Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 July 1937 — Page 19
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PAGE 19
_ By Frank Owen ILiorse Racing, Once Sport of Kings, Now Sport of Bing Crosby, Other Aircasters;
TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1937 OUR BOARDING HOUSE
1 EGAD, JASON! UMF-FUFF ww» ITS 7 THE FAMILY SUIT OF ARMOR, HANDED DOWN FOR GENERATIONSwNO DOUBT,
With Major Hoople
LAWSE, MISTAH MAJAH]! | YOU SURE 1S A ONEMAN ARMY IN DAT
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ON GIVES = “HIM AN IDEA =
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
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“Don’t miss any or I'll go back to using insect spray.
Copr. 1937 by United Feature Syndicate, Tne. §
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QUICK, HOP IN ! LL CHOP HOLES IN THE
THERE! THEY CAN'T FOLLOW US. BY THE TIME THEY GET WISE, WE'LL
BE FAR DOWN THE
RIVER,
MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE
TRY AND LISTEN
[I KNOW THAT LANE IS YOUR, ER VERY DEAR FRIEND, MVRA, BUT
OUT O' REACH.
| SIGNAL DRUMS! BLAZES, I DIDN'T FIGURE ON THAT!
T /8 TRUE TO WHAT
MEMBER OF THE "PATRONS OF PEACE" - PLEDGED TO SERVE
THAT I- AM A THAT
To Ti
THESE BABIES ARE WMPORTANT HE PEACE OF OOUBT..BUT BELIEVE ME WHEN I TELL
EUROPE, | HAVE NO
DO YOU UNDERSTAND, NOW, WHY IT I'S NECESSARY FOR YOU AND ME TO GET
Hollace Shaw, shown above at
ih
the CBS microphone with Mark
Warnow, sings over the junior network at 6 o'clock each Tuesday eve=
ning with Warnow’s “Blue Velvet” orchestra,
go West from New York to Hollywo
to New York from the West to star on the CBS program. carried locally, but may be heard over WBBM, Chicago.
RADIO THIS EVENING |
While most radio singers od, the red=headed Miss Shaw came It is not
(The Indianapolis Times 8 not responsible for inaccuracies In program an. nouncements caused by station changes after press time.)
INDIANAPOLIS WEBM 1230 (CBS Net.) Stringtime
MeGregor Interviews
News-Sports Hall's Or.
Easy Aces Varieties Sports Slants
Freeman's Or. e Jimmie Allen
ws
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)
CINCINNATI) WLW 00 (NBC-Mutual) Larry-Sue Tomy -Betty Inlaws “Lowell Thomas
CHICAGO WGN 520 (Mutual Net.) Swing It Californians Mes; ner's r
Concert Or Concert Trio Sports Unannounced
Mystery Varieties Lum-Abner Bob Newhall
Musio Hal) Johnnie o
S332 E
Symphony Or. King's Or.
Jom-Dick-Harry Haenschen's Or. Rhythms
Morgan's Or ” »
Can, Be Done
Al Pearcy Voy, Pon,
Goodman's Or. Green's or.
Bernie's Or. Concert Or. " " " Mysteries » » y Tomorrow Trib
”
“Navy Band Follies "
”
J. Fiddler Vic-Sade
| 5353 $353
Tonle Time Denny's, Or Big Idea " » Jim Fidler Northerners Vie==Sade :
se
= &
Melodies Len Rile Stabile’s
Amos 'n’ Andy News-Musie
9: kg 5: LH 8 8: 8: LE 9: 9: 9
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Haenschen's O Baseball
2 |
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News n lock’s Or. rsev’s Or.
or
Collins’ Or.
———— 3333 =
Nocturne ance Or, Chiesta’s Or. Engle's Or,
WEDNESDAY
EAN 1 FBM 1230 (CBS Net.) Chuck Wagon
Baseball Hawalians Strong's Or. Talking Drum
252 53
kd — Ee HD
w >
Devotions Showmen
Thompson's Or.
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)
PDuchin’s Or. Week's Or. Williams Or
Amos n’' Andy Madhatterfieids
r. Los, Amigos
P. Sullivan Rapp's Or Thompson's Or.
Sander’s Or. Duchin’s Or.
Kent's or.
Panic o's, OF.
Barron's Or. Tucker's Or.
PROGRAMS
CINCINNATI CHICAGO ‘LW 700 GN 720 (NBC -Mutuah (Mutual Net.) Home Songs Golden Hour
Musie Clock " » "
" o Varieties
Early Birds
»
staay | BA | 5353 | &2
” "
Peter Grant Devotions Aunt Mary Chandler Jr.
Good Morning
Mrs,
0 Plain Bil Children
David Backstage Charming Interviews
Kitty Kelly alton Boys ookends Mrs. Farrell 2 Magazine H:30 Big Sister 0:45 Life Stories
10:00 Hope Alden
eed
Harum
—
Nerenade Mah Box Get Thin Harold Turner
Hymns Hope Alden Virginians Next Door
Don Pedro Children Painted Dreams Store Woman
Linda’s Love Personals Live Again Gospel Singer
Girl Alone Next Door
Tuesday Evening Shows Hold Set Casts THIS YOUNG LADY CAME EAST
»
| Husband-Wife Teams Are Numerous on Networks
By RALPH NORMAN
Horse racing, once the sport of kings, is now the sport of broads casters. The list of radio singers, come= dians and orchestra leaders who take their turf seriously, even to the | extent of owning horses or racing | plants, gets longer each year. Bing { Crosby heads the list, as you doubt= | less know, with his huge and expen= | sive Del Mar track in southern | California. Bing’'s associates in this milliondollar venture include several other radio and film players. Then at Eastern tracks this summer you can find Ben Bernie, who came ali the
way from Hollywood to supervise | his one-horse (referring to size, not quality) racing stable. The Old | Maestro usually is to be found at | Saratoga. Another broadcaster from the | Tuesday evening shows who boasts his own stable as well as insatiable interest in horses generally ix Al Jolson, who, like Bernie, is in the East for the summer scason, Al raced his own horse, Totem Pole, the other day, and Totem Pole won. Al confessed to friends he didn’t have much money bet, but just seeing the | horse come in first was worth a million dollars. | Jolson’s guest at Empire that day was Milton Berle, whom you hear over CBS on Sunday evenings. It seems Berle wanted Jolson’s expert | advice, particularly on which horse | would come in first, but after one race Berle used his own system of picking winners. Almost needless | to say, Al didn’t pick the winner in that one race. | ” " w Bernie gets back to the miecrophone for a few Minutes tonight to present his musical program and guest stars. These guests tonight will be Mischa Levitzki, able concert pianist, and Wynn Murray, star of the current Broadway musical comedy, “Babes in Arms.” Cab Calloway is booked on the Bernie show for next week. ” ” ” The Tuesaay evening shows, which all winter and spring were | a mecca for guest performers, have | settled down for the summer with | set casts. Only two programs, I believe, feature extra talent-— Bernie's NBC-WLW broadcast at 7 o'clock, and Benny Goodman's swing concert over CBS-WFBM at 7:30 o'clock Goodman's guest tonight will be Lionel Stander, film actor, who will continue the program’s swing feud. There's no reason for argu-ment-—=even humorous argument--about swing on Goodman's broad casts which are dialed by listeners who want his particular brand of music, but that's someone's idea of | comedy, and doubtless it will go on | all summer, " nn # The other Tuesday evening | musical show maestro, Johnny Green, promises for tonight a musi= cal preview of what the ears will hear | during the next few months. Popu=- | lar music, it seems, changes styles | occasionally and, furthermore, Mr. Green tells us we are on the brink of a new era-—"swing-lined” Hawaiian and Cuban music, The preview will include "swing= lined” (what will they think of next?) arrangements of “Hula Heaven,” “Sweet Leilani,” “Aloha Oe” and “Ta Hu Wa Hu Wali” There you are, and if you want to be ahead of the crowd in the new-
On Mall Better Health Joe Dumond Women Only
YOU THAT [| WAVE NO IDEA EXACTLY WHO THEY ARE OR FROM WHERE THEY CAME. I WAS TOLD TO SEE THAT THEY &OT
TE ORDER IN EVERY WAY. HENCE, BEING A DOCTOR, | WAS ASSIGNED
1 HAVE TO SAY, WITH AN OPEN MIND =
10:15 Edwin C. HID 10:30 Helen Trent 10:45 Our Gal Sunday
est in music, you can dial WIRE
Mary Marlin at 7:30 and hear it all.
Markets Quartet
Len Salve Truth We Are Four
3 DEWILDERED By THE
SUDDEN TJURN OF EVENTS, MVYRA AWAITS OR. JASON'SEXPLAN* TATION.
RX
TO COME THE BEST
TO YOUR CLINIC
INTELLIGENT | i OF ALL ANIMALS, I Is A : RODENT; A FAMILY
WEAK 2 MENTALITY
OF FleHES OF CERTAIN SPECIES DEVELOP ANNWALL
GROWTH RINGS,
LIKE
TREES, THEREBY MAKING IT POSSIBLE TO DETERMINE THE AGE OF THE FISH.
Crear
A CHANGE OF
TEN PER CENT IN THE HEAT OF THE
SON wWouLD BE SUFFICIENT TO DESTROY ALL LIFE UPON THE EARTH.
AS may be seen by the enormous sun spots, the head of the
solar system is subject to mighty
disturbances, but, fortunately for
the inhabitants on our planet, it continues to exist in a most stable
manner. Geologic history shows evidence that the sun has undergone
little change in two billion years, .
do
Lh
NEXT-—-What effect
%
he =
Ha
bees?
nad N ATER
OF CARE, AND TO KEEP
THEIR PRESENCE HERE A SECRET.
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
16 IT LONG HOURE OF DRIVING THAT CAUGES 60 MANY DRIVERS TO 80 TO
SEF AT THE
WHEEL? i YECORNO we
HIGHLY INTELLI® SE OR ONE of the surprising facts developed by the National Safety Council, according to Science News Letter, after studying the accidents
caused in 12 states by drivers who were asleep, was that nearly half of
than two hours! However, at least one-third of them had been without sleep from other causes for from 16 to 20 hours. So it is evident that it is lack of proper amounts of sleep in general rather than long, gruelling hours at the wheel that causes most of the driver-asleep accidents. 2 Ld »
YOU may remember the study
Fb
these drivers had been driving less
I mentioned recently made by ‘possible to
HEE OR NO ti
mers, Purdue University psycholo-
gist, which showed the marked im=provement in law observance that could be brought about in young people by having them run the school like a city government. The study also showed that the highly intelligent pupils had no more respect for obedience to law than did the average and slow students. This probably applies to people in general. Respect for law is an attitude of mind and these students found no significant relationship between this attitude and a person's intelligence. ” » ”
YES, But, you may ask, why do so
ideals both young men and women have of each other are made up of only a few general qualities. They fail to consider that the ideal in these respects may possess a hun= dred other qualities that are not glamorous at all. Ideal husbands are usually not glamorous but they are extremely considerate of the other fellow and always play 50-50. |
NEXT--Should people who are out of a job try to get one?
COMMON ERROR
“Never say, “I feel like I need a change”; say, “as if I need a change.”
Insanity is on the increase. Already more beds are being occu- | pied by mental cases in the United States than by patients hospitalized from all other causes combined. Dr. Earl Crafts, Ohio State psychiatrist.
Best Short Waves
TUESDAY
SCHENECTADY--4:35 pn. ‘ . Wave Mail Bag. WIXAF, 9.53 Snort
LONDON--5:30 p. m. “The Came Back.” 1531 meg. ash "1th meg., GSD, 11.7 meg... GS
15.18; . 9.81 BERLIN-—6 P Shows. DJD, 11.77 BERLIN-17:30 Carl Loewe. DJD. SANTIAGO, UHILE-745 pp. m. Byinshony and Opera. Cnoed 9.60
CARACAS-—8:15 p. m. Mr. informa5.8 meg.
tion. YVSRC, NDON-9:10 p. m. Variety. G8G, 1145 meR.; GSI. 15.26 meg.: 888: 11.75 meg.:. GSB. 9.51 megs BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINE--10 p. m. Dance music. LRX, 9.66 meg. TOON--1:30 . m._ Old Time Prone SPRO. 6.15 meg. CIR
m, Latest Song
m. Berlin Variety meg
, _m, Ballads by hi meg. a
vt | Eo
Ji
1:00 Feature , Time Home Town
1: 1: H 1: »
Farm Hour
Bob Elson Tom-Dick-Harry Seryice
Allen Werner Tom-Dick- Harry Markets Farm Hour
Markets "
Reporter usie Police Court Varieties
Gilchrist's Or.
fc ——— —
Myrt-Marge
New Apron Strings uestions usie of Past 4 Lorenzo Jones Dance Time Varieties Russell oor " Medical Talk
XSW
Concert Or Concert Trio Lucky Girl Romance Wife-Secretary June Baker Arthur Wright Baweball
Varioties Betty-Bob Pepper Young a Perkins
Ralph Nviand Kitty Keene Rhythms Guiding Light
"” ” ”
Rythmaires
Tea, Time Kogen’s Or.
58235323 5838 53s3
McGregor
News-Sports Singing Waiters Interviews
Meet Orchestra
”» " ”» ”
Houseboat Dot-Pat Singing Lady Meet Orchestra Swing It Harold Turner Travel Tour Californians
Toy Band Tommy -Betty In-Law
8 Lowell Thomas
Where to find other stations:
Chicago, WBBM 770; WENR 870;
WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR, 750; Gary, WIND, 560.
Good Radio Music
By JAMES THRASHER
Vera Brodsky and Harold Triggs, who are probably America's best- | known duo pianists, will be heard in a CBS-WFBM broadcast at 1:45 p.m |
tomorrow
Indianapolis concert-goers should be especially interested in the pro-
gram because it seems very probable
of local piano pedagogs and per-#
formers in the fall.
Both Mr. Triggs, who hails from Denver, and Miss Brodsky, a Norfolk, Va. native, were pupils of Josef Lhevinne. They met first in Salzburg, Austria, where a composition of Mr. Triggs was played at the annual festival. Later they met again in New York and formed a two-piano team. They played frequently on the air with Roxy, Maj. Bowes (in his “professional” days) and on other programs. Later they made appear= ances with the Philharmonic-Sym-= phony Orchestra and the National Orchestra Association. For tomorrow’s broadcast they have scheduled the Chopin C Major Rondo and a Sonata in G Major by Johann Christian (the “English™) Bach, youngest of Johann Sebastian’s musical sons.
Alec Templeton, the blind and remarkably gifted young Welsh pianist, is to be soloist with the Chicago Philharmonic Orchestra at Grant Park tonight. Richard Ozerwonky will conduct, and the program is to be broadcast at 6:30 o'clock by CBS-WFBM. This is to be the *ilharmonic’s last concert in He axles, ook: Tuesday evening the Women’s Sym-
that Mr. Triggs will join the corps of two appearances at the same hour, ” n " Varied novelties again will be in order when the Manuel and Wil liamson harpsichord ensemble takes the air at 8:30 o'clock tonight on the NBCO-Blue network. There will be a Mozart sonata and Rameau’s “The Chicken” as harpsichord solos; George Bishop is slated to sing two Haydn songs; a Handel concerto for organ and harpsichord, a Pastorale by Vivaldi and the “Imperial Suite” of Couperin will complete the program.
UTURES and Miscellaneous The “March of Time” will con tihue on Thursday evenings, and will not shift to Friday nights as announced . . . President Roosevelt's next radio address will be at 8 a. m. Sunday, when he and President Lebrun and Marshall Petain of France, U. 8. Ambassador William C, Bul[litt and Gen. John J. Pershing will broadcast a Meuse-Argonne coms moration program. . The John Barrymore Shakespearean series ended last night, and NBC will present Helen Hayes in O'Neill's "“Beyond the Horizon” next Monday evening = . . Mr. Barrymore and Elaine Barie, the actor announced last night, will return to NBC in September to present two modern “
the first
bo
: > and “Accent on Youth” Cra-
» " ” This department the other day mentioned several husband-wife radio teams prominent in broads casting, without intending to include all the married couples who head radio shows, Just how in complete the list was I didn’t realize until I checked up. Besides the most prominent, like Mr, and Mrs. Jack Benny, the Allens, George Burns and Gracie Allen, Fibber McGee and Molly, Jane Froman and Don Ross, and Julia Sanderson and Frank Crummit, I'm told that Irene Noblette of the Tim and Irene comedy team is Mrs. Tim Ryan, the Aces of “Easy Aces” are husband and wife, and that George Jessel and his wife, Norma Talmadge, will be heard together this fall. Then there are the Barrymores— John and Elaine. Ethel Shutta is Mrs. George Olson, Harriet Hilliard is Mrs. Ozzie Nelson and Dorothy Lamour is Mrs, Herbie Kay. Ruby Keeler has broadcast many times with her hus. band, Al Jolson, and while Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Rogers have not been on the air together since their marriage, each was heard Sunday evening. Among the singers, there are Gladys Swarthout and Frank Chapman, who are Mr. and Mrs, Chapman in private life, and that celebrated couple, Lily Pons and Andre Kostelanetz, whom rumor has had married a dozen times, Even Miss Pons, when interviewed, only shrugs her shoulders and asks, “Who knows?”
vens, CBS news commentator, takes her first vacation in five years beginning tomorrow; she returns to CBS on Aug. 4. . Edward G. Rob inson, “bad man” of many gangster movies, and Frieda Inescourt will bé costarred in the CBS version of the “Taming of the Shrew” next Monday evening. . . . CBS’ “Julius Caesar” last night, I believe, provided the best radio drama to come out of either networks’ Shakespear= ean presentations. . The radio chains’ next big superiority battle will be over the Am-crica's Cup races Saturday, which Ted Husing [will describe for CBS, Kenneth 8. M. Davison for NBC, and Cameron King for Mutual. . . . Ina Claire's vehicle for her second NBC drama presentation Sunday evening will be the late Sir James Barrie's “What Every Woman Knows.” . . . Fisherman’s dilemma: Fibber MoGee really caught a “whopper” while on he West Coast, but he can't no one pretends. to believe.
a
