PAEASE HELP ME PACK +» AND STOP GRUMBLING
1 now, CORA =
MR ~ AZ 4
(TUE MADE UP OLR MINDS! WE'RE GONG HOME CAN'T STAY AWAY
! WE FOREVER
Oh ,\T WOULONT BE FOREVER THE LONGEST VISIT SHE EVER MADE U5 WAS WHEN T WAS A BOM —— SHE ARRWED ON EER eon
(TWERE \SWT A BT OF USE ARGUING | AUNT PENNY 1S OUR GUEST AND SHE'S AX HOME, THIS VERY MINUTE ALL ALONE ! AFTER ALL, RUNNING AWAY FROM A PROBLEM DOESN'T
CONFOUND fY,1'M | NOT TRYANG YO SOLVE TILT KNEW THE ANSWER THE MINUTE Sue BARGED WW OLR FRONT DOOR.
IT SEEMS REST, MARY THEY 'RE His OWN ELESH AND BRLOOD -
© TY. DIDN'T TAKE “Boy” VERY FAR - IT. THOUGHT You'D BE WORRIED =. —18 THAT AUNT GOING To TAKE “BovY "2 pro S—
? 1927 by United Feature Syndiesle, Inc A Fee US. Pat Of.—AN rights reserved 50
BUT HE'S LIKE MY REALLY AND Treuw JWTTLE BROTHER -
KNow
WiLL BECOME
1 rove HIM, Too - -IF I LOSE THE Jon
‘OF TAKING CARE SF HIM, EDON'T
{
MAIL MAN! ~LETTER/
wHAT
OH-1Ts FROM HIS FATHER! —HE 1s THE ONLY ONE To saY wHo SHouwD HAVE
quick!
—By Crane
LOOKOUT. HE'S USING BUCKSHOT. / SUMPIN, LULU
- MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NUR
YOU MUSTA DONE | HEY, CUT IT OUT)
© BELLE, TO MAKE YOUR PAPA MAD
YE DANGED OU PELICAN! IT'S
Rue SEe
EERE ety BO NSN\Go
LULER BELLE SUGGS, I COME TO WISIT YE. cee]
SAKES ALIVE, HONEY! T'LL BE RIGHT AFTER VE. }. I THOUGHT YE WUZ ONE O' THIM TRIFLIN
fon fi LLIONAIRES,
INC. T.M. REC. U.S. PAT. OF
MAY 1 INTERRUPT FOR A MOMENT, I vour eeauTIFUL P < = 1 MY GOOD a | FRENDS? /
Y Ze BUTI Ei 2 i) A Af ~~ "(LEW WON'T YOU S47 Wi Ls. pp DOWN? / 4 | ivy {
m—
nN TRUTH,
i THIS CURIOUS W By William Ferguson SWF TEE Nua NPR AN IN THE
UNITED STATES, FOR. EVERY SQUARE MILE OF LAND FIT FOR. CULTIVATION, THERE ARE AROUT hd 00 PERSONS/ & IN JAPAN, & THERE ARE
) z ON THE AVERAGE, SEND THEIR ROCTS OUT IN ALL DIRECTIONS A DISTANCE EQUAL TO ABOUT ONE AND ONE-THIRD TIMES THEIR. OWN HEIGHT.
“CYLINDROPHIS RUFUS,” INTIMIDATES ITS ENEMIES WITH ITS 7A/L, WHICH . RESEMBLES A HEAD, AND IS CARRIED ERE an
THE curious snake, known by the Latin name .of Cylindrophis .. Rufus, Is not poisonous, and, therefore, makes every effort to bluff its " enemies. The brightly colored tail is held at a position calculated to « intimidate a foe, and actually goes through the motions of striking.
* = t
. i
®i
& ~~ NEXT-—How fast can a tarpon swim?
/ 2 MOST UNWOR THY MOTIVE WHY OF COURSE, | PROMPTS ME TO IMPOSE UPON OUR LONG FRIENDSHIP, BUT, ,
\ REASONS FOR. SEEKING Nou ou IN MOREMTIA =
[ DON'T BE SO
Ha OTHER
COME ON, LEW, SPILL IT.
VOU KNOW HOW GLAD MYRA AND I WiLL BE TO DO ANY THING WE CAN gz TO HELP YOu ~
OF COURSE, LEW WE OWE YOU A HEAP OF ” GRATITQDE * [1 | |-
FLOWERY =
SARA |
—By Thompson and Coll "YOUR ASSURANCE 1S OVER-
WHELMING. FACT 1S, | AM ON \| TRAIL OF MOST EXTRAORDINARY ' |! JEWEL THIEF, BUT, S50 FAR, YOUR HUMBLE SERVANT IS JUST PLAIN STUMPED!
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
€ OR T THE MAGCULIN FEMININE QUALITIES |
6 ONT MOSTIN NKIN THALCORI AGE RDP ?
YOUR ANSWER eee
A GERMAN psychologist, * Schulze-Naumburg, has made a study of the qualities that make for married happiness and concludes that such masculine qualities as high “personal tempo,” self-asser-tion, pressure of activity, and most other masculine characteristics and drives are the qualities that make for married unhappiness. Such qualities as self-effacement, reserve, emotional strength, capacity for expression and other qualities commonly considered feminine are the ones that tend to make marriage happy.
= » 2 ANY employer with a heart made of anything softer than
marble finds it hard to discharge an
16 an EMPLOYER gery inp
HEARTED WHOSE FEELINGS KEEP HIM FROM DISCHARGING AN INCOMPETENT WORKER? 2 YFSORNO_.
3 A GROUP OF HIGH SCHOOL PUPILG ASK, "DOES A HIGH
) FOREHEAD
INDICATE GREATE
THAN A LOW FOREHEAD?"
YES ORNO
employee, especially a willing but incompetent one. ‘But if he fails to do this he is failing in that largerheartedness that takes into consideration the fellow-workers that the incompetent one is injuring by his poor work and the fact that practically always there is a competent worker needing the job. It is a hard way out of a hard situation but the truly kind-hearted employer will discharge such a worker—after using every effort to make him competent or to find him another job. 8 # .» I DISLIKE to answer a question more than once in this column but this one comes in nearly every. mail from some iidividual or
group. The height of your forehead has no more to do with the height of your intelligence than has the height of your kneecap from the ground, or the distance from your elbow to the end of your little finger.
As I pointed out last year, one |
psychologist measured the heads of 1500 criminals and a large group of noncriminal adults and found the criminals had slightly higher foreheads than did the lawvers and judges who tried them. This was merely by chance but it happened to turn out that way.
NEXT—Are prejudices ever justifiable?
COMMON ERRORS
Never say, “Both leaves of the bridge raise at once”; say, “rise.”
Best Short Waves
FRIDAY
ROME—5 p. m.-—News; ““Rome’s Midnight Voice.” meg. SCHENECTADY—5:45 p. m.—Mexican Cabelleros. W2XAF. 9.53 meg. MOSCOW—6 np. m.—History of May Day. RAN, 9.6 meg. LONDO 6:25 p. m.—‘“Responsibilities of Empire.” GSF. 15.14 meg. GSD. 11.75 meg.; GSB, 9.51 meg. BERLIN — 6:30 p. m. — Musical Treasures. DJD, 11.77 meg. BERLIN—7:45 p. m.—Interview of . the Month. DJD, 11.77 meg. CARACAS—8 p. m.—Concert Orchestra. YV5RC, 5.8 meg. LONDON—8:55 p. m.—‘“Music of the Western Isles.” GSF, 15.14 meg.; GSD, 11.75 meg.; GSC, 9.58 meg. IS—9 p. m.—Gramophone Rec-TPA-4, 11.72 meg. VANCOUVER—11 p. m.—Continental Varieties. : CJRO, 6.15 meg.; CJRX, 11.72 meg.
concert, 2RO, 9.63
PAR ords.
NE ON 'SHARLIE
BARON PULLS O
NBC microphone.
each Friday night. Tommy tenor, complete the bill.
RADIO THI
(The Indianapolis
Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in .program
Baron Munchausen (left) pulls a fast one on “Sharlie” at the This is the way the comics. Jack Pearl and ClUfT Hall look as they go through their NBC-WIRE broadcast at 8 o'clock Dorsey's orchestra
and Morton Bowe,
S EVENING
an=-
nouncements caused by stalion changes after press time.)
INDIANAPOLIS WEBM 1230 (CBS Net.)
WIRE
(NBC Net.
News-Varieties vs Hi
Inlerviews Reveries
News-Sporis Bohemians
” »
Aisle Seat Uncle Ezra News-Sports Jimimie Alien
Butler Univ, Hollace Shaw. News
Varieties
Irene Rich Loren Dalton Kemp's Or, Juhilee ” 1 Voice Theater
Waltz Time
:00 Hollywood Hotel
» ”
Mystry Pianist i » os
INDIANAPOLIS 5 1400 ) (NBC-Mutual)
CINCINNATI WLW J00
CHICAGO WGN 20 (Mutual Net.)
Swing It Budy-Ginger
Toy Band Tommy-Betty Unannounced Lowell Thomas
Harold Turner Orphan Annie
Johnson's Pickards Carl Freed » 2 Concert Or, Boh Elson
Lum-Abrer Rob Newhall
Jack Dempsey Himber's Or.
Death Valley Lone Ranger
Sanders’ Or.
Men Only
Martin's Or.
Deems Taylor 2 5 Tomorrow's
Trih,
San Francisco Or. Jack Pearl
Bahe Ruth
Varsity Show Benay Venuta 3 19
First Nighter Whiteman's Or. Unannounced Happy Times
Camera Lines o ”
Amos-Andy Music-News Meladies Festival
Melodies : Sportslight 9:20 Norve’s Or. 9:45 id 3 -
King's Or. Kyser's Or, Martin's Or,
Amos-Andy Dance Or.
News Field's Or. Roller Derby Goodman's Or.
10:60 10:15 10:30 10:15
Deutsch’s Or.
Joe-Roy-Cal ” »»
| cast by the NBC-B
Inside Story Panice's Or. Wilde's Or.
11:00 Ind. Roof 15 Lowe's Or. 13 Fisher's Or. Chiesta’s Or.
SATURDAY
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)
WIRE (NBC Net.
Sunny Raye Devotions
Mu sic Clock
Chuck Wagon ” »
Early Birds » ” » »
Charioteer Vass Family Manhatters Rigamarole Hymn Singer Home Town Speech Magie
9:00 Cincinnati Or. 9:15 ” 4 9:30 9:45
»”
»» »
INDIANAPOLIS 1400
P. Sullivan Hoff's Or. Dance Or, : 3 a 1s » Whiteman’'s Or, ”»
i} ”»
Moon River
Dance Or.
PROGRAMS
CINCINNATI WLW G00 ) (NBC-Mutual)
Cheerio » ”»
CHICAGO WGN 20 (Mutual Net.)
Golden Hour
Devotions News Larry-Sue Lee Erwin
Good Morning
”
Len Salve Melodies Ed [Fitzgerald
Sweethearts Raising Parents » »”
Synagogue Madge Farley Minute Men Music Clubs Romances
Get Thin
Harold Turner Yagabonds
Song Minister Music Clubs May Day br i
10:00 Children’s Hour pS ee ”» » » ”» Jack Shannon Bob-Vera Sunny Serenade Health Talk
Mary Baker Safety Club
Farm Hour
Markets News Reporter Calvary Hour
Meditation Farm Bureau Farm Circle
" ”
Commerce Dept. Glee Club Clyde Barrie rr » Matinee Interviews Baseball g
Dictators
Dancepators
$ Hehrew Talk 5 Puchin’s Or,
Scholarship Kindergarten
Youth Call ” Markets Medical Talk Glee Club Women's Club Benay Venuta News-Markets Farm Hour Concert Or. Len Salvo Three Graces leadoff Man
June Baker June Baker Dave Bascal Bob Elson Harold Turner Service iT
”» ”
”» ”»
Melodies Congress Or.
Musicale Baseball bal ”" ” "”
Logan's Musicale.
Glee Club
Youth Salute
G. 0. P. Talks
Stenross’ Or, Sherry's Or,
Kindergarten Harris’ Or.
”» »”» » » News-Sports T. B. Talk
Raseball .- "
Varieties rH »
Day's Close Harold Turner Light's Or.
Top Hatters Tommy-Beity A. G. Karger
Where to find other stations:
Chicago, WBBM 770: WENR 870;
"WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820: Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND 560.
delphia Orchestra, They are Ravel's “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.”
delphians are on tour. on WFBM at 8 o'clock.
Good Radio Music By JAMES THRASHER
Two French compositions will serve to introduce the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra to the Friday “bank night” audiences of the Phila-
“Tombeau de Couperin” and Dukas’
Pierre Monteux, onetime conductor of the Boston Symphony, is the San Francisco orchestra’s conductor of five substitute organizations which will be heard while the PhilaThe program is heard tonight and each Friday
. He and his men are the second
Incidentally, Eugene Ormandy, the Philadelphia orchestra leader, is making frantic dashes each weekend during the tour to arrive in Detroit on Sunday for rehearsal and broadcast on the Detroit Symphony Orchestra's regular Sunday night broadcast. Much in the manner of Maj. Bowes, the Chicago Symphonic Hour broadcast is to be “dedicated” tonight—not. ta a city, however, but to Terpsichore, goddess of the dance. The program will attempt to show the different racial and national influences of the dance upon various composers. Among the illustrative orchestra selections will be Weber's “Invitation to the Dance”; the Allegro from Beethoven's Seventh Symphony; two dances from Sme-
tana's opera, “The Bartered Bride”; tHe Chopin Polonaise in A Major, | and de Falla’s Spanish Dance, No. 1, | Vocal music, as influenced by the | dance, also will have its share of | attention. Vivian Della Chiesa, lyric | soprano, will be heard in Rossini’s | “La Tarantella.” Charles Sears, | tenor, is to sing “Vous dansee, Marquise,” while Edward Davies is scheduled to do some of the waltzes | from Richard Strauss’ ‘Der Rosen- | kavalier.” Brahms’ “Liebeslieder | Waltzes” will be sung by the Chi- | cago A Capella Choir, directed by | Noble Cain. The program will originate at
WENR, Chicago, and will be broad- |
Igclock.
ue network at 9
Two anniversaries will be celebrated tonight, the first at 6 o'clock on CBS-WFBM when “Broadway Varieties” moves into its fourth year on the networks. Then at 6:30 o'clock, Kay Thompson and her Rhythm Singers mark their first anniversary on the same network and station. Kay will sing her own song, specially written for the occasion, and Hal Kemp's orchestra will salute the entertainers with a special program.
ADDED TO CAST
Russell Hayden, who made his
sereen debut in “Hills of Old Wyo- | [|
ming,” again was signed today by Harry Sherman for an important role in “North of the Rio Grande.”
ra] Ey
EVERY WEEK
20 RCA Victor Auto Radios 500 Autographed Baseballs
Tune in SINCLAIR BABE
RUTH CONTEST
WFBM—9:30 P. M. (E. 8. T.)
- | ”
at Sinclair D alors J
adio Development in 1937 Marked by Many ‘Forced’ International Broadcasts; Indiana U. to Take Air in School Parade
| Fredric
Janet
Margh, Gaynor Featured in ‘Hollywood Hotel.' |
i ! | By RALPH NORMAN Three marked and significant. | are apparent if one | glances back over radio's developtment during the past year. First i and probably most important as far las the listener is concerned, is the
movements
trend to “listener participation” pro- | grams, an innovation irequently disi cussed in this. space. | There likewise has been a marked i increase in the number of internai tional broadcasts, due perhaps net so much to network program planj ners as to events which forced radio | to go abroad if it was to feliow imi portant events. The Pan-American | Conference with Presidenr Roose- { velt in attendance made an unpre j cedented number of South Arerican | broadcasts worthwhile, and of course the English abdication crisis and the’ forthcoming coronation gave—anel will give—opportunity for counticss | interesting programs {rom London. { A third very obvious trend is edu{cational institutions’ use cf coast-to-[coast networks during evening neurs when audiences are lavgest. Mest | university ol coileme-spansored | broadcasts, prior to last fail, were carried during daylieht hours and were chiefly educational In nature. But now every - large institution plans its festivities with a network | schedule in mind, and broadcasts are intended to interest the casual | listener as well as the smaller alum- ' ni audience group. °° :
= ” NBC-WIRE's successful “Varsity Parade,” which originates each week on a different campus and in three or four months has moved from coast to coast, may be responsible in part for the networks’ willingness to devote more time and better broadcasting hours to quasi-educational programs. The “Varsity Parade’s” success recently caused its extension flor several weeks, and tonight it will originate at the University of Washington, to be heard locally at 8:30 o'clock.
”
|
{ | |
= | DePauw University celebrated its | 100th anniversary with a coast-to-coast NBC show, and comes now In- | diana University with a -half-hour | program on NBC-Blue at 9:30 | o'clock next Wednesday night to mark the 117th anniversary of its | founding. Like many of the pretentious commercial shows, the Indiana Univer- | sity broadcast will originate in dif- | ferent, cities. President William | Lowe Bryan will speak in Indianap- | olis through facilities of WIRE, Hoagie Carmichael, composer of (“Star Dust” and other popular | tunes, broadcasts from Hollywood, [2nd Edwin C. Hill, the CBS commenator; Phil Duey, popular bari- { tone; Johnny Johnson's orchestra, | and other features will originate in | New York. All these celebrities, | many of them regular network en- | tertainers, attended Indiana Univer- | sity.
”
® 2 ”
Tonight's radio schedules are overrun with movie names, and even the CBS-WFBM bank-spon-sored symphonic broadcast ‘goes Hollywood” to the extent of presenting Darryl Zanuck, Twentieth Century-Fox president, as its guest speaker. Fredric March and Janet Gaynor head “Hollywood Hotel's” cast for a preview at 7 o'clock tonight over CBS-WFBM, of their new picture, “A Star Is Born.” Fred MacMurray makes his last appearance as master of ceremonies, to be replaced next week by Jerry Cooper. 7 ao Then at 8 o'clock over NBC-WLW, { Don Ameche and Barbara Luddy | will be heard in a strictly modern drama, “Love Flies High,” a transcontinental airplane romance. Elza { Schallert will interview Patsy Kelly, i currently in “Wake Up and Live” at { the Apollo, and Lyda Roberti as
! part of her NBC-Blue network pro-
| gram at 9 o'clock, completing the | cinema parade. # Oddest result of schedule juggling for daylight saving time is cancellation of “Paramount on Parade,” which NBC premiered a few weeks ago. Because everyone works so hard in Hollywood, and because Sunday morning is the only one on which the stars can sleep late, Paramount discontinues its new program. Under daylight saving time schedules, the stars would have to be at the studio at 8 a. m, and that's tooeearly, it ‘seems. The program is expected back on NBC next fall, when normal time is resumed.
” ”
Special Announcement
yTHE PHILADELPHIA] ORCHESTRA
Presents the second of a of Guest Orchestras
San Francisco Symphony Orchestra
PIERRE MONTEUX, Conducting
* TONIGHT AT 8
*
WFEM
Columbia Network
American National Bank
at Indianapolis
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
