Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 July 1937 — Page 27
THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1987
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
With Major Hoople
BEFORE YOU OPEN 1/4 SuaRP1 I WINDOW AND Jf SHOOTERS ZN LET THOSE 100 HAVE BEEN | EAGLES ¥LY USING “THAT OUT, 1 KNOW OLD DRAKE WHERE YOU DECOY, 10 CAN BUY A BAG TW’ MILL CHEAP, WILD GOOSE, THAT BATS EVER 8INCE BACK EXTRA MY GRANDMA LOUD ECHOES! | / FELL HERO MER AUNT EMMYS
| VHONORABLE BOLIVAR SCOMB ww DEAR aR?
= 1 AM HAVING MY LINEAGE TRACED BACK, TO PROVE THAT I AM A DIRECT DESCENDANT OF SR DRAKE WINDSATE HOOPLE! UPON RECEIPT OF THIS PROOF OF MY ELAM TO THE DRAKE ESTATE, 1 SHALL FORWARD IT TO YOu! THE ENCLOSED $100 DRAFT 15 FOR YOUR SERVICES!”
YSIR AMOS DRAKE =, HOOPLE 7 !s
=z
LONDON U SOLICITOR=
| JASPER
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 27 |
By Frank Owen
“] sec—yon always get splinters when you slide down the top rail!”
«By Martin
NOUNG MAN ,T SEEMe RR WERE 1 DA WE = oN,
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pA COPR. 1937 BY NEA BERVICE, ING. 7. WM. REQ. U. 8 AAT
ON NOU AMAZE MeN TIME \MMEMOR (A, | BR (RVING To LISTEN OLDEST STORY BUER TOO 13 NOT LOVE BUT tag ONE THE LASY WOLLONY LeTEN To
«By Brinkerhoft
} / ENOOWER « HERE COME T™HE JLOEES - NOW TAKE YOUR FOOT OLY OF YOWR MOUTH AND I TRY AND
RE SOO +4
A TO aa WITH Yoo
ke + : TON TUBBS Nl OUCH! MOSQUITOES!
bh TH DERN JUNGLES FRA ALIVE WITH ‘EN,
TO SAV NOTHING, MY ERIEND , OF BOA CONSTRIC TORS AND JAGUARS,
MYPA NORTH. SPECIAL NURSE
. J RuN OFF JuaT WHE) THE Jubees ARE COMING TO SEE YOu I win TARE a RIENT
THAT & SDD!
Nomaer m™MirRTeEN
dere Ne 18... DON'T KNOW WHY HE ACTED T™S WAY «dE NEVER DID BEFORE
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«By Crane
OL, BOO SAID THERE WERE ANNIBAL INDIANS Re HERE, Ti
SEE WIZ! I'M GETTIN WORRIED, OUMPY COMPANION, EASY. HOW TW HECK Al
SAIINA PROTECT / UPACTURE SOME
LEAVE IT TO ME, MVY*®
| BY NIGHTFALL, T
RE WE GUARANTEE TO MANY
OURSELVES? / MOSQUITO NETS,
HAMMOCKS, KNIVES, NE N
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dy Thompson and Coll
/ WE APPROACH OUTEKIRTS OF TOWN, NOW... WHAT DOES WIRE DOCTOR BELIEVE WE SuALL FIND UNDER ANCIENT CHEATIUT TREE!
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TO UPRET OUR AND MER
117 MuRA-T HOPE ALL ee. r NO-NO, OF SOURSE PLANS... NOT, JACK JI |
- L[ tis 1a NOT GONG NO A | \
PARTY LOSE NO TIME NN HEADING FOR THE QLD CHE STUY TREE, AD INSTRUCTED | | IN THE WATEQIOUS ua TESS |
L NOTE"
NOT MARD I) GUESS, LEW: 8OME - ONE PROBABLY 18 WISHING A BOUND: LING ON Misa
BUT, AUCH SECRECY 18 MOAT | UNCALLED FOR *
HERE'S THE TREE, MYRA .. AND LOOR I! "MERE'S A BAAKET UNDER 17!
FREQUENTLY ARE RELEASED AFTER THE PLATES, KNOWN ON THE MARKET AS WTORTO/ISE ~Srikl il,” ARE REMOVED.” THEORY MAS IT THAT THE TURTLE GROWS A NEW SET OF SHIELDS TO REPLACE THOSE IT HAS LOST.
COPR. 1937
co WV NEA SERVICE, INC
a ARR
1 NO. Last year I reviewed several researches showing that we have been wasting & lot of sympathy on the “only child.” A new study of several hundred students by W. ©. Carter, of Simpson College, shows the only children to be just as wellladjusted as those in large families.
YES, if it is mortally possible. As Roy Chapman Andrews says, adventures are always due to lack of preparation. Amelia Barhart crashed at Hawaii solely because of Jack of preparations had failed to test the landing ‘tires
RISES AND FALLS AROLT NINE INCHES WITH THE GRAVITATIONAL PLLL OF THE MOON.
r——
COMMERCIAL “tortoise-shell” is removed from the hawk's-bill turtle’s shell by heating it, which causes it to peel. The theory that the material will grow back is not entirely correct, since the new growth is only a thin vencer, and of no commercial value. » LJ »
NEXT-—Can trees manufacture starch in the dark?
every one hundred fail and Dun & Bradstreet say it is practically always lack of preparation the project through to the end. In writ-
ing & book I have to see it clear |
through before making & start otherwise I do not start,
SHE certainly should, or else green or purple or yellow or some color that lightens up both the landscape and her spirits. The cuse tom of wearing mourning more than a short time is rapidly disappearing beow the newer mental hygiene izes that if one really does not want to cling to his that many peop
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
protects them and gives them in
fluence over others—then the thing | to do is to return to normal life as |
vigorously and decisively sible,
NEXT-Why is it that the third year of married life is the most dangerous?
COMMON ERRORS
Never say, “You must go and lay down”; say, “lie down.”
as Pos
The “people of Ohio spend the | the remainder of the hour will be
same amount of money for education that they do for tobacco.--E, N. | Dietrich, assistant Ohio education director.
When the lights of an oncoming |
car hit a driver's eyes, he drives blind for a certain number of feet .- Dr. Irving Straus, New York optom-
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SIGNED FOR
2D SEASON
Vivian Della Chiesa, young soprano of NBC's Monday evening “Contented Hour,” has been signed for her second season with the The 21-year-old star ik pictured above sights seeing at the Chicago Zoological Society Gardens, resting between She fs heard on NBO-WIRE, as the
Chicago Civic Opera.
rehearsals and broadcasts, “Oontented Hour” vocalist, at 8 © she Mings frequently on NBC sustai
March of Time’ Actors’ Precision Is ‘Miraculous, WFBM Writer Reports; Kate Smith Is Active Generalissimo
Informal "Show Boat,’ With Cap'n Henry at Helm, Returns Tonight,
By RALPH NORMAN
“Miraculous” is Jim Matheny’s word for the “Matroh of Time.” The stop-watch precision with which more than 30 actors dramas | ize the week's important news, Jim explained after returning to | BM script department from a New York vacation, is almost amaz= ing to witness. Few persons have seen the “March of Time” go on the air, and to be a spectator at this remarkable pro= gram, now in its seventh year on BS, was Jim's ambition. He got into the control room only after writing to about every bigwig at OBS and at the advertising agency which produces the show. Jim was most impressed by the almost mechanical program operation. To describe it as he told it to me, he arrived in the control toom a few minutes before 8 o'clock (the program goes on OBS-WI'BM at 8:30 p.m, each Thursday) to watch a portion of dress rehearsal, Ohe young actress, unable to read certain lines to please the director, Ar= thur Pryor Jr, was coached and then asked to repeat the lines time after time, Then at 8:10 o'clock, the studios was cleared and everyone loitered in the halls until a few moments before program time. The orchess tra of about 20 pieces took its place along one wall, and the cast was
‘clock each Monday evening, and ning programs,
RADIO THIS EVENING |
(The Indianapolis Times is hot cesponwible for thaccurncies th program ah touncements caused by station changes after press time.)
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Good Radio Music
By JAMES THRASHER
There are a few of us who may regret that tonight's Philadelphia | Orchestra concert from Robin Hood Dell comes in the hour beginning at | 8:30 o'clock. Tt will be competing with Rudy Vallee and the “Show Boat” | programs on the othor NBC network, and consequently may be hard
o find,
In the event that vou pick up the program, however, you will be Boy
warded with an all-Brahms programe conducted by Jose Iturbi. Albert Spalding and Alfred Wallenstein are to be the soloists in the Double Concerto for violin and cello, and
taken up with the “Academic Festival” Overture and the Symphony | No. 8 in F Major. | Of these three items, the Double Ooncerto is heard least often, Per haps it is because the work, after the broad sweep of the opening statement, presents Brahms as the master contrapuntist at some sacrifice of emotional content. This con certo, by the way, served as a peace offering from the com to Joseph Joachim, ithe violinist and friend of his boyhood, after a few years of estrangement following Joachim's divorce. Brahms called his “Academic Festival” overture “a Very Jolly votputri on students’ Ta
of speaking casual ingly © RE ee compositions
y and slight= | oh nearest
Mozart's compositions for these four instruments. The selection will be the D Minor Quartet (K 421) in four movements, marked Allegro moderato; Andante; Menuetto and 3 Heme, and Allegretto ma non
English to Hear Wheat Trading
By United Press CHICAGO, July 8=The closing
15 minutes of today's session of trading on the flgor of the Chicago Board of Trade was to be broadoast to England, _ The program was for the speciel benefit of English traders who hold memberships in the American Exe
| four
seated in chairs lined up before microphones. The cast faced the control room and took all cues from the producers, two of whom worked in the tiny booth. ” on on Narrator Westbrook Van Vorhees | took his place at an end micros | phone, opened the program, and the | commercial announcer worked at a | wecond microphone. The cast, seats ed in order of appearance at the microphenes, marched to any one of the four microphones on signal from the control room, arriving at the mikes with not a second to spare. Frequently the actors mot at the mikes sang, talked or shouted, for background sound effects. Two sound effects technicians=a man and a woman-==operated sound instruments. Most of the sound effects were recorded, the records played at proper moments. An excellent performance at the microphone always brought, Jim explained, approval from other cast members. This approval was expressed by raised arm. The voices of childien were simulated by midgets, and microphones were raised and lowered as necs essary, With 30 or more persons works fng at four microphones, pres eventing disconnected skits in rapid succession, the chances for errors, Jim said, were tremens dons, But there were no errors, and there never are errors. More than 70 persons, most of them actors and actresses, are on the “March of Time” staff, though only about 30 appear on each pro= gram. Most of them ate middle aged, and all have had stage and radio experience. After the program Jim said, the studio cleared almost instantly, and thera was no ohance to talk to anyone,
# # ” Jim, “doing” New York's broads casting centers from the inside, also saw Kate Smith's concluding “Band Wagon” program and Fred Allen's “Town Hall.” Kate's show, he sald, was rehearsed as carefully as Allen’ 8 was informal, Kate, it seems, was the program generalissimo, though Ted Oollins helped. She gave cues to orchestra and performers, saw to it that every» one was ready to go on and in gens eral dominated the CBS Playhouse stage, Kate's bad eyesight forced her to wear glasses, but this did not make reading easy, and she many times brought seript close to her eyes, taming it to get better light, Jim said, He thinks it would be very embarrasving to have made a mistake on Kate's carefully di rected show, but to have erred on Allen's show would have added to the merriment, In the “Town Wall” performance Jim saw, Harry Von Zell get lost and had to reread part of his peript, and a wound effects man failed to get the correct bang from a gun, causing Allen to ad lib, and Allen frequently ad libbed with his guests, Kate's show, Jim said, was .con= centrated on the microphone, and the studio audience was ignored. But Allen's show was played to the audience, just as though the micro= phone were not there. Since Matheny's return to Indianapolis, Allen left for vacation, turning “Town Hall” over to Walter O'Keefe, Times columnist and noted humorist, who presented his first program last evening.
» » » Tonight's big radio event is the premiere of NBC-WLW's new “Show Boat,” again starring Charlie Win= ninger as Oapn Henry, If your listening antedated Jack Benny or Pred Allen, you need no introduction to Capn Henry, who piloted his NBC ‘Show Boat” on many a mythical Mississippi River trip. Cap'n Henry's cast for the res juvenated “Show Boat” will in olade Jack Haley, of “Wake Up and Live” fame, with his stooge, Patricia Wilder, Meredith Willwon, NBC West Ooast music director, is to conduct a 27-piece “Show Boat” orchestra, and vocals ints will oe Nadine Conner, L. Thomas,
