Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 June 1937 — Page 15
SATURDAY, JUNE 19, 1937 OUR BOARDING HOUSE
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JASPER
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
By Frank Owen
“Okay, the British are coming! Now get back to bed!”
—By Martin
BY CHANCE ,1 WHAT
WS we \T'6 TH TOMFOOLERY
1 QUITE AGREE WITH YOu! \T'e SCANDALOLS L\T'5 PREPOS OANGUEST B\Y OF EVER HEARD OF
ROLS!
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T'LL LEAVE SNOOKER PIeTLRE HERE - THEN M caN'T HELP BUT SEE
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I WONDER WHAT 1S ‘THE MATTER WITH MOM = = | —- SHE TJusT DOESNT AKR FOLKS «
(WELL, TUE OONE MY PART | NOW), THE REST LP 10 You
GOODBYE L\T WAS SWEET OF YOU TO COME AND TELL 7d ME WHAT \TS ALL : ABOUT
DUST BETWEEN US, WHEN] 1 can THE YOUNG SCALAWAG SHOWS LP wIF BE EVER DOES «TO SMACK RM DOWN
ALL sHE cAres
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WASHINGTON TUBBS II
Pays oF TepIOys TRAVEL HIE
© AS WASH AND EASY,
DISCOURAGED AND EMPTYHANDED, RETURN SOUTHWARD. [if §
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ABOUT 15 JUST MB. RUT SHE'LL LIKE eNooKeER’s DaboY AS SOON As sHE
SEES His PICTURE
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Da me INSTANT, JACK PINIONIS THE DESPERATE | REGGIE'S ARMS [ BEHIND HIM, WHILE THE DAZED : jl MRS. PAS= = | TURES LOOKS ON
__\ YOUNG FELLOW.. THE YACHT
THAT'LL BE JUST ABOUT YOUR LAST ACT OF VIOLENCE,
1 WON'T BELIEVE ToT CAN'T BE TRUE!
WILL BE SURROUNDED 8&Y OFFICERS IN A
‘THIS CURIOUS WORLD
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THE AMMER/CAN NAT/ONAL BIRD SHOULD THE EAGLE EVER. 8E
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THAN
By William Ferguson
I'M SORRY FOR YOU, MRS. PASTURES, BUT IN A WAY, (T'S YOUR OWN FAULT, YOU DOMINATED REGGIES LIFE SO COMPLETELY HE HAD 70 OO SOMETHING 70 ASSERT HIS EGO.
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NO king has the full support of all his people, and so there are those who oppose the bald eagle as the national bird of America. Because of the love and respect held for the cheerful meadowlark, his name often is mentioned as a true All-America successor to the present ruler,
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THE ROLE OF “BLUEBEARD' GAVE THIS BASHFUL, REPRESSED LAD THE OPPORTUNITY TO ORAMATIZE HIMSELF IN THE EYES OF THE WORLD. YOU EVEN FORBADE HIM THE SOCIETY OF GIRLS, THRU YOUR FEAR OF FORTUNE HUNTERS. THESE EXPLOITS GAVE HIM SOME-
THING TO GLOAT OVER, SECRETLY!
'T WILL TAKE MORE THAN YOUR THEORIES TO CON VINCE ME OF MY
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
Sow oie ee Le d 1 SCARCELY anything would do more to accomplish two grand results, make the family budget go much farther and cure advertisers and tradesmen of lying than getting women: over this foolish idea and teaching them to judge fallacies. For example, women are fregaently assured a fabric in “silk” whem it is some synthetic fiber, or “all wool” when it is part cotton or shoddy. For instance, the word ‘silk” has
‘| been legally defined by the Federal
Trade Commission as being only the fiber from the cocoon of the silkworm. So, if tradesmen knew all women could tell real silk or wool or any other fabric from imitations, they would have ‘to quit lying about: their goods.
| THINK QUESTION. DOES COMPLETE IGNORANCE FREE ONE FROM
FEAR? zone
OES A Ree eB TALKER 6L1B THINKER? YES OR NO eee IT FREES one from some forms of fear but not from all. A person would have no fear if he were in complete ignorance that a cyclone were coming, or a burglar were in the house or his business were about to be ruined. But complete ignorance of the laws of nature has always filled people's minds with a thousand fears—the very air is full of evil spirits and other terrors. Complete ignorance of the causes of disease leads to exaggerated fears from every ache or pain. * AS A GENERAL
3
# RULE, yes. Of
course, we have the boastful]
windbag who is constantly “running
off at the mouth,” saying nothing, andthe village gossip. who says less
than nothing. But the person who an talk easily and freely about hings of importance is usually a good thinker. The most important single mental ability is ability to express one’s self in words.. Of vourse, the brainy introvert or timid person may keep these words: to himself and not talk much but when he does talk he usually says something. 3
COMMON ERRORS
Never say, “Is the race over with?” om. “with.”
Best Short Waves
SATURDAY PARIS—8:30 a. m.—*An Evening at Montmartre.” TPA2, 15.24 meg. BERLIN—4 p. m.—Ship in’ Construction. DID. 11.77 meg. BUDAPEST, Hungary—>5 £5 m— Gypsy Band. News. HAT4, 9.12 g.
m.—“Of All the meg.; ‘GSO, 15.18 GSB, 9.51
ON—5:30 p. GSP, 15.31 D, 11.75 meg.;
" CARACAS—7 YV5RC, 5.8 me
BUENOS AIRES, Argentine—17:30 Pe m.—Vijennese Orchestra. LRX.
meg. BERLIN—T7:4 in the Tropics.
a’ m.—Waltz Hour.
5 p. m.—Photography DJD, 11.77 meg. LONDON-8 p. m.—“Table d'Hote."” GSI, 15.26 meg.: GSF, 15.14 meg.: GSD. 11.75 meg.: GSC. 9.58 meg. SANTIAGO. Chile—8:40 p. m.— Dance Music. CB960, 9.60 meg. VANCOUVER—11 p. m.—Mart Kenne, and His Western Gentlemen. L£JRO, 6.15 meg.: CJRX, 11.72 meg. . TOKYO-—11:15 p. m.—Entertainment. JZJ, 11.830 meg. SUNDAY . UDAPEST, Hungary—8 a. m.— } Concerts and Talks. HAS3, 15.37 meg. ; ¢
SANTIAGO, Crile—1 p. m.—Dance Music and Songs. . CB960. 9.60 meg. {BUENOS AIRES, Argentine—2 p.m. -—Sunday Dance Program. LRX, 9.66 meg. : TOKYO—3:15 p. m.—Entestainment. JZJ, 11.80 meg. ©: BOSTON—4:30 p. m.—Magna Carta
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painting and entered Harvard. Later
4 perfectly good concert-hall music
| will Inot stand for it. I have ap-
.as they apply to radio.” . ‘new Concertino is simple, clear and
NBC and Jack Benny Will Reintroduce ‘Show Boat's’ Capt. Henry to Radio;
INDIANAPOLIS WER 1230 {C Net.)
Network Stars Make Vacation Plans
RADIO THIS EVENING RET :
CHICAGO
Py NAT) (Mutaal Net.)
(NBC-Mutuah
Top, Hatters Congert Or.
8 Net.) Tea Tunes
News-Sports Feld’s Or.
Top, Hatters
Neéews-Musie A. G. arger
Horse placing Rambles |
Israel Messare
Sports Slants Bible Ins’t.
Concert Hall Dick Harold ews
R. K D., Hour
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Sport: Cancers on
Prof. Qujss
Bohemians Track Meet
Dramatic Skit
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Sanders’ Or. Tomorrow's Trib.
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Baseball
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8 yyder or. _* Song Fest
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King’s Or. Nichols’ Or. Williams’, or. -
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News Goodman's Or. - Casa Loma or.
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(CBS Net.) {NBC Net.)
SUNDAY PROGRAMS
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400
CHICAGO
CINCINNATI LW 7 WGN 720 (Mutual Net.)
00 (NBC Mutual)
Aunt Suspn’s Silent hy
Children’s Hour Silent ” ” ”
Melodies ”» »
Srhiems Eastside Church
Romany Trail ”" » Organ Moods CMB Class
Jake Entertains Baccalaureate
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Church Forum - Concert ” » ”» ”»
”» ”»
» ”»
Ensemble ews
Princeton Talk
”» ”»
Review Tune Topics
” » ”» » Melodies ” ”»
Hour Glass ” ”» Melodies ” ”»
SSeS
Cadle Choir Music Hall
Chicago ,Chapel
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Marion Talley ” ” Baseball ”» ”» ”»
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Al Wynkoop
Joe Penner Rubinofl’s or.
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(CBS Net.) (NBC Net.)
¥ Melodies Chyck Wazon Music Clock - ” ”
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Early Birds » »
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» ain ”» Children David Harum Backstage Charming Interyiews
Magazing Mrs. Farrell » »
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Bob Carter Grace-Scotty Joe Dumond Ensemble
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Marv Baker Singing Sam J inda’s_Love Life Stories Farm Flashes Big Sister arkets Farm Circle Myrt-Marge News Apron Strings Pop, Concert
Markets Women Only Reporter O’Brien’s Or,
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Police Court Interlude oil | Celebration
Lorenzo Jones Chugch Women Varieties
- Julia Blake Kitty Kelly Playdays . » ”
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Regatta ssari Dan Don Winslow Jackie Heller
Wives’ School Unemployment Woman's News Tea Tunes
Kiwanians News-Spoits Hollace Shaw
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LIS ° INDIANAPOLIS IN FEM 1530 § WIRE 1400
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Trib.-Comics
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Transportation Between
Alice Blue Organ Recital |
Martha-Hal I Concert Or. Edna Sellers |
Magic Key » »
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Melodies
Baseball | Choral Echoes ;
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P. Sullivan Lyon’s Or. Sissle’s or.
Denny's ,or. Duchin’s Or. » LL Williams’ Or,
Nichols’ Or. Sander’s Or.
Moon River ”» ”»
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ROGRAMS
CINCINNATI (NBC Mutual)
CHICAGO GN 920 (Mutual Net.) Home Song Golden Hour
»n ”»
Good Morning ” »n
Peter Grant Devotions Mail Bag Chandler Jr.
Sweethearts Mail Box Get Thi Harold
Don Pedro Childten Grimm's Daughter Store Woman
jymns ope Alden Virginians
in Door Turner
Next First Love
© Live Gospel
Girl Alone Markets Marshalls Frim Sisters
Carl Freed Male Trio Markets Farm Hour
o» ”» ”» »
Varieties Betty-Bob
Pepper Young Ma Perkins Vic-Sade * O'Neills
Helen Nugent Kitty Keene
ollow Moon Guiding Light Mary Marlin Mary Sothern
Singing Lady Orphan Annie
singer
Next Door Len Salvo Truth Only We Are Four
Bob Elson Tom-Dick-Harry Service Markets
Concert Or. Painted Dreams Lucky Girl License Bureau
Wife-Secretary June ker Orchestra Headliners
L. Salerno Len Salvo Jobn’s Or.
Concert Williams’ Or.
Swing It Sally Nelson Harold Turner Orphan Annie
Tl'oy Bana Tommyv-Betty In-Laws Lowell Thomas
Good Radio Music By JAMES THRASHER Walter Piston, head of Harvard University’s music department, will be guest conductor on tomorrow's “Everybody's Music” hour (WFBM at 1
p. m.) when his new Concertino for piano: and orchestra is given .its Jesus Maria Sanroma, well known recitalist, will
This composition is the second of the six Columbia Composers’ Commission works to be presented. The first was William Grant Still's
colorful Negro narrative, Avenue.” Now, with. Mr. Piston’s composition, the commission takes us into a new walk of musical life. Walter Piston is a New Englander by birth, training and tradition. Born in Rockland, Me, in 1894, he was attending an art school in Boston when he realized his vital interest in music. So he abandoned
he continued his stundy of composition with Nadia Boulanger in Paris. His works have been played by the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Roth Quartet and other leading orchestras and ensembles.
” # s
Mr. Piston, like the other com- | missioned composers, has taken this musical order seriously. Asked to write specifically for radio broadcasting, he made a study of music through the microphone and was impressed by the distortion of much
when put on the air. Says the composer: “If the orchestra is muddy, the microphone
proached this project very seriously in an effort to realize to the best advantage instrumental resources
Consequently, we are told, the
~ Day, WIXAL, 11.79 meg.
direct. It is 1g tres movements
“Lenox &—
which blend into each other and the entire work takes only about 15 minutes for performance.
= 8 ” u The summer series of Goldman Band concerts, from the mall in New York's Central Park, is to begin tomorrow night with a broadcast on the NBC Blue network at 7 o'clock. The occasion will mark! the 20th. anniversary of these free concerts, and the 17th year that NBC or its key stations have broadcast them.
Funeral Held for Benny's Gag Man
By United Press HOLLYWOOD, June 19.—Screen and radio celebrities who knew him as “the funniest man in Hollywood,” gathered today at funeral services for Al Boasberg, droll “gag man” for Jack Benny and the Marx brothers. Mr. Boasberg, who died of a heart attack yesterday. at 45 years of age, said he tried to train a termite tokeep. his pencils sharp. ~% Back in. Buffalo, N. Y., where he was born, the writer sold gags! to vaudeville actors. “For $5 each,” he said. 'They didn’t have that money-under-false-pretenses law then,” -
PAGE 15 |
~
Local Stations to Relay Kiwanis Convention Events.
' By RALPH NORMAN
Charles . Winninger, whose radio popularity as “Show Boat's” Capt. ‘Henry was widespread even before
night. You may be sure it's for “build-up” purposes, prior to Winninger's return to NBC on July 8. . ; Mr. Winninger, of all radio people,
listeners, but NBC and the sponsors - apparently believe audiences fickle and that many may have for= gotten that as Capt. Henry, Charlie ° Winninger directed many mythical
“Show Boat” job next month, he, like a new headliner, will be farmed: - out to other programs to recapture -
during his Hollywood sojourn. hr Listeners who are movie addicts will know this brief sojourn gave us. two delightful pictures—Three
Cantor’s Deanna Durbin to movie stardom, and “The Go-Getter,” which played here a couple of weeks ago. They should increase his po---tential network audiences, movie fans listen to radios occasion--ally, too, I believe. 1 :
” & 3
While) Benny helps sell Mr. : ning audience tomorrow, other --
vacation headliner—Jane Frohman. Many of these so-called
3
Jack Benny became a topflight - broadcaster, makes a guest appear- = ance on the Benny show tomorrew
Mr. re
should need no reintroduction to -
are.
“Show Boat” cruises. = So - before he returns to his old. :
the radio audience he may have lost. -
Smart Girls,” -vhich boosted Eddie -
for- =
Winninger to NBC's Sunday eve-
programs - have helped sell his ~~
“guest appearances” are to create
listener interest in a new star or
an old star who has been absent from the airlanes. Radio, just like other entertainment, has to sell itself. :
= x» =
Mr. Benny's vacation plans are as. unsettled as the weather.
First, he. .
and Mary planned to relax in Eu- -
rope, but now he fears Europe is not - the best place to relax, with revolu- _ tion and war scare dominating the. news, so they may go to the Orient. E die Cantor is using his spare timé from the microphone to work
{on a new picture, “Ali Baba Goes to
Town.” . : : . Jack Oakie, whose Tuesday eve-. ning CBS show will be his last until fall, also will work on a forthcoming picture, byt will spend part of - the summer with his wife, the for-
mer Venita Varden, at the seashore, -
Kate Smith, accompanied by Mr.
‘jand. Mrs. Ted Collins, will motor to -
Banff, Canada, for part of the summer, and will return to her island - home at Lake Placid, N. Y., ‘or summer sports. . Robert Ripley, for the first time in 10 years, will spend the summer in New York. His show moves from Sunday to : riday night next month, and will run through the summer. Earlier sumamers have been spent in = some remote corner of the world in -
search of oddities. ’-
: 1.8» # : - Both - WFBM and WIRE will
connection with the Kiwanis convention. WFBM, at 4:15 p. m. Monday, will pipe to CBS a talk by A. Copeland Callen, Kiwanis. president, on “Kiwanis Today.” . John Holtman, WFBM staff .an- -: nouncer, will handle the program. WIRE, at 4 p.-m. Tuesday, will present the KDKA Choristers, who are to be here for the Kiwanis meeting. The group, long a KDKA' feature, comes to Indianapolis under sponsorship of Pittsburgh Kiwanians.
® 2 =» Not long ago CBS related that
Truman Bradley, CBS Chicago an~". nouncer, fer three seasons had.
troit and return without. once being.: late or having trouble. Then this week CBS ‘had to revise the story—for after the last De=
and on June 13, too, Mr. Bradley's" plane was grounded and he was:-
to Chicago. : In three seasons of announcing flew more than 100,000 miles, occa=< sionally making two round trips &-
werk between Chicagd and Detroit.-
” 8 . The CBS Detroit Symphony pro- . grams will’ be replaced tomorrow night by Rex Chandler's “Universal. Rhythm,” which holds, some kind of record for moving. It : premiered last winter. on NBC on Friday evening, then moved to CBS and Saturday evening, and now for the summer will be heard on CBS at 7 o'clock on Sunday evening. Frank Crumit, who has been in and out of radio since the days of crystal receivers, will be master of ceremonies, continues as baritone ‘soloist.
2 2 2
EEK - END HIGHLIGHTS—-~ Ken Ellington and Cy Newman, CBS Chicago announcers, will describe the 28th running of the American Derby at Chicago's Washington Park at 4 p. m. today. . .°%" Jack. Dempsey will be (Joe Cook's: NBC-WLW program headliner at: 7.30 p. m. today. THe Manassa: Mauler will predict the outcome of the Braddock-Louis fight. . . . Other - Cook guests will include Bruna
a
originate : programs next week in _
flown weekly from Chicago to De- . .
troit Symphony Orchestra concert,” .
forced to wait for a train to return i
Detroit Symphony concerts, -Bradley : :
I believe,
and Richard Bonelli-
Castagna, Metropolitan Opera so==" °
prano, and Billy Lynn, comedian.” .. . Income tax evasion problems - will be aired in NBC's University of Chicago Round Table discussions at10:30 a. m. tomorrow. ... CBS at 3 p. m. tomorrow premieres a new series of salutes to South American countries, to be heard over the CBS chain in the United States. . . . May . Robson, beloved character player of the stage and screen, will be heard in Sir James Barrie’s “The Old Lady: Shows Her Medals” as part of NBC’s unnamed but excellent Sunday evening variety show which regularly stars Don Ameche, Fdgar Bergen, W. C. Fields and many others. . . . Grisha ,Goluboff, 14-year-old violinist, tomorrow night replaces Ray Middleton, baritone,
on this Red network 6 o'clock presentation, aay
