Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1937 — Page 23
WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 1937
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
(= SV DOWN ~BY-EEE & F THEE E wc OLDA MILL & STA-REEMMM wf] WHERE RTHE ~-5 KAFF -KAFF «ww UMPZ
- -AH=~H Ee H 5 AR-A WITHIN
PRACTICE, MY RICH BARITONE WILL BE AS GOOD AS WHEN 1 STARRED IN OPERAw~ SAA, pS srr EPI KAFF-F
BARRIE
HE WAS LOOKING THROUGH ANY OLD SNAPSHOT ALBUM AND RAN ACROSS A PICTURE OF TH SWINGING DOORS IN TH! OLD MSCLAUSKY SALOON], BROUGHT BACK MEMORIES OF TH' DAYS WHEN HE YODELED IN A BEER-IMBIBING QUARTET /
WITH All THAT THUNDER, TH' WAR CLOUDS ARE SURE TO GATHER LET'S DUCK FOR COVER BEFORE MRS, HOOPLE STARTS A RAIN OF
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ANDIT
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HIS BELLOWING= |,
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
& z\ ° = 2 / AN
NW Cy
(SoU HAVENT SAC A WORD SINCE WE'VE BEEN OANCING
A PENNY FOR YOUR THOLGHIS | MISTER
, eg
l"¥™M dust
TRYING To REMEMBER
(\Y SEEMS TO HANE SLWPVED MY MIND | HAVE 1 :
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
By Clark
With Major Hoople | SIDE GLANCES
DON'T
11937 NEA SERVICE ac REC U.S PAT.O%E.
ME THMM- | MEMBER OF
NE
og
“He brought me last week, and whatta you think he did? Made me sit up here in the balcony!”
—By Martin
OR SOME OTHER FELLA JUST Y'PLAY SAFE , 10 BETTER START RIGHT From THE FIRST TIME 1 EVER SAW NOL
sae
RE -
COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T.M. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF.
—By Brinkerhoff
8 SEE2 IT SAYS RIGHT IN THE LETTER FROMM “RoYs’ FATHER THAT WE MUSTNT LET #5” UNCLE HAVE HI1M-
coLLy’ THAT DIFFERENT
4
~- by United Feat
© 1937 Tm. Rec. U.S. Pat. OF.—All
!GTON TUBBS II
SAY, YOUNG FELLER - THE BARY Ss aTAYiN
y [on Hs UNCLE ’
£4 il | \ N\ os \
was
MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE
THATS JUST IT ~ -AND THE BARRY S FATHER SAYS Youre NoT To HAVE HIM -
7 Th GET 4 THAT Kip
RIO BRANO
LIKE A ROASTING
X [PAN IN THE TROPIC \| SUN. BARKING \| DOGS. MUDHOLES | VULTURES. AN | ODOR OF SOURED =| MILK. SOMEWHERE \] THE NASAL WHINE | OF A LOVE SONG,
FAR OFF, THE SWISHING BOOM { OF THE SEA,
A
AH, GO WELCOME TO EL NACIONAL!
EVENING, SENORES, |
ESP Fo
NACIONAL
SINGING BIRDS, FOUNTAIN. THE FRAGR
ANCE
GROWING IN
THE COOL OF THE PATIO
OBOY!'@ THIS'LL BE
” WHAT ARE WE TO DO NOW, LEW 2? GOSH, VES!WE ( IT LOOKS AS IF OUR MASQUERADE,) CAN'T HAVE 7. % HERE IN BIARRITZ, THAT BIRD HAS BECOME A FOR | Bae”
von HAS FALLING RECEIVED a MYRA! A BOX J id >. TJ CONTAINING i PRINCESS OLGAS FAMOUS, KYBER RUBIES, WHICH PLACES|AN ENTIRELY DIFFERENT ANGLE ON THE SITUATION
soe
SAFETY
= =
THERE ARE ABOUT 400, 000 CHRISTIAN HYMNS © IN EXISTENCE.
THEMSELVES, | WITH THEIR. CLENCHED MANDIBLES, ™ A
CORMORANTS DIVE UNDER WATER
AND ACTUALLY FLY AFTER. FISH
oo KER U > THE cormorant dives while swimming on the water surface. On " - submerging, the bird immediately uses its wings as its propelling force.
They drive it along with amazing speed, and seem to work equally well in water and air. x
COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.
* * *
MUST EXTOL VIRTUE OF PATIENCE, MY FRIENDS, AND, ABOVE ALL, WE MUST SAY NOTHING ABOUT RECEIVING PENDANT. ‘BLUEBEARD HAS LITTLE RE GARD FOR THE
SPURN HIS GIFTS.
. NEXT—What brains are larger than the human’ brain?
"VOU MEAN), IF WE
OF THOSE WHO
PENDANT OVER TO THE AUTHORITIES, MYRA'S LIFE MIGHT BE ER - GOSH, LEW, WE MUST DO SOMETHING!
TURNED [THE
THING!
pin
COPR. 191) BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T. M REC. U.S. PAT. OFF.
1 CAN SEE, NOW, WHY "BLUEBEARD" HAS BEEN GETTING AWAY WITH MURDER" FOR SO LONG... BUT DON'T WORRY, JACK .. WE'LL DO SOME-
IN FACT. I'M GOING FOR A LITTLE STROLL ALONG THE WATER FRONT, RIGHT NOW: ALONE!
19 THE BEST WAY
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
a
TO 6ET OVER THE
. L065
‘OF A LOVE
D ONE
TO REMEMBER, 16 600 Ia 200K KEEPERS
THINK QUESTION: CAN YOU 6IVE WO G00D REASONS Fon AND TWO AGAINST HAVING EVERYBODY
FINGERPRINTED? FOR AGAINST ITS ALBIGHT FOR CRIMINALS BOT...
“0
COPYRIGHT
I THINK it depends on whether . the loss be by death of the loved one. or by desertion and change of affection. If a loved one has passed on, the more we remember his good qualities the more do our memories gradually fuse into.a hallowed and poignant sweetness—a mixture of happiness and pain. But where a wifg or husband or lover has proved unfaithful, nothing helps quite as much as remembering their worst qualities and developing as much dislike, even contempt of them as possible. ”
THIS question is warmly debated in the Rotarian by J. Edgar Hoover on the pro side and Sir Basil Thomson, formerly of Scoti
# s
YONN D/L &
SIAN pI ARH AN HR
ARE GIRLS WHO "BREEZE IN" FROM SMALL TOWNS INTO LARGE CITIES AS LIKELY
TO GET 6000 JnBS AS CITY GIRLS 2
YES ORNO 922 land Yard on the con side. Mr. Hoover argues: (1) Over 10,000 persons disappear in New York City alone yearly and over 8000 unidentified are yearly buried in potter's field. Many of these persons could be identified with finger prints, and the mense cost of investigation redufed. (2) Thousands of people annually lose their memory as to who they are. Finger prints would identify them. Sir Basil argues: (1) Finding the right. finger print in a list of over 500,000 is well-nigh impossible; in a list of 120 million, it would be impossible—at least require an army of experts. (2) The cost would be immense. If 12,000 people were finger printed each day, it would
require 3 years to finger print the citizens of London alone. Take your choice. I'm for the affirmative.
” o n ACCORDING to Sally MacDou-
gal, journalist, the country girls
are more likely to land jobs. She thinks this is due mostly to their "not having enough sense to be afraid.” She thinks people get jobs often by their sheer self-confidence. However, Miss MacDougal warns that only trained, thoroughly competent girls should try the cities.
NEXT — Which are the better dancers—introverts or extraverts?
COMMON ERRORS
Never say, “Modern houses are not as cold as ancient houses were”; say, “not so cold.”
Women are ill one and a half times as often as men, yet the “weaker” sex lives slightly longer.— Dr. John W. Williams, noted pathologist.
Best Short Waves
WEDNESDAY
ROME—5 p. m.—News. Melodies. 2RO, 9.63 meg. ne : LONDON—5:30 p. m.—Songs of the Northern Countries. GSP, 15.31 meg:; GSO, 15.18 meg.; GSD, 11.75 meg.; GSB. 9.51 meg. MOSCOW—6" p. m.—Soviet Tourism. RAN, 9.6 meg, : HUIZEN, Netherlands—6 Happy Programs. PCJ, 9.5 BERLIN — 7:45 bp. Hour. DJD, 11.77 meg. PARIS—9 p. m.—Musie. 11.72 meg. LONDON—9°'10 p. m.—Walter Collins. GSI. 15.26 meg.: GSD. 11.75 GSC. 9.58 meg.: GSB. 9.51 meg. TOKIO — 11:13 p. m. — Japanese Music. JZJ, 11.80 meg.
p. m.— 9 meg: m. — Women's
TPA-4,
+
ts Sor
WFBM.
Lily Pons’ cat gives a graphic performance of Zez Confrey’s “Kitten on the Keys” to the amusement of the French soprano and Andre Kostelanetz, her fiance and assisting radio artist. and Mr. Kostelanetz, sans cat, will be heard at 7 o'clock tonight on
Miss Pons
RADIO THI
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.) Tes, Time Harry Hogen Interviews Speedway
News-Sports Ind. Central
EVENING: =
(The Indianapolis Times 1s not responsible for inaccuracies in prozram announcements caused by station changes after oress time.)
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)
CINCINNATI WLW 00 (NBC-Mutual)
CHICAGO WGN 20 (Mutual Net.)
Toy Band Tommy-Betty In-Laws Lowell Thomas
Swing It Melodies Sally Jo Nelson Orphan Annie
Easv Aces Uncle Ezra News-Sports Jimmie Allen
Wheeler Mission Buddy Clark News
Concert Or. 3 Graces Small Brooks Sports
Johnsons Mrs. Roosevelt Lum-Abner Bob Newhall
®
Cavalcade
Lod Ss
Ken Murray King's Or. ”n ”» ”» ”
Merry-Go-Round
One Family King’s Or.
Family Musie Lone Ranger
2
Kostelanetz Or. Concert ”
Jessica Dragonette
alabader
0 —- wow
Denny's Or. Tomorrow's Trib. Family Music s
Gang Busters Hit Parade
Babe Ruth " 3 Shirley Howard Baseball
00m im wens
Hit Parade Expediticns
2 ” Theater . Music Revue 4 ”
Amos-Andy
Poetic Melodies Len Riley News Baseball |
Social Security Daly’s Or.
VLOVL -— wonsS
Amos-Andy Madhatterfields Wis, Alumni
H. King's Or. Weem's Or. Martin's Or.
News ” Y W. C. A. Chorus ” » Nichols’ Or. Joe-Roy-Cal
« P. Sullivan Norvo's Or. Los Amigos
Dornberger’s Or. ,
Denny's Or. " mM
Baseball Panico’s Or. Pendarvis’ Or.
Nocturne Eldredge's Or. Chiesta’s Or.
Moon River Stabile’s’ Or.
Pendarvis’ Or. Sanders’ Or.
THURSDAY
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)
-Chuck Wagon
WIRE
Sunnv Raye Devotions
a3
INDIANAPOLIS 1400 (NBC Net.)
PROGRAM
© CINCINNATI (NBC-HMutual) Cheerio 5
CHICAGO WGN 20 (Mutual Net.) Golden Hour
Early Birds Music Clock ”» ”» ”» ” ”» ”» » ”
aladeads?
Peter Grant Devotions Aunt Mary
Good Morning Chandler Jr. ” H
Feature Time Mrs. Wizes » n Other Wife Plain Bill
Children
” ”» ”» ”»
en Ju
Cooking School Mail Box Get Thin Next Door
Hymns Hope Alden Hello Peggy Next Door
Milky Way Quality Twins Kitchen ,Clinic
David Harum News-Music McGregor's Songz Minister
House
Don Pedro Children Grimm's Daughter Parade
Linda’s Love Personals We Live Again Gospel Singer
T. Franconi Health Talk ° Varieties Speedway
The Gumps Edwin C. Hill Helen Trent Our Gal Sunday
Girl Alone Lucky Girl Markets L. Salerno Quartet Melodies Wile Saver We Are Four
Way Down East Hope Alden Sunny Serenade Aunt Jenny
Mary Baker Dan Harding Linda's Love "Farm Hour
Bob Eison Serenade Service ‘Markets
Three Spades Shirlev Howard Markets Farm Hour
Markets Women Only Reporter WPA Music
Big Sister arm Bureau Pioneers Myrt-Marge
WIG we
Concert Or. Painted Dreams Way Down East Concert Or.
Chandler Jr. Betty-Bob
News Apron _ Strings You Remember
Denmark ” ” "wn on ” ”»
J
Pepper Young Wife-Secretary Ma Perkins Vic-Sade . O’Neills Leadoff Man
Lorenzo Jones Varieties
Relax Time Kitty Kelly Army Band
9191919
Harry Bason Turn Clocks Don Winslow Jackie Heller
Questions >. A. R. Program All Hands Children’s Corner
I) 0 kD NDNnS
Tea, Time
News Hall's Or.
V. Brenner Interviews Speedway
Where to find other stations:
Jimmy - Kemper
WMAQ, 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, Wl
Ralph Nyland Baseball Kitty Keene 1” » Follow Moon ” 1”
Guiding Light ” »
”»
Mary Marlin 2 ” Mary Sothern 2 s Singing Lady - Orphan Annie
Swing It Melodies Sally Nelson Orphan Annie
Mary Alcott Tommy -Betty In-Laws Lowell Thomas
§ Chicago, WBBM 770, WE! 870,
, 960.
There is a remarkable freshness
contemporary composer,
-
Good Radio Music
By JAMES THRASHER
and endless possibility of develop-
ment in certain simple tunes which so far has defied precise explanation. Among such melodies is the folk song, “Ah, vous dirai-je, Maman,” which you may know as the “Alphabet Song.” It was used as the basis for piano variations by Mozart and by the Dohnanyi. ; Nursery Theme,” were played this past season by the New York Phil- |
The latter's *“Vafiations on a
harmonic - Symphony Orchestra with Arthur Loesser as piano soloist. Now the theme and Mozart's variations will be presented in unfamiliar guise when Lily Pons sings them on the Kostelanetz program at 7 o'clock tonight through WFBM. In their vocal form they are known as the “Toreador” variations. ” 2 T is necessary to tell how they got this unusual title, lest listeners should go looking for some bullfight atmosphere in the music or performance. - A French operatic composer named Adam was so fond of the Mozart composition that he lifted theme and variations bodily and inserted them as a soprano aria in his opera, “Le Toreadore.” This was in ‘1859, and since the composer was long dead and copyright laws not what they are today, there was no one to object. Mr. Kostelanetz has made a special arrangement for this evening's performance. Unless he also has
u
made some radicai changes in the +
3.0 -
soloist’s score, it is safe to predict that the composition is one of unusual vocal demands.
2 " ” ONIGHT'S NBC String Symphony concert, conducted by Frank Black, will include the Bagh Arioso, a Suite in E Minor by the English composer, Bridge, Dvorak’s “Nocturno,” and a-Concerto Grosso by Ernest Bloch. The program will be on WIRE at 7 o'clock. . 8 ‘a. @=& OMORROW at 1 p. m. WIRE
will carry the latest in a series |
of European concerts sponsored by the . International Broadcasting Union. This will present the Copenhagen Radio Orchestra, Erik Tuxen and Launy Greendahl, conductors, in a program by Scandinavian composers. Henrique's prelude, “Voelund le Forgeron,” a Concerto for Trumpet and Orchestra by Riisager, and Carl Nielsen's “Expansive Sym phony” will be heard. :
A 4
>
irs
Start to Finish
Leslie Howard to Be Star. Of 'Your Hit Parade’
Program Tonight.
|
{ If you tune in CBS’ description | of the Indianapolis Speedway classic May 31, you will be greeted by the | familiar voice of Ken Ellington, | WFBM alumnus and current news and sports commentator at WBBM, Chicago. : This will be the fifth consecutive race that Ken has covered. In 1933 and 1934 he represented a newspaper syndicate at the track. The following year he described the 500mile grind for WFBM, and last year assisted Ted Husing in the first CBS | broadcast from the Speedway. Ken will have things all to himself -as far as Columbia is concerned this year. Husing will be at Forest Hills catching the Davis Cup tennis matches which, with baseball and the race, will make up the network's crowded Memorial Day ‘sport schedule. The CBS tennis broadcasts, by the way, are exclusive. But NBC has countered by sewing up rights on the James J. Braddock-Joe Louis scrap in Chicago, June 22. ® Both the Red and Blue networks, 125 stations in all, will carry a blow-by-blow description. This is - the biggest coverage of a fight ever given ‘by one broadcasting company. The Braddock-Louis fight will be motor-sponsored by the same firm that backed the, Baer-Louis and Louis-Schmeling fight descriptions.
” Ed »
Although NBC will be out at the Speedway for the race, WIRE will bring listeners a local and more extensive coverage of the event. There will be only brief interruptions from 6 a. m. until the race ends. Tentative plans call for a halfhour broadcast at 6 a. m., then an
_ start, beginning at 9:30 a. m. Another quarter-hour is slated for 11:15 a. m. and 10 more minutes at 11:45. Morris Hix will take his “sidewalk interviews” to the trackside at 12:30 p. m. there will be a full hour description at 1 p. m. and another from 2:15 until, the race is finished. Mr. Hix, Bill Frosch and Jack Stilwill are to handle the job. ” n n Leslie Howard's exemplary British diction will be heard on the air
for “Your Hit Parade” via WIRE at
been announced, but whatever the selection, it's a safe bet that it will be done well. # Maybe Mr. Howard's “Hamlet” met with mixed receptions this past season, but there's no discounting his radio ability and popularity. . ® a2 The debut of an unusual dramatic series will be carried by WGN at 8 p. m. today.-It is called “From the Ends of the Earth,” and will .give you some of the vicarious thrills, hardships and headaches that make up an exploring expedition. Specifically, the series is to dramatize the expeditions and exhibits of Chicago's Field Museum of Natural History. The inaugural will describe the James SimpsonRocsevelt. expedition to Tibet in search of the rare Marco Polo sheep. iB Participating in this broadcast will be Theodore Roosevelt Jr., one of the party's original leaders. With his brother, Kermit, Mr. Roosevelt brought back one of the few living specimens of this sheep ever taken. od = # on = Ten years ago [tomorrow morning a gray monoplane lumbered
controls. Less than 34 hours later, Charles A. Lindbergh had plunked the “Spirit of St. Louis” down on the turf at Le Bourget airport in Paris. So at 11:30 a. m. tomorrow, the Mutual network will carry a halfhour broadcast from a commemorative luncheon given every surviving person connected with the flight— except the hero of the occasion. NBC will pick up the luncheon at noon. Speakers will include Chancellor Harry Woodburn Chase; Richard R. Blythe, one of Col. Lindbergh's original representatives; Rear Admiral Henry Ellis Lackey, who commanded the U. 8. 8S. Memphis, on which Col.
ern Airlines general manager. " on 2 Dick Merrill and John Lambie, whose round-trip European flight was one of the most significant chapters in post-Lindbergh air history, were besieged with radio offers following their safe return last week. No less than nine sponsors were angling for personal appearances as sopn as they had hit home soil. But the honors went to the “Rippling Rhythm Revue.” Pilot Merrill was mobbed by autograph
broadcast. He was held up for an hour after the first broadcast, and he got through the crowd just
30 seconds before the repeat broadcast.Dick said it was tougher than flying the Atlantic, but he enjoyed it, nevertheless.
» »
Family” script series, is just back from a trans-Pacific pleasure hop aboard the China Clipper. He found several fans in the Orient, among them the Postmaster General at Hong Kong, who picks up the serial by shortwave.
ree 2NASH 8°
EVERY WEEK
i 20 RCA Victor Auto Radios 500 Autographed Baseballs
Tune ip SINCLAIR
CONTEST WFBM—8:30 P. M. (C. S. T
Ly Ji rs Hy Ken Ellington, WFBM Alumnus, to Handle 500-Mile Race Broadcast for Columbia; WIRE to Cover Event From
LILY'S KITTEN ON KEYS
Then
| down the runway at Roosevelt Field with a tall, lanky young pilot at the
Lindbergh returned to the United: States; Charles L. Lawrence, design= er of the Spirit of St. Louis’ engine, ° and Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker, East- -
hunters following his Sunday night
o : 2 Speaking of flyers, Author Carleton E. Morse of the “One Man's -
a Entry Blanks at Sinclair Dealers oJ
hour and a half description of the ' -
again tonight when he guest-stars
3 p. m. What he|is to do has not
