Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 May 1937 — Page 17
"| MONDAY, MAY 10, he THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES’ OUR BOARDING HOUSE With Major Hoople | SIDE_GLANCES By Clark
‘PAGE 17 Picture:
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BOOKIE”2 WHY THAT HAY MOOSE
EVEN
Coronation Broadcast to Give of Colorful Ceremony in | Joan Crawford Stars in Radio Theater’
London;
CLASSICS ON HARMONICA
rei Listeners Hope.
To Hear Wedding of Duke on Air.
NAMED “THE BOOKIEY. . HOCH 1 TRUTHFULLY CALLED WHEN. THE TURN ON WHO i : TH WOULD WIN IN THE DERBY, HUNTING - OR IN ANY OTHER 1S sO RACE «+ KAFF-KAFF- +aoop! THE PURSE 15 MINE / : —
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WIN | 71 ENTERED | \& IN TH DERBY || cERBY/! TM THE | SO, WE BOOKIE” WIN!
«
By RALPH NORMAN
Listeners cannot help but be coronation conscious tonight, tomorrow and Wednesday as nearly all programs - build their entertainment around the British ceremony. Phen for early risers, the coronation will be broadcast, beginning at 3 a, m. : | Wednesday. : | NBC has seven announcers ready to describe every coronation detail, including (the actual ceremony in Westminster Abbey. The parade will be broadcast from many points | along the long route from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Abbey | and return. All three networks will open early Wednesday morning, and the coronation will, continue until | about 9 a.| m. Wednesday. The most elaborate short-wave | transmission setup in radio history | will relay the descriptions from | British stations to American net- | works for| rebroadcasting. From 3 1a, m. until 8 a. m. all 23 of the | British Broadcasting Co.'s direc= | tional aerials will be in simultaneous operation, and the powerful British Empire station at Daventry will operate continuously for 24 hours
——
) A Contending that the harmcnica is a symphonic instrument, Carl % } 3 3 : Freed, orchestra leader and vaudeville player, organized a harmonica COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. TM, REG, U's. PAT. oF : band which today is a popular WLW feature. Using special arrangements, Freed and the Lads play virtually any type music from classical | to modern rhythm, and his arrangement of the “Poet and Peasant” overture has won him much acclaim. That's Freed on the left. The group is heard many times each week via WLW, and it makes frequent | theater appearances in Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky. Wednesday if you wish to hear the
RADIO THIS EVENING coronation by short wave.
(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in ‘program an- I a» Py
nouncements caused by station changes after press time.) “ . " : INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI CHICAGO Radio| Theater” takes a cue WF IRE 14 from the coronation tonight, pre-
BM 1230 : w 00 WLW 700 WGN 720 (CBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual) (Mutual Net.) senting Joan Crawford in Maxwell Toy Band Swing It Anderson's “Mary. of. Scotland.”. Tommy-Betty Upannounedd Her supporting cast will include Lowell Thomas Orphan Annie Franchot Tone as the Earl of Pickards Bathwell, and Judith Anderson SP ke will play| Queen Elizabeth. This a capable cast will be augmented by Roe os the Earl of Warwick, the British » gL OF, film player whose ancestral title Lons Ranger entitles him to a seat of state in Westminster Abbey Wednesday. The Pon busy in Hollywood, and will tell about the coronation tonight, faonch he will not see it. # oo = It’s becoming a tradition that actresses who play Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots, have auburn hair.’ Helen Hayes created the role on the New York stage, then Xatharine Hepburn did it for the movies. Now Miss Crawford will do the role in the radio | adaptation. All three - actresses are on the auburn side,” Moon River This -probably is coincidence, but Meakingaad's Or. won it's true that Mary, Queen of Scots, had auburn hair, just as haye her Sn of American theater
TUESDAY PROGRAMS and radio ©
INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI CHICAGO There's |a possibility that AmerWFBM 1230 WIRE 1100 WLW 700 WGN 720 ican listeners will hear the marriage « .. (CBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual) (_ (Mutual Net.) of the Duke of Windsor and MTS. Simpson just as they will hear the coronation. There's a very good » possibility, too, that the Duke will refuse to | have microphones anywhere arqund when he and Mrs. Simpson are married. The networks, at least NBC andl CBS, have their European representatives |pulling every wire to get
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HIE NJ: \ LA 5 </ “A woman shouldn't tell her right age. No matter what 10 1 mo 7 ND NOW THE WAR IS ON= she says, everyone adds four or five years to it.”
' BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES —By Martin
WELL, WHAT ARE YOO rye] WERE WASTING TO | [LAND SAWES AYS A PY WE CANT RAVE
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1 ROEW VT! PERCIVAL , TH\S YAS GONE FAR ENOUGM | PACK, OLR THINGS = L WON'T STAY wn 1 SousE NOTHER OTE
DONG TOOAX T HEAR WHAT YO SOME PRIWACYK , WITROUT FOLKS TAGGING ~ os ALONG WHEREVER. WE GO AND SNOOPING 4% AROUND, TVERY BLESSED
WE HAVENT VINOTE of Ine
DEC\DED NEY
Tea, Tunes Baseball
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Nowy: Sports Coronation
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Now and Then School Sketches News
Anything Happens Johnsons Uncle Ezra M News-Sports Jimmie Allen
CITTTIIN | Bo
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Bob Newhall
Heidt’s Or, Burns-Allen Burns-Allen
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Bohemians Margaret Speaks Margaret Speaks
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Fibber McGee Charm Hour
Review Music Parade Clifton Utley Tomorrow Trib.
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King’s or. Contented Hour Jury Trials Drame-Rhythm " 5, " »”
Ind. Parade Happy Times Weber’s Or.
Jury Trials
By ‘Brickerhokt 7
Piano Twins DeLys-Hauser
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TRERE GOES THAT MEAN fi UNCLE -~ RP -HE'LL Re
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Amos-Andy Cooper’s Or. Courtney's Or.
Melodies Sportslight Pick-Pat,
Amos-Andy , Music-News Your State Let's Dance
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News Ravel's Or. Roller Derby Fio Rito’s Or.
Ma gnolias P. Sullivan
James’ Or. Joe -Roy-Cal Norvo's Or.
Dance Or. ” ”n H. King's ” ”n
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OD 1921 by United Featcre rie, Ine. § Te. Ree U. 8. Pat. Off. —All rights reserved
Chuck Wagon Sunny Raye
Devotions
Music Clock
Cheerio Golden ‘Hour » ”» ” »
an = 22
Early Birds Devotions ”»
' WASHINGTON TUBBS II 7 ai ™
» ”» Good Morning
Chandler Jr.
ENTLY, | IN THE DEAD OF NIGHT, ASH AND EASY Ba TO BARNACLE BEACH. WHO NOE a - WHERE NL IT'S A FUNNY WORLD
O, EASY
Cooking School Len Salvo Get Thin Next Door
Hymns Hope Alden Unannounced Next Door
Mrs. Wiggs Other Wife Plain Bill Children
BUSINESS, MAN! MY NAME'S WOODPRO : NO JOBS, NO JEREMIAN one TCO HoT CANT] | BX » 0»
Feature PROSPECTS. . SS ¥ 2 7 3 1d ”» »
74 HALT! wo 5 TH ee? NONE O' YOUR EF GET CN YOUR a SouG Tim : 4 Time
CIRC. 1. M. REG. U.S. PAT. OFF ¥
— {
DOSING AS “A WEALTHY AMERICAN
/ IT'S QUIET, HERE IN THIS CAFE, COUNT.
1 HAVE REASON TO
/BLUEBEARD"2 ISN'T THAT WHAT EVERYONE 1S JOKING |
MAM SELLE, WOULD NOT SAY THAT IF SHE BUT KNEW THIS
NOW TELL ME WHY YOU THINK I'M IN DANGER -
BELIEVE
THAT "BLUE -
LY. CALLING THIS DARING JEWEL THIEF? HOW
BEARD" IS HERE IN BIARRITZ! 2d
HEIRESS, TOAID LEW WEN IN CAPTURING 1 A NOTORIOUS i JEWEL THIEF, MYRA MEETS THE POMPOUS , COUNT ZAMAROFF, WHILE ON A SCOUTING EXPEDITION SAT THE BEACH
Jb N GOATS MI CLK ALWAYS 15 FREE OF |
BERCLLOS/S GERMS.
IS THE CLOSEST PLANET, BUT WE KNOW MORE. ABROLT MARS, DUE TO THE FACT THAT VENUS HAS AN OPAQUE ATMOSPHERE, AND ALSO THAT, WHEN NEAR- bi EST WS, THE NIGHT : S/pE£ OF THE PLANET IS TOWARD US.
A BARREL OF CRUDE PETROLEUM ~ YIELDS ABOUT TWICE AS MANY GALLONS OF GASOLINE TODAY AS IT DID FIFTEEN YEARS AGO.
corn. 1237 BY NEA SERVICE, ING. T.M. REG. U. 5. PAT. OFF. “s.r0 VENUS travels an orbit that lies inside that of the earth. Therefore, when she is nearest us, she is directly in line with the sun, and we gan see only her dark side. Mars travels an orbit that lies outside our pwn, and we look away from the sun to see it at its nearest approach, and we see its full lighted face. : * %x *
NEXT—Are there any deer in Aufiralia?
PERFECTLY THRILLING !
WARN YOU
FIEND'S SINISTER METHODS! THAT'S WHY 1 Rn I<. 1 ae
"BUT MY DEAR / COUNT. IF NO ONE EVER HAS SEEN THIS MAN HOW DO YOu KNOW HE'S HERE? ————————
A FRIEND OF MINE... THE ~ PRINCESS OLGA... ALREADY HAS BEEN ROBBED / HER FAMOUS KYBER RUBY PENDANT WAS STOLEN ONLY THIS MORNING!
By DR.
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND
ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
WHEN EDUCATED OPLE
PE STUTTER DOES IT INDICATE UNUSUALLY HIGH INTELLIGENCE? YES ORNO ee rR
IN HIS delightful book for all dog lovers, “The Mind of the Dog,” F. J. J. Buytendyk argues that the love of the dog for his master rests on the ascendency and superiority of man and adds: “Does there not lie herein a strange secret of all love which ever seeks the higher and not the equal or lower. . . . Herein is foreshadowed that which is the very core of human experience, the well-spring of the soul.” A beautiful and profound thought. A man or woman may have a passion for something or for some lower
one, but this is just the opposite of.
love, for love is the most exalting emotion that we know and that which is lower cannot exalt,
DOES, oVE, LWAYS SEEK THE HIGHER. OR THE EQUAL OR LOWER?
4 YOUR ANSWER ____
CAN You DRIVE YOUR CAR
FASTER
IN WINTER OR
COLYRIGNT 1987 SOHM DILLE co.
AT PURDUE UNIVERSITY, Max D. Steer, psychologist, found among 87 college student stutterers that they averaged seven points higher on intelligence tests than nonstutterers. He cites numerous other large investigations which indicate that in the general population people of either high or low intelligence are apparently about equal in stuttering, but since stuttering is a drawback in school, he thinks those who fight their way on through to college are likely to be in the higher ranges of intelligence. I imagine they would also be found to be very high in will power
and ability to work for a distant goal.
a
making a long drive you can usually make it quicker in winter than in summer even though you have icy roads and the like, simply because there are fewer cars. You may go along at a somewhat slower speed, but at a much steadier one. For a long drive that you must make quickly, choose the winter unless there are very heavy Snows.
Next—Should women have the same right to propose dates and marriage as men?
COMMON ERRORS
Never say, “They all came except vhe”; say, “except her.” ;
Economic strife resulting from inordinate or discriminatory trade barriers is one of the most fruitful sources of political animosity and military conflict.—President Roose-
velt.
Best Short Waves
MONDAY
PARIS—8:30 a. m, Light Music. TPA~2, 15.24 meg. ame conversation A, Later Bohle - and Director Dr. von FEoeckmann. DJD, 11.77 meg. News in Engin
ME—5 p. m. ne 2RO, 9/63
Opera. SRO. Mail Bag. meg. 8 i iv MOSCOW — D...Mm. on Jers ry - of *‘subbotnik.’” RAN, 9.6 m PRAGUE, Crete — 7130 p. Prague Teachers’ Chorus. BLRIA. 11.84 meg. | ARACAS—T7:45 p. m. Hear YV5RC, 5.8 mess NDON—8:30 Dp. The Glens of an GSF, 15. Mi ol 2d GSD, 11.75 meg.: GSC, '9.58 m PRAGUE, Crechosiovaiia — 8: p. m. Concert. . 11.84 meg. PRINCE To 30 Pp. m. Pls Review. CJRO, 6.15 meg.; CJRX
Amateur
11.72 meg.
Milky Way Quality Twins Mrs, Farrell
David Harum
Hymn Singer
McGregor House
Song Minister
Linda’s Love, Personals Live Again Gospel Singer
Unannounced Children
Grimm’s Daughters
Parade
permission
Gumps Ed C. Hill Helen Trent Our Gal
Unannounced
Dr. Auman-Melody
Varieties Cadets
Girl Alone Markets uartet Wife Saver
Len Salvo Melodies Unannounced We Are Four
NBC vice be around
Way Hope Alden Serenade Life Stories
Down East
Mary Baker Dan Harding Linda's Love Farm Hour
Three Spades Delys-Hauser Markets Farm Hour
Bob Elson Three Graces Service Markets
CBS is
Big Sister Farm Bureau Farm Circle Myrt-Marge
Markets Women Only
Reporter WPA Music
”» »n ” ”» Varieties Betty-Bob
Concert Or. Painted Dreams Way Down East Truth Only
News Apron Strings Concert Hall
Varieties ” »
Women's Clubs You Heard
Pepper Young’ Ma Perkins oe Sade Neills
Wife-Secretary June Baker Len Salvo Leadoff Man
casts, if |{
ing at 3 a.
Court pr
VWIOTISDD | pk fabio jd | 75 10 19D
—l—D GSN
Bohemians Kitty Kelly
Se hool Sketches
“Pop” Concert
Lorenzo Jones Escorts iy Moon Matinee
Interlude Kitty Keene - Follow Moon Guiding Light
Baseball ” ”
”» ”» ”» ”
Del Casino
Science Series |
Interviewer
Mary Marlin Mary Scthern
» ”»
ginning Speakers
if | possible.
to describe the famous
president,
couple's: ceremony, and so far they have not heen refused. John Royal, said NBC will
as usual, “if there's any-
thing to broadcast.”
less emphatic about ar-
rangements, but CBS will be there The marriage broad-
hgy materialize, will be
m. ” ” ”
for early risers only, probably open=
President Roosevelt's Supreme
osals will be opposed by
four: Democratic Senators in an NBC-Blue network broadcast beat 6:45 o’clock tonight.
will be Royal S. Cope-
land of New York, Peter G. Gerry
EXPERIENCE SHOWS that in |
Baseball Syncopator » 2 Chilaren’s Hour 3 ”
Ut D “LS uD
Singing Lady " n Orphan Annie n »
n° 2» » ” ” ”» ”» ”
Tea Tunes ”
News-Snorts Coronation
aad l WWW om “ans
Larry-Sue Tommy -Betty Inlaws Lowell Thomas
Swing It Melodies Singing Lady Orphan Annie
Where to find ‘other stations:
Chicago, WBBM 770, WENR 870,
what he preaches. point to his orchestra members.
A few minutes later; strated a point on the violin. Then to prove his versatility even further, he stepped into the tenor place in the quartet and sang the part, though he actualy is a baritone, ” 3 8 Vivian Della Chiese, “Contented hour” soprano, was told her voice is unusually powerful, but she didn't realize it fully until after a recent broadcast, The soprano was wearing a dress with a row of buttons down - the back. As she approached a crescendo, one button popped off. In succession, two more crescendos, and two more buttons gone. The broadcast over, Vivian picked up the buttons and retired to do repair work, un n ® Jules Herbeveaux, NBC “Contented Hour” production man, is known among broadcasters for his stories. Each week during. rehearsal the cast and .various employees. would hang around his control booth waiting for the story-of-the-week. The crowd became so large program directors decided to end the stories, or disband the group in favor of a smaller audience. Now Jules tells his stories to Bob Childe, Continentals accompanist, who then comes out of the control booth and “rebroadcasts” it for fellow employees. Remote control, so to speak. ” " ” A special Coronation program will be featured on the “Contented Hour” tonight. Old English airs, martial music and other British selections have been programed. Dr. Black will direct the orchesira in ‘Flotsam’s “Changing
| |
| day faced a $20,900 suit by a book- |
is a man who practices |
of the Guard” and the “Coropation March” from Myerbeer’s “The Prophet.” Miss Della Chiesa’s selection will ‘be “Annie Laurie,” and the Continentals’ Quartet will sing the English hunting song, “John Pesln »
COMEDIAN LEARNS TO CUT, FIT DRESS
Times Special HOLLYWOOD, May 10.—Victon Moore had to learn to cut out, fit and sew a dress for Helen Broderick for a scene in “Missus America” in which the funsters are featured. In addition, the rotund comedian had to operate a power sewing machine as if he were a veteran at the job. . “This wes the most difficult task ever demanded of me in a film or a stage production,” said Moore. “I felt like a man in a runaway car when that sewing machine began to hum.” “Missus America” is a farce comedy revolving around a small-town woman who wins a national contest for the outstanding housewife of America.
TILLY LOSCH SUED ON FILM CONTRACT
By United Press
HOLLYWOOD, May 10.— Tilly |
| Losch, dancing screen actress, to-
| ing agency which claims to have
| obtained her a $1000 a week movie !
contract. John McCormick, Inc. charges that she repudiated a contract under which the agency was to receive 10 Per § cent of Lér earnings.
4 which ml wears
of Rhode Island, Pat McCarran of Nevada and Harry F. Byrd of Virginia. 4 Ed ” r YRACIE Allen isn’t the only one ¥ in the famous Burns-Allen
WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND 560. | family who has idiosyncrasies—MTr.
‘Contented Hour’ Chief Proves His Versatility
ONTENTED Hour” notes—Dr. Frank Black, who directs the Monday evening NBC-WIRE 8 o'clock program, During a recent rehearsal, he wished to illustrate a He stepped to the piano and played the | bie hat. passage in question as he wanted it played. he demon-«
Burns has|a few of his own that ‘aren't mentionéd as often as Gracies. : He thinks, for instance, that a ringside seat at a prize fight is a good Piacplia think of radio jokes. He says his best ideas come just after a fighter gets knocked out. George, off] the radio, tells the last part of jokes first, and if no one | laughs, he doesn’t bother to tell the first part.’ | Cracie often mentions her little ii has none. She's talk- | ing| of George's little blue beret when golfing. George wears it perched on the back of his head, so when he swings at the ball he’s more worried about losing his hat than perfecting his swing. Consequently, he drives long, low balls and has a sure touch | around oy greens. Golfers might copy.
|
RADIO THEATRE
x em a Tonight
JOAN CRAWFORD
FRANCHOT TONE
ARY
OF ¢ COTLAND"
JUDITH ANDERSON
BY MAXWELL ANDERSON Directed by Cecil B. deMille
7PM.
Central Standard Time WFBM and Coast-to-Coast Columbia Network
