Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 June 1937 — Page 21

: | WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 1987 5 OUR BOARDING HOUSE

With Major Hoople

2 ”.( You sAY Youu DEVELOPED

You swWUNG DAT CUTLASS?

>) No POWAHFLL MuscLES Z% 1 27 i Yo sHouLDERS, DE Zz 2 «. TIME YOU WAS SURROUNDED Tor GAT IN DE AFRICAN JUNGLE, NEAT Er TURIN! DE BOER WAR, & THE TIME 1 AN' HAD T'cUT YO WAY V/ EMERGED FROM OuT, EH? HOW BOUT THE JUNGLE, TO PEMSTRATIN! WIFF DIS | THIS DAY, AS A RESULT A CARPET BEATER HOW OF THOSE FINE WEEKS

OF CONTINUOUS HACK- | ING, 1 HAVE BEEN UNABLE TO 50 MUCH

|___ - THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

JASPER

By Frank Owen

. PAGE 21)

Youngsters Replace Radio Favorites

Leaving Air for Summer Vacations; Fred Allen Still Undecided on Contract

RADIO STARS WATCH BRADDOCK

Name for Movies Puzzles Family.

By RALPH NORMAN

“Life Begins at Forty” is just ths name of a book in network circles, where the youngsters are being boosted to top radio spots while oldsters are off the air for summer vacations. : With almost every announcement that a headliner will leave the air on a certain date comes another announcement that his place ‘will be filled by one or more of radio’s promising young stars, generally a ‘singer. There will be a dearth of comedy during July and August, as vocalists replace the funsters. Only one comedian—Fred Allen— will be replaced by a comedian. Walter O'Keefe, Times’ columnist and prominent radio guest star and master of ceremonies, heads “Town Hall Tonight” after Wednesday, June 30. ‘But Jack Benny, Eddie Cantor, Phil Baker and other funny men have been, or will be, replaced by vocalists, and usually by young, promising newcomers.

td » ”

Trudy Wood, not yet 21, already has risen to top spot of Johnny Green's variety show, which last week replaced the Fred AstaireCharlie Butterworth combination for the summer. Mr. Green's cast of singers is composed almost entirely of persons in their early twenties. Then on Thursday, July 8, two youthful singers unknown a year ago on the networks—Thomas L. Thomas, baritone, and Nadine C , soprano—will take over top

MANUFACTURE OF CPROTEMHN 1S AN EVERYDAY OCCURRENCE IN MOST PLANTS, BUT NO CHEMIST HAS BEEN SUCCESSFUL x. IN MAKING ONE/ \ SINGLE PARTICLE oF IT.

every HOUR, APPROXIMATELY FOUR PERSONS THROUGHOUT THE

WORLD ARE BURIED UNIDENTIFIED.

COPR. 198% BY NEA SERVICE, INC.

MAN'S factories and chemical laboratories are but playthings, compared to the marvelous manufacturing processes carried on inside ‘the cells of common, ordinary plants. From simple foods taken into the plant, hundreds of amazing products are made through the magic of

_ sunlight.

»

. ® zn NEXT—What stones did Japan anli the

Ey i ps

United States exchange as

-

QUI

MANY people all the time and all people some of the time talk from mere habit—they can ‘set their mouths going and go off and leave them.” For this reason we have a “listening acquaintance,” with such people but not a speaking acquaintance because we seldom get a chance to speak. Nearly always when we talk we are trying to tell others what we know. When we really want to learn we listen.

” ” n MENTAL tests seem to show that the mind reaches its highest speed at about age 20 and runs on a level up to about 27 or. 30. Then mental” quickness slowly declines but keeps up a very high rate of speed even into the

1© THE RESERVED, DIGNIFIED “WOMAN MORE POPULAR WITH MEN THAN THE GAY

WISE -CRACKER?

YOUR OPINION cms

HN O14LE CO

80's. So, in a new emergency—one where old acquired habits do not serve to meet the situation—the man between 20 and 30 will meet it slightly more quickly than the one (of the same intelligence) —after that age. However, as I showed recently, mental power never declines —only mental speed.

3 ” ” » IF THERE is one woman that . men dislike it is the wisecracker. Not a very elegant term but a very descriptive one. She is

men by trying to puncture egos. Her assumption is that sheds ‘taking them down a notch” and

's and {is

puncturing their tism; but she

| my expense account.—Gov.

always bidding for the cure. Heir eir

Davey, Ohio, upon receiving a parking

ticket.

Best Short Waves

WEDNESDAY ROME—5 Bh m. News. Band concert. 2RO, 9.63 meg.

LONDON—5:30 p. m. “From Poona

to Putney,” a 3% Pogeem, GSP, 15.31 meg.; GSO, 15.18 meg.; GSD, 11.75 meg.; GSB, 9.51 meg.

HUIZEN NETHERLANDS—6 bp. Happy Program. PHI, 17.77 meg. : MOSCOW—6 p. m. From Tsaritsyn to Stalingrad. RAN, 9.6 meg. SERLIN—7:45 p. m. “Women and the Future of our Nation.” DJD, 11.77 meg. CARACAS—7:45 p. m. Equatorian Music. YV5RC, 5.8 meg. SANTIAGO. CHILE—7:45 a m. Symphony. Opera. CB960. 9. meg. LONDON—8:20 p. m. Chalk Farm Salvation Army meg.; GSF, 15.14 meg.; meg.; GSC, 9.58 meg. BEUNQS AIRES. ARGENTINB-— ~ 9:15 p. m. Music. LRX, 9.66 meg. m. French Folk meg.

GSD, 11.75

PARIS—10:45 p. Songs. TPA4, 11.72 TOKYO—11:45 p. m. Japanese Guitar Concert. JZJ, 11.80 meg. ”

Band. GSI, 15.26 y

| | his own inimitable manner,

AS SWING A FLY SWATTER WITHOUT . EXPERIENCING A ow \ SS PIERCING PAIN ACROSS 0 JE MY SHOULDERS ~~ ; 2 ON UME -KAF -KAF ¢ ¢ x ~~ Ml) } oe Sy ! 2 a , | O00 = ~: ol: — st NN be A || ZS x Ea — 0 i Sy x e zl { WZ —Z FH 2 Cer bye [Ae reALLY SPRAINED IT JABBING AT 5 ; ; 5 THE LA: To] “You got the right idca—but look! Yow don’t move your » 4 == A —— be b ST CHOP= 1 : 7) t h o 6-10 GFr-15378Y NEA SERVICE ING T. M. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. QA arms fas enougn! ' BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES i : : : —By Martin With the NBC broadcast of the Braddock-Louis Chicago fight headvt ; FO : ~ lining June sports programs, broadcasters take increasing interest in . AND HE'S $0 WILD HE COLLD HES A CAREFREE ,WAPPY-GO- . — ng p prog ] sing 5 ; TAKE ROOT ON WE ROCK OF - RENE GADE | THE er TIE IRR Be AD aR YOO TELLWG boxing apd boxers. Champion James J. Braddock is shown ss he j 1®R | G\'BRALTER HE NEVER RAD A SEE HMM \S WHEN HE'S BROKE ! HE'S matches blows with Barney Ross, world’s welterweight champion, who [11 fl SERIOUS THOLVGWY W HS \\FE A _NO-GOOD ; SQLANDERING WHE\LP ! fights at Perry Stadium tonight, while four interested microphone ; HE'S A WORTHLE 55 RASCAL! HE'S BECAUSE , 1 artists look on. » A = A BOM! WE'D == WES =e KNOW HM They are, left to right—Jack Fulton, heard daily in CBS’ “Poetic : ne THAN Melodies”; Olan Soule of CBS’ “Bachelor's Children” and Mutual's h i ELSE “Couple Next Door”; Franklyn MacCormack: of the “Poetic Melodies” ; . cast, and Ed Prentiss, who is heard in NBC's “Today’s Children” and " “Guiding Light” and WGN'’s “Painted Dreams” and “Arnold Grimm's j Daughter.” 1b ls ! ds RADIO THIS EVENING ; | or (The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies In program ane | 7 nouncements caused by station changes after voress time.) b 2 INDIANAPOLI 1AN CIN vs 2 WEBM 1930 INVIRE 1100 > CWEW 300 Won 0 fi SEER ie YAR | SE i COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T. M. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. (CBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual) (Mutual Net.) i ' re PRES Sie 4:00 Tea Time Harry Kogen Toy Band Swing It ’ . 4:15 ” ”» ” Zo o i LITTLE MARY MIXUP —By Brinkerhoff 4:30 News-Sports McGregors pl Batty Sait Nelson i. 4:45 Waiters | Melodies Lowell Thomas Orphan Annie { ' v > : » ‘eNoovweR! 18 Mary.’ come HERE - y / 5:00 Wheeler Mission Easy Aces E bl ; | : . ITS FROM WHY” Mary. om eeler sy nsemble Concert Or, il ? IN SNOOKER 5 A SWELL NAME. QUICK ~ A CANRLE CRAM CHRAIMNA WHATS THE 5:30 Gogo de Lys eh anor BA oe 4 =TIMMINY, I'M -I Rar #1s DAoDY CAME FROM SNOOKERS HES COMING MATTER 2 5:45 News Jimmie Allen Bob Newhall Sports o ' S19 Tou dave i Lu Ke iT, : Home’ ie 50 Cavalcade Merry-Go-Round One Family Duchin’s Or. i Al. NAME oo pty is ] LEAVES THIS MAYRE SNoaKer's 6:30 Ken Murray King’s Or. Dutchmen Lone Ranger BEY] ee AN week / DADDY WiLL WANT ii : Ee ee ys : HIM ALL To HIMSELF 1:00 Kostelanetz Or. String Symph. Town Hall Sanders’ Or. § -AND WE CAN'T 7:30 Jessica Dragonette | Genevieve Wiley ” n Hutton’s 7 HAVE HIM so 7:45 , ’ | Interlude ” ” Tomorrow's Trib, 3 Gang Busters Hit Parade Unannounced : Expeditions 8:30 RB b R th ” ” ”» ”» 3 ’ 8:45 SE l-Bnedy H. W. VanLoon Music Revue Meigdies,, | 9:00 Poetic Melodies Amos-Andy Amos-Andy a 3 3s der Raley i Fous I Madhatterfields Hutton'’s Or. Ji Soeiat Securi y aseba " Rapp's Or. Williams’, Or. 10: ” ” 3 ’ > in . = A LL 101 Phillipe Or. »”: ’ ” Hames ox. < Felion ul 3 ee . 19:30 amilton’s Or. Breeze s or. Sprizz s Or. Sanders ,, Or. ON TUBBS I —By Crane 11:00 Nocturne Baseball Moon River Gaylord's Or. t NTIL FINALLY, PABLO POINTS ouT THE SPOT WHERE RD Is fines 0 Soin lb Jesters’ po Sanders’ Oc A / 7 i 0] ne. , n ” » ” ni ; Uenini SMe Sin A Dozen OR MORE THRIVING Cmca LAe | 11:48 Bowens or Atl PALL, SENOR! THERE! ir ENTIRE TOWN - .«. “5. a. "THURSDAY PROGRAM \_> INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI1 CHICAGO WFBM 1230 WIRE 1400 2 (CBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual) (Mutual Net.) 6:30 Chuck Wagon Devotions Music Golden Hour oh © 6:45 ” 4” Music Clock > nT ni 9:00 Early Birds "on Peter Grant wit ell A $3 PET cell 7:45 “in Varieties _ Chandler Jr. °% | Yamine - 1 8:00 Feature Time Mrs. Wiggs Hymns Melodies NN 8:15 hem Other Wife Hope Alden Mail Box : ino PRE FRET LEE BP. UP. UP. TOWERING CRAGS AND BITTER COLD. ICE AND WIND AND WHIRLING A . GRO : ] - ; gid SNOW. HERE) IN THE MIGHTY ANCES, THE ONCE NUMEROUS CHINCHILLAS MADE |, NO BR UREOINDING VAL LES. iy 9:13 Quanity Twi be TRE on Rey naire « 2, THER'HOMES, HERE TRAPPERS SLEW THEM BY MILLIONS AND THE FOXES ATE Tue | ON AND ON THEY GO. UP AND DOWN, \ ; 2:36 Biighen Chimie Crimelight © We Live Again Grimm's Danghter : AND EASY FIND A FEW, STILL REMAINING? AR, THAT IS A QUESTION. [2 FOR DANS AND DAYS. mE . a 9:43 nen Reporters a aan. noaTzine r - . - 10:00 The G Bob te i | MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE '—By Thompson and Coll 3% HSf®hm BRHh Side EO : s n Tre roller r | v9. | WELL {YOUNG OMAN GET | [Recer 15 RELUCTANT 70 LEAVE. VOL'RE RIGHT, MRS. PASTURES. SE TT AsO TAFSER 10:45 Our Gal Sunday. Ensemble Wite saver |" Wa Are Four - AR OF HIS MOTHER IS SO IM NOT AN HEIRESS. 1 CAME 70 BE A NURSE. AND CERTAIN : i : if PLANATION, AND You MAY s [PLEASE MRS. GREAT THAT HE OBEYS, INSTANTLY. TO BIARRITZ WITH SECRET en BN Bema Singin. Sam Mars Small Aes Eien i W LL ADMIT, RIGHT NOW, A PASTURES -1 WHEN SHE TELLS HIM TO WAIT AGENTS, IN AN ATTEMPT TO A FEMALE HAVE CAUSED ME TO DIRECT 11:30 Serenade . Lin@a’s Love Markets : Service [| yougE No american 0 COULD TELL mY IN THE ADJOINING CABIN. TRACK DOWN THIS PERSON DETECTIVE! MY SUSPICIONS TOWARD J: Aunt Jenny Farm Wour Farm Hour Markets . El E . , J : oq : anid gTren, THEY CALL ‘BLUEBEARD" 12:00 Big Sister Markets nla Concert Or. i J 12:15 Farm Burean Women Only pon Painted Dreams ; 12:30 Pioneers Reporter handler Jr. Unannounced i 12:45 Myrt-Marge WPA Musie etty-Bob Concert Or. ; 1:00 N P - ; 1:15 AP Strings Tne Shera fer BS aoe ite Toany 1:30 Remember 3 ? Vic-Sade Harold Turner 1:45 ’” ” Caballeros O’Neills Leadoff Man 2:00 Julia Blake Lorenzo Jones Modernaires Baseball 2:15 Kitty Kelly Varieties Kitty Keene Rid ” 2:30 Eton Boys # ih Follow Moon ” » : 2:45 Organlogue » " Guiding Lizht ” ” . 3:00 Wives’ School Harry Bason Mary Marlin ” 2 3:15 On Deck Turn Clocks Mary Sothern ” » 3:30 noth Don Winslow Singing Lady ni: » 3:45 Children’s Corner = Kings’ Men Orphan Annie ” » t 4:00 Tea Time Norsemen Mary Alcott Swing It ee 2 4:15 1” ” Conference Tommy-Betty Melodies 4:30 News-Sporis McGregor’'s House In-Laws John’s Or, CURIOUS WORLD B William F r | 4:45 Hall’s Or. Interviews Lowell Thomas Orphan Annie | y erguson , | Where to find other stations: Chicago, WBBM 770, WENR 870, . \ \ Wh / / / V4 " IH 7 LET S EXPLORE YOU R MI N D WMAQ, 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND, 560. \ \ / / 4 7 2 - By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM G d di M \ . : : : : . 10 A” S “Ws inner personality. She is, in re- 00 Ra 10 usicC N\ > | = aaa N a 3 ality, vaunting her own egotism Bv JAMES THRASHER \ | N which is always a defense against a y N feeling of inferiority. The wise- Genevieve Wiley, soprano, who gave a recital here last Thursday : cracker—male or female—is always | night, is to be heard on WIRE at 7:30 o'clock tonight in a 15-minute : | suffering from a, feeling of in-: program of songs. The singer formerly lived here, where she studied | feriority and trying to gain impor-| piano at the Indiana State School for the Blind. Since moving to Calitance and superiority over others by | fornia in 1922, she has devoted her talents to singing, having appeared | this method. Any other type of | on the West Coast with major symphony ‘orchestras and on network il ‘ woman is more popular with men. radio programs. : ! Miss Wiley’s program will include Handel's “Come Beloved”; a NEXT—Are college students be- cs o EN ’ | DO MOLT PEOPLE TAL coming more like human beings? Gavotte by Josef Marx; “Little Lamb, by Amy Worth; Beatrice Fenner’s CE oa Ee? 2 aria,” an e “Champagne | TO TELL OTHERS WHAT COMMON ERRORS Waltz.” ; : 3 altz,” from Gladys Swarthout’s CAN JUMP ABOUT THEY JNOWs : . : picture of the same title. Fea rs Fasc Sm, TIMES YOUR OPINIO Never say, “That’s plenty good ; : 7100 * ”. &“ ” mS OWN LENGTH 2 enough” say; “ulle goo) enough. Eni Johnson Says cy ; CANA I'll frame &t. Its the first ticket | This really isn't the “good radio . 223% I've ever been given in my travels | music” news intended for today. In | 4 20 THINK over Ohio. I want to present it | fact, it's the second column I've (Gen. Johnson Says, Page 14) . A to the state auditor to approve on | written, and all because Lily Pons

called off a “serenade” at the last minute. Originally Miss Pons was scheduled to sing at 10:50 o'clock tonight for the wedding of Gene Raymond and Jeanette. MacDonald. Earlier, the French soprano had promised Miss MacDonald to sing at the wedding, but was unable to be in Hollywood today. So CBS was going to carry her songs and good wishes to the bride and bridegroom, as well as tuners-in along the way. Maybe Miss Pons figured one network broadcast a night was enough, for she will be on at her regular program time of 7 p. m. on WFBM, with Andre Kostelanetz and his orchestra. Her selections will include excerpts from “Lucia di Lammermoor” and “Manon,” while Mr. Kostelanetz will direct the orchestra in some popular tunes, done over in |

By United Press NEW YORK, June 16—Gen. Hugh S. Johnson, former NRA Administrator, believes a tendency toward fascism or communism is inherent in some of the legislation being sent to Congress. : In a CBS address last night Gen. Johnson said that recent communications to Congress appeared to “push our carefully guarded democracy some distance toward the Fascist and Communist experiments” which, he added, “are as alike as two peas—Government by executive with little if any popular participation.” * Gen. Johnson blamed a group of young men in the Administration whom he described as “the most brilliant young minds in the worldwide radical movement.” He ab-

spots of NBC’s new “Show Boat,” which will originate in Hollywood under command of its venerable captain, Charles Winninger.

n n ”

Igor Gorin, incidental member of CBS’ “Hollywood Hotel” cast, has been boosted to an important place in Eddie Cantor's summer show, which doesn’t include Eddie, but does include Bobbie Breen and Deanna Durbin, youngest of the networks’ famous youngsters. CBS had no fault to find with Mr. Gorin’s first name, but when he went to M-G-M to make pictures, the movie bigwigs thought a more Americanized first name like Charles would be preferable. So they changed it. Last week Igor received an inquiry from his| brother, who lives with the rest of the Gorin family in Vienna. “We have heard there is a Charles Gorin who will appear soon in American movies,” he wrote. | “We wonder if he is one of our relatives.”

» " s

Absence of Fred Allen on the airwaves for the summer or longer (Mr. Allen apparently hasn't made up his mind about future contracts means there will be no amusing little notes, like the following from NBC, to brighten our mornings: 1 “Fred Allen, that merry maestro of matchless and medieval mountebanking, Massachusetts’ Mickey Mouse, will go alliterative in a big way with dizzy ditties, Busy Bees and a Gibson girl during his broadcast with Portland Hoffa, the Mighty Allen Art Players and Peter Van Steeden’s orchestra over NBC-WLW at 7 o'clock tonight.” ; For more detailed information, 1 suggest you follow NBC's directions, and dial WLW at 7 o'clock.

5 # 8

Dialers who have trouble locating NBC's Wednesday evening thriller, “Lights Out,” might try WMAQ, Chicago, or WTAM, Cleveland. ‘Because this NBC feature, which Arch Obler writes and directs weekly, is a sustaining program (not sponsored), no definite station list is announced. WIRE occasionally carries “Lights Out,” when baseball or other local programs do not interfere. “The Meteor Men,” a story of invasion of thé earth Ry a strange breed of supermen from interstellar spaces, will be presented at 10:30 o'clack tonight by “Lights Out.” It probably will be just as gory as most

make the blod run cold in the large and devoted following which listens regularly. n ” Commencement time a. few years go found Johnny Green's classates at Harvard predicting he would be a banker, and Johnny. evidently thought likewise, for a majored in economics and mathematics. Now he leads a band on Tuesday evenings for NBC listeners. At Notre Dame, they expected a hefty football player named Ralph Dumke to get a coaching job—and a good one——in | some university. Little did his friends expect he would wind up | as one-half the popular radio team whimsically called “Sisters of the Skillet.” And the bright young things at Boston’s Cambridge High School voted Morton Bowe “most likely to succeed”—but they meant as a sculptor. : ; A young New York University graduate back in 1925 lcoked tq industrial engineering for a career, but ow Peter Van Steeden leads a band for Fred Allen’s programs. . Phil Baker never experienced the clamor of commencement day, for he was so poor he had to quit school early. But his grade school pals were sure he would be a politician when he grew up, because he was so universally popular.

Mrs. Roosevelt

many invitations to make baccalaurcate addresses during the commencement season, Mrs. Roosevelt will broadcast an informal baccalaureate message during her regular NBC-WLW program at 5:15 p. m. today. With her on the program will be Constance Eberhardt, recent graduate of a New York City high school,

solved the President of even “silent intent.” , ie

who will ask questions.

IgoF Gorin's Change of

“Lights Out”. stories, which weekly .

To Be Quizzed |

Because she was unable to accept |

I SY 1745