Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1937 — Page 39
FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 1937
-
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
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YOU AREN'T GETTING UP 2 1 sUPPOSE THE EXERTION OF DOING NOTHING HAS YOU HANGING ON THE ROPES, LIKE A WET- WASH ww ARE YOU RUNNING A 7 OF A BALLOON FEVER? YOUR NOSE SEEMS A | BRAWTER RED THAN UsUAL/
EQAD, L GET HOT AND COLD ENERY TIME 1 THINK OF LAUNCHING MY CAMERA BALLOON INTO SPACE WITHOUT A LINE ATTACHED wWiTH WHICH TO PULL IT BACK TO SEARTH WAC UFF~FUFR WSPUTTZ *SFUlT = PRAT I7/ BUT FOR THAT, THE WORLD WOULD BE ECHOING WITH PRAISE OF MY ACCOMPLISHMENT MP,
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BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
EVERY HMAINUTE OF TRE OANX 1 THINK OF You! 1
WEED SAVING YOUR NAME Baile
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A | SO HAPPY IL SIMPLY CAN'T WE NOS Xe
I DON'T WANT /' NuTdiIN® To HAPPEN To ME LITTLE PAL,
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IF TH' OLD sSPOOK LEAPED OUT
TO MAKE A PARACHUTE JUMP, HE'D FORGET TO TAKE ALONG His FLYING UMBRELLA/S
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
>
PAGE 39
By Frank Owen
—By Martin
SOMETHING THERE
[wane XADMY , TA’ NAP WAS
NEAR. Wvo TH HECK \S WE , D0 YA S'POSE ?
AN WHERE ? THATS WOT 1 WANNA WOW HE SHOWN LP ?
1 OUNNO wee BUY. L TRIN
WHY ST | HE 1S |g
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—By Brinkerhoff
TuRNS
| Whine insine, THE MEAN UNCLE
GREAT BoY.-I Mm Proud TO RE HIS UNCLE ~-BuT He NEsbds some ONE 10 Look QUT ror His RBuUsINESS
Ww Vi ; MOST FRIENDL 2 ITH THe Mo ie Fo S.
oN #
~I cAN MAKE
I AAYE A DATE TO TALK BUSINESS WITH TARE MOVIE FOLKS - -I NEED To HAVE THE RARY ith po BETTER DEAL WITA
WHY NeT cA. MARYS RAnY “BREIL” 2 ER AND M. ROLLENDORF =1019~B-DAUPH IN ST PHILA —- PA
I KNow @ NTTLE ReY WHO KOOKS JusST ALIKE) HIM WHOSE NAMES IS "RANAY=cAk. HIM THAT) ~MAAY FITZGERALD « 11 BULLARD ST. DORCHRSTER) MASS
THE CUTE LITTRE Bo7/
WHO PLAYS WITH MARY
"mT N VAUGHN. TOUTE 3 « NoRMAN- OKLA
PLEASE CALL THE Bany "PERKY jive grossmaYEnR 66 INMAN 3T. AWRON, O. Shamha Lita Tok A
ice As .
A! DEED I NOT SAY THERE WAS ANOTHER MANZ WHO EES {JHE , WO {MAN WHO SEN' MOU LOVE
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L NURSE
HE MERELY LIKE MY
BOT, DARLEENG,) BAM! SHE TRIES TO SHIEAD A | THEES | GRINGO PEEG! QUICK, FOOL; WHERE EES THE RAILROAD
11
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WAY; M1
CORONEL- \ EL
KILOMETER DISTANCE.
i COFR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE
RUN HURRY! My RIVAL, HE EES CATCHING THE TRAIN. THERE EES NOT A MOMENT TO LOSE,
~ —By Crane
CR)
E_~ SANS
. 3. M. REG. U. §, PAT. ws fer —By Thompson and Coll
BY HERE WE ARE AT Jol THE TOP OF THE HB HILL, MISS NORTH
3
“THIS
ONCE CLOSED, A MAN CAN - HOLD THEM SHUT EASILY WITH HIS HANDS.
COPR. 1937 EY NEA SERVICE, INC.
IN THE UNITED STATES, IT REQUIRES ABOUT EIGHT YEARS AND #5000 TO DEVELOP ONE ACRE OF DATE PALME TO THE POINT WHERE THE GROWER. BEGING REAPING R
‘CURIOUS WORLD
MURA - TELL ME WHAT YOU'RE UP 70 - 1 COULD SOCK THAT CHAP, DORSKI, FOR HIS BLUNDER. r
JACK! WE'RE IN LUCK! THERE STILL ARE ELEVEN SHIPS INTHE HARBOR -
ELEVEN SHIPS?
BEARD MIGHT TRY TO ESCAPE . BY SEA?
YOU FIGURED “BLUE
By William Ferguson —_ a — Le
TT —
IN THE JAWS oF ALLIGATORS
LIES ONLY IN THE <LOSING MOTIONS
THE jaws of the croc terrific force, their prey. To add to the arm or leg of a victim, the the member loose from the body. »
*
NEXT—What effect on a sandy beach does
-. grains have?
pdile and alligator are brought together with and are hard to dislodge, once they have fastened to \destruction, after attaching themselves to an roll over and over in the water, thus twisting
THEN JACK, IT’S TIME T TAKE YOU INTO MY CONFIDENCE... I CAN'T
FULLY TRUST
JACK
A HALF HOUR ATER FINDS MYRA ANC
SMALL MOTOR BOAT, LEAVING THE
PUTTING OUT FROM THE DOCK WN A OTHERS BEHIND =~
DON'T FORGET YOUR INSTRUCTIONS CAPTAIN - WAIT FOR THE SIGNAL -
the shape of the sand
5
ONK hi YEG ORO =
COPVRIGHT 93> ‘ JONNDOILLE Co
WE CAN only answer this by asking a lot of men and women about it. This is what Dr. Ray Baber, sociologist, did by carefully framed questions and he found that one-third of the men would marry a homely, unattractive woman if she had redeem:ng qualities, whereas only one-fifth of the women would marry a man whose appearance was unattractive, no matter if he were an angel otherwise.
" ” »
A GERMAN psychologist, P. Metz, concludes that because of the very great differences in flying ability among people some do have a special flying talent. He thinks this is largely made up of ability to
¥ MUSICAL TALENT? Yes
\ May - Ne SEE a = . E OR KNOWL ED&E~ CALGE THE MOST E i WORLD? EAR IN THE
1ONORANCE HALF KNOWLEDGE _ KNOWLEDGE _™
orient in Jjgee dimensional -space—,
gad 3)
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
DO NOU THINK SOME PEOPLE HAVE=
SING TET
VET AS SOME PEOPLE HAVE A— SPECIAL ART OR MECHAN CAL OR, OR NO
3
which means in our language keep his head straight in all directions even when he is upside down.
He thinks the vision must be perfect and the kinesthetic sense—that is the muscle sense of pressure and pull, etc., very keen and alert at all times. Also, the vestibular organs— that is, the nerves of the inner ear which keep us in balance, must be very perfect. # ” ”
BY ALL means; half-knowledge. The ignorant person has fears of natural forces — ghosts, spirits, storms, etc., but has no fear of the greatest dangers—social, economic and - political forces, because he knows nothing about them. The half-educated person knows just
enough to spend, higjife fighting fear , |
—fear of public criticism, of economic breakdown, of superior people, and has a-general fear of insecurity. : This is peculiarly true of the professional politician whose whole lifz is one of fear. The man who has full knowledge, especially the scientist, has less fear of social forces and he knows alt tnings follow natural law—and of natural law he is never afraid. ;
NEXT—Does it flatter a woman to tell her she is good?
COMMON ERRORS
Never say, “I can’t seem to understand what he is saying”; say. “I do not seem able to understand.”
The show (coronation) had been |
provided for Edward, but you threw Edward out and put George in.— William Gallacher, Communist member of Parliament.
The evils of democracy are curable, while for the evils of despotism there is no cure save violent change. —S. K. Ratcliffe, British journalist.
Best Short Waves
FRIDAY SANTIAGO. CHILE—4 np. m. Dance Music. CB615, 12.30 meg. ROME—5 p. m. News. 2RO, 9.63 meg. BOSTON—b5:15 p. m. Listeners’ Mail Bag. W1XAL, 6.04 meg. MOSCOW—6 p. m. Recreation in Soviet Union. RAN. 9.6. meg. BERLIN—T7:45 p. m. “German Hconomics,” Karl Emil Weiss. DJD, 11.77 meg. LONDON—9:25 p. m. ‘“Responsibilities of Empire.” GSI. 15.26 meg.; GSP, 15.14 meg.; GSD, 11.75 meg.; GSC, 9.58 meg. : PITTSBURG—10:30 1p. Club. W8XK, 6.14 meg. VANCOUVER—11 p. m. Continental Varieties. = CJRO, 6.15 meg.; CJRX, 11.72 meg.
Concert.
—5
m. DX
Three-Day Broadcasts Will Highlight
DePauw's Centennial Anniversary;
WLW to Salute Indianapolis Tonight
T'S NO SOFT JOB
tures above we are shown the whole
tain line. Lower left, he brings tim right) in his signal “on the nose,” exactly on time.
King.”
The “Workshop” program Sunday, 5 p. m., will be a novel version of Oscar Wilde's fantasy, “The Young
A swiftly moving radio story calls for an alert director. In the pic-
story of the swift change in tempo
and vigor in a CBS-WFBM “Workshop” series, directed by Irving Reis. At top left, Reis from the control room, calls for quick acceleration in timing. Top right, he painstakingly explains emphasis he wants on a cer-
ing up slowly, which results (lower which means the broadcast ended
which WFBM will carry at
nouncements caused by station changes af INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOL WFBM 1230 WIRE 1400 (CBS Net.) (NBC Net.)
Tea, Tunes
3
Harry Kogen ” ”
Interviews Melodies
Aisle Seat Uncle Ezra News-Sports Jimmis Allen
Irene Rich
News—Sports Buddy Clark
Echoes Butler Univ. Hollace Shaw News
i
Varieties Kemp’s Or, y » Sportsman Hollywood Hotel
Waltz Time Mystry Pianist
”» ”
Grofe's Or, Rep. Boehne "” ” Melodies
Babe Ruth 4. Fidler Ray Heatherton Vic-Sade
LLY | WXXW | dupa | An ov ot ae | oe aw se ev everse §oovaw
td od tt 2208000
eich D | nos
Melodies Amos-Andy Sportslight News-Music eeks’ Or. Baseball |
” ’ ” ”»
Interviews Henderson's
Baseball Collins’ Or. Jesters Bestor’s Or.
Noms hillips’ Or. Hami ton’s Or.
35 oo So 2 | sh 30 Uh on G8 ps = SERS [S853 | 5853 | £852 | 5353 | 5853 | 585
See evee 0XWw | eter? | ARID | UIITG
Jk fa be pos
Nocturne Chiesta’s Or. Fisher's ,Or,
ok fh hd J ms DIS
Or.
RADIO THIS EVENING
(The Indianapolis Times ts not responsible for inaccuracies in program an-
ter press time.) 18 CHICAGO IGN 20
(Mutual Net.)
CINCINNATI WLW 700 (NBC-Mutuah
Swing It ‘Len Salvo | Margaret Rebeil Orphan Annie
Toy Band ommy-Betty n-Laws Lowell Thomas Johnsons Concer} or. Remember Bob Elson
" Himber’s Or.
Bob Newhall
Pleasant Valley - Morgan’s Or
Death Valley Lone .iRanger ” » » ”
Jack Dempsey Sen. Wheeler
Tomorrow's Trib.
”
Deems Taylor ” ”»
Denny's Or. Duchin’s Or. Curtain i)
First Nighter J. Fidler Happy Times
Unannounced Carlsen’s Or. Williams’, Or.
Amos-Andy Madhatterfields Moore’s Or. & P. Sullivan Sprigg’s Or. Saluve a
Heidt’s Or. Dénny’s Or. ” | ”» Moon River Gaylord’s Or. ”» ”» ” ”
Wilde's or. Sander/s or.
SATURDAY PROGRAMS
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)
Chuck Wagon
TNDIANATOL IRE 1400 (NBC Net.) Devotions Music Clock
” ” ”»
Varieties
” ”» ”»
Early Birds "
” ”
Charijoteer Vass Family Manhatters
Your Garde Rickard Maxwell Let's Pretend
n
GE53 | 585353
Hymn Singer Minute Men De P
Fred Freibel World Waltzes
Concert ,, Hall auw
Youth C Talented Get Marr Ensemble
Mary Baker Safety Club
Farm Hour
Children’s Hour
» »
fh hd ha fod esse © WSS Le (SWS | NST
”» ”»
Golf Meet
Sunny Serenade Buffalo Presents
Meditation
arkets Farm Circle News
- i
Markets FHA Speaker Reporter Devotionals " "
Police Court De A
Herman's ” ”
353 | 5852 | 5
Commerce Clyde Barrie
Golf Meet Robert Schmitz
Interviews Baseball |
53823
”»
” »”
”» ”
Kindergarten ” ”
White's ,or. .
Verrill’s Vocals Children
5353
Tea, Tunes Baseball
” ”
iis | 00M | 0D | Ip
5353
News-Sports Feld’s Or.
Where to find other stations:
WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary,
all JusiclansMarkets e
18 CHICAGO
N_ 920
CINCINNATI 7 WG (Mutual Net.)
(NBC-Mutual) Golden Hour
Cheerio ” ”
” ”
” ”
Peter Grant Devotions Larry-sSue « Good Morning Lee Erwin van Margery Graham Mail Box Melodies Alice Blue
Sweethearts Ralstng Parents Synagogue Sue Mitchell Melodies Mi Three Graces Topics Dixie Debs Varieties
Youth Call
June Baker Melodies Dave Bascal
Medical Talk Ensemble
Orient Song Team News-Markets Farm Hour
Bob Elson Sall Nelson Seryice a ”» ” -
Svivia Clyde Alice Blue _ Concert Or. Len Salvo
- Melodies . - Concert
Mail Bag Revue
Hill's Or, Spelling Bee
Williams’ Or.
Margot Rebeil
Baseball |
” ” ”» ”»
” » I” ” ”»
”» o
n Kindergarten ”» »
Concert Or. Alice Blue Messner’s Or. Unannaunced
Top, Hatters News-Music A. G. Karger WBBM 770; WENR 870;
Chicago, WIND 560.
Good Radio Music
By JAMES THRASHER
Those who are partial to the intimate and out-of-this-world beauty of the harpsichord will be glad that Yella Pessl, Viennese harpsichordist, and Mitchell Miller, first oboe of the CBS Symphony Orchestra, are in-
augurating a new series tomorrow.
on WFBM as the first of several programs featuring unsual music and
They will be heard at 9:30 a. m.
instrumental combinations. Miss Pessl, one of the most distinguished members in the limited field of harpsichord performers, will be heard first in the Bach D Major Partita. For the second part of the program she will join Mr. Miller in a performance of Handel's Sonata in G Minor for oboe and harpsichord. Why is it, I wonder, that women harpsichordists outnumber the men by about 4 to 1? It isn’t an “effeminate” instrument, certainly.
» ” ” E. Robert Schmitz must be getting on toward the end of his lecturerecital survey of Russian piano music and transcriptions, for his program tomorrow will include
works by Serge Prokofiev, as well as music by A. Stantchinsky. Stantchinsky won his fame before the revolution, but Mr. i stands today as Soviet Russia's ace composer. Outside his native land Mr. Prokofiev likewise enjoys high regard—a triumphant blending of musical genius with thé approved proletarian flavor. Dmitri Shostakovich, anther noted Russian contemporary, has been in what is known currently as the “dog house” with Soviet officials, who seem to have discovered that he has put tones together with a con-ter-revolutionary result. Not so Mr. Prokofiev; his music's stark formal outlines, its dissonance and sardonic
humor have met with governmental approval. . After Stantchinsky’s Prelude and Fugue in G Minor, Mr. Schmitz will play the following Prokofiev compositions: A Prelude and March frcm Op. 12; the “Vision Fugitive,” Op.
22 No. 16; “Danza,” Op. 32 No. 1, |
and the March and Scherzo from “The Love of Three Oranges.” The program may be heardr via WFBM at 2:30 p. m.
” 3 ” i The NBC Home Symphony ‘series, |
conducted by Ernest LaPrade, closes its first season with a broadcast ac 4:35 p. m. tomorrow on the NET Blue network. There hasn't been much news about this novel experiment appearing here recently, mainly because NBC has been a bit remiss with its publicity. However, the series seergs to have been as successful as anticipated. Orchestra parts, you will recall, were
sold to amateur players and groups
throughout the country, and they all played together each Saturday under an unseen conductor’s direction with the help of a studio orchestra, Mr. LaPrade, when he was here for the National Federation of Music Clubs convention, said the
greatest difficulty encountered was
the inability to compete with local commercials on smaller stations. Saturdays, what with sport broadcasts and the like, are poor days to swing a sustaining serious music series. i
NBC'S Cheerio io Retire For First Rest in 10 Years on Air.
By RALPH NORMAN
A series of DePauw University commencement broadcasts, in connection with the school’s celebratiod of its centennial anniversary, is announced by WIRE for tomorrow, Sunday and Monday. 5 Alumni. will be interviewed in informal programs at 9:30 o’clock to~ morrow morning and again at 1:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon, when the alumni luncheon is broadcast in part. Al Beveridge Jr. and Bill Frosch, WIRE announcers, will be in Greencastle tomorrow to handle the remote control pickups. . Sunday’s broadcast, beginning at 8 p. m., will include President Clyde E. Wildman's baccalaureate address at DePauw's Gobin Memorial Chap» el. Eugene Pulliam Jr. will handle this portion of -the series. : The final broadcast of the series, at 10 a. m. Monday, will include Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam’'s commencement address and other come mencement program highlights. Earlier this spring DePauw Uni versity marked its 100th year with a nation-wide NBC broadcast which originated on the Greencastle came pus, in New York and other cities. ” ” 8 | With August Schaefer as con- ' ductor and William E. Green as master of ceremonies, WLW at 10:30 o'clock tonight will salute: Indianapolis listeners with a special music program. WLW’s mili-. tary band, which Mr. Schaefer ‘ condvets, is one of the station's best-known features, and Mr. Schaefer is widely known in Cin: cinnati music circles. He has been: a member of the College of Music and the Cincinnati Conservatory: of Music faculties for 26 years, and appeared as cornet soloist with" many famous bands. : Mr. Green, as is customary on: “salute” broadcasts, will describe Indianapolis’ historical and cultural development and tell about: the city’s chief interesting industries. .Here’s an easy and pleasant way to brush up your knowl-: . edge of local affairs—10:30 o'clock this evening. 2 ” 2 } With 10 years of continuous broadcasting to his credit, NBC's Cheerio surely holds some radio rec‘ord. Cheerio, the anonymous dispenser of good tidings via NBC at 6:3D o'clock each week-day morning, leaves the air after Saturday for a suminer rest, his first since the program premiered over NBC on March 14, 1927. : He will retire to his Vermont farm to rest until Sept. 27. when the program resumes its morning period, and others of his cast also will vacation,” for most of them, like Cheerio, have been on NBC daily for many years. - Only his famous canaries will have to work. They will entertain NBC visitors in Radio City air= conditioned corridors. :
2 ” ” x Jack Haley, who portrayed ‘mikefright” so well in the film, {Wake - Up and Live,” will be starred next fall in his own CBS show, though last spring he was afraid to accent an. offer to appear on a weekly show. : : When Dick Powell withdrew from “Hollywood Hotel” and the producers were looking for a new master of ceremonies, they spotted George Burns and offered him the job. George declined, explaining that with Gracie and their own weekly broad‘cast, he was too busy. He suggested Jack Haley. : George even tried to persuade Haley to take the job, but Haley was frightened with the thought of facing the microphone each week in the “Hollywood Hotel” show window, and he turned down the job. “Then largely because hé portrayed “mike-fright” so well as the mysterious tenor in “Wake Up and Live,” he became something of an overnight movie celebrity, and now has accepted a show of his own, to premiere in the autumn. :
2» 2” Don’t turn off the dial if [you are annoyed by static tonight —it might be the mad Marxes—three of them—previewing their new film, “A Day at the Races,” on “Hollywood Hotel.” It should be funny, for all the gags were tested on West Coast vaudeville audiences before going into the film.
SPORTS TO GO ON AIR
The CBS week-end sports calendar includes broadcasts today and tomorrow from the National Open golf championship meet st Birminham, Mich. with Ted Husing as chief announcer, and a broadcast at 4 p. m. tomorrow of the annual Latonia classic at Covington, Ky. Cy Newman and Frank G. Menke will be at the microphones for the Latonia meet.
; Modern Symphonics STARRING:
FERDE GROFE
Brilliant-composer-conductor
The Grofe Symphonic Orchestra Blended with The Edwin Smalle
Voices *
TONIGHT AT 8 Central Standard Time “WFBM Columbia Network American National Bank
at Indianapolis
Member Federal Deposit . Insurance Corporation. .
