Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 August 1937 — Page 30

FRIDAY, AUG. 6, 1937

OUR BOARDING

WHAT A SETUP! RIGHT BY TH’ WATER, AND TH' GRASS 15 WONDERFUL / THEY MusT HAVE HAD IT ALL MANICURED UP IN HONOR OF OUR COMING!

th Major Hoople |

| | 1 COULD SLEEP, |

HOUSE Wi EGAD! FROM MY SF VAST EXPERIENCE, GLEANED WHILE CAMPAIGNING IN THE BOER WAR, 1 PROMOUNCE THIS CAMP &TE PERFE CT KAFF - KAFE J FAR FROM HABITATION AND UNTOUCHED BY PROGRE SSA lUMF - WE'LL SLEEP ULNDSTURBED BY RAUCOUS AUTO

STRETCHED OUT ON A 3 PICKET FENCE! A

; TH CUSHIONS I OF THIS TRAILER i BED MAY FEEL LIKE PAVING BLOCKS UNDER SOME SPINES, BUT, AETER WHAT I'M USED TO TOSSING ON, AT TH' HOOPLE HAM AND- EGGERY, THEYRE AS SOFT AS TH} MAJORS HEAD/

UenTING TONIGHT ON THEIR FIRST CAMP GROUND =

REC PAT. OFF.

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THE: INDIANAPOLIS TIMES JASPER By Frank Owen

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“He says bathin’s bad enough, without getting put on the stove by mistake instead of the beans!’

Copr. 1937 by United Feature Syndicate, Ine

—By Martin

HELLO, MEADOWS

LITTLE MARY MIXUP

"EAVEN 'ELP ME ms HIT YOU Mes gOOoTe ?

YOU'RE HA £\GHT FOR SORE HEVES MAM «LAE HL MAY SAY ©0' THE MASTER WILL RE MIGATY ‘APPY TO S%% NO

VACATION

FOR WA SHORT

VERY GOOD, MAM! HT1L ‘AVE HA CAR BROVEGAT HAROUND HK IMMEDIATELY “T "ALLOA. Nl SAY > MISS BOOTS W'S ERE

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M. REG. U. S. PAT, OFF

3 = R= COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T,

oO DADDY, DRS HE SAD "HELLO, AS, CHEERFUL AS M

WORRY ANY MORE. HE OUGHT our House BACK AND

AND WE'RE ALL R

WE'VE LIVED fj HERE ALWAYS -MY’7 ITs Nice fg To THINK WE fl DONT HAVE TO MOVE AWAY.”

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OTHER 1S GLAD HM, Too

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7 WAVFOR TW' WNERLIONARSSS ———————

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MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL N

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|, LET S GO "ROUND [THE RACK WAY - ~MAYRE THEY 'Re= TALKING BUSINESS OR SOMETHING

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ANCHORS AWEIGH, COMMODPOR! AND FULL SPEED AHEAD,

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BECAUSE OF THEIR HABIT OF

MAMMALS / THEY UNDERMINE THE BODY UNTIL IT SINKS INTO THE EXCAVATION BY ITs OWN

T THAT MOMENT A HEAW GUST OF 1 WIND 8LOWS A PORT HOLE OPEN WITH A CRASH - THE BARES START TO WAIL.

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COOP NIGHT

OKAV- IF THAT S ALL YOU HAVE TO Say - GOT TO GO NOW... THERES A HURRICANE BREWING NOT FOOLING Bill DAKIN, AND iF [MA STOPPED BY ANV LINER WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO PICK VA UP I'LL BE FORCED TO TURN YOU OVER

JM. WHAT 1 CAN'T SAY £ MPORTANT THING, RIGHT NOW, 1S..CAN THIS TUB OUTRIDE THE STORM? |

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SEXTON beetles have an acute

any dead creature lying about. After burying the body, the female beetles lay their eggs in the decaying flesh, so that the emerging young

may be born amidst an ample foo

NEXT—Which, of all reptiles, are the most widely distributed?

KELY TO GE SRUANONE NO, ORESTE RNC

Pe GOLFER

@OAVR ANT IQBY JON DILLE cd

TEN CENTS ON THE FIRST HOLE, AND LOSING... THEN DOUBLING THE BET ON EACH SUCCEEDING HOLE, AND LOSING, Joie BE OUT 25, 2/4. 30 IN AN 18-HOLE MATCH.

COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.

Literary Digest that a research by |

that the girls who dressed in white

those decked out in colors. They | reason that white reminds one of] moonlight, and moonlight reminds | one of love and love reminds a man |

to propose toc a woman, = " = 2 THE savage medicine man who beats the tom tom certainly be- | | lieves music has charms to sooth! ( the ailing breast and the liver, |

stomach and nerves as well. Ac-|

sense of smell, and quickly locate

d supply.

: {| of Metronome in the Rotarian, I music is now being used extensively

\

A

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

I MUST confess, girls, I'm plumb | by psychiatrists not only in hospiflabbergasted to learn from the| tals for the insane but in aiding

the psychology class of Westmin-! Old familiar ster College, Pennsylvania, showed | memories

got more offers of marriage than|cites all the bodily and emotional!

| cover SO much more ground. one can improve his speed of read-

cording to Doron K. Antrim, editor

| has to read slowly because rapidity | {of reading depends largely on| | rapidity of eye movements.

NEXT—Which are more punctual—men or women?

COMMON ERRORS

Never say, “Don’t do those kind of things”; say, “that kind of things.”

SINGERS, ACTOR, JOURNALIST

| 10:30

[i PIs

I am never bored with anything except a show that pretends to be | intellectual and isn't.—Charles B. Cochran, noted producer.

There is considerably more danger of a Fascist state in the United States than of anything resembling Communism.—W. P. Tolley, president, Allegheny College.

Labor has nothing to gain and everything to lose when people, in their impatience, overthrow democratic processes.—Sidney Hillman,

IF You can New York.

SLOWLY RE NDERSTAND WHAT YOU RERD, DOES IT PAY TO LEARN FAST READING? YES OR NO een

Best Short Waves

FRIDAY

ROME-—-5 m.—News. Concert. O

DP 2RO. 11.81 meg. LONDON-—5.30 p. Came Back.’ GSP. 15.18 meg.; F. 11.75 meg. MOSCOW-—6 p. m.—'Heroes of Soviet Republic.” RAN, 9.6 meg. BERLIN—6:30 p. m.—Variety. DJD, 11.77 meg. BUENOS AIRES. ARGENTINA — 17 . m.—Light Symphony Orchestra. RX, 9.66 meg. CARACAS-7:45 chestra. YVSRC, LONDON—9:20 pn. m, Time.” GSG, 17.79 meg meg.; GSD. 11.75 meg.: meg. PITTSBPRGH — 10:30 op. m. — DX lub. WBXK. 6.14 meg. VANCOUVER 11 nental Varieties. CJRX. 11.72 meg. e TOKYO—11:45 p. m —Movie Story. JZK, 15.1 meg.

people with ordinary depressions. melodies stir one's usually in a happy way | —and brilliant music stirs and ex- |

-*They Never GSO. GSD,

m 15.31 meg.: 15.14 meg.

functions. y 4 =

IT DOES if you would like to] learn more because you can

Pp. Any 5.

m.—Concert Ornex.

8 nm

“Dancin ing by .a little practice and he will &SB. Ex understand what he reads and remember it just as well—or better. The main thing is to practice getting whole words and even whole lines and phrases as single pictures. Any one who sees each separate

“Conti5 meg.

m. - RO. 6.1

Dn CJ

letter or even each separate word

Educational and Political

Talks Scheduled for Programs Tonight.

A glance at almost any radio schedule reveals that prominent women broadcasters are not limited to the members of husband-wife teams. Tonight, for instance—and Friday night is typical—we find the legitimate stage represented by Irene Rich, who broadcasts her last pro-

| gram from New York before going | to Hollywood. Irene Dunne comes

from the movie colony to preview her newest picture, “High, Wide and Handsome” for “Hollywood Hotel,” and businesswomen will be represented by Dorothy Thompson, wellknown writer, who premieres an

| NBC series at 8:45 o'clock.

There are many others, of course,

| in various roles in various programs,

Dorothy Lamour and Nelson Eddy (upper photos) are teamed as singing stars of NBC's Sunday evening show, which also stars W. C. Fields and Edgar Bergen. Eddy joins the program Sunday, to be heard through fall and . = *-r. Frank Morgan (lower left), prominent screen player, heads a transcribed summer series which WLW carries at 6:15 o'clock each Friday evening. Dorothy Thompson (lower right), prominent journalist, premieres a new NBC series at 8:45 o'clock this evening, to be carried by WIRE and WLW,

: RADIO THIS EVENING

(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in program announcements caused by station changes after press time.) NDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI ™~N WLW 0

VYFBM 1230 WIRE 1400 (CBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual

CHICAGO WGN 20 (Mutual Net)

Swing It Californians Travel Tour Cup Races

Toy Band Tommy-Betty

In-Laws Lowell Thomas

0 Tea Tunes Kogen's Or, MeGageagor

News—Sports Interviews

TE Hall's Or. ——

3:00 Bohemians 5:15 Famous Homes 5:30 Talk-Musie 3:45 News

Concert Or. Jack-Paul Sports Californians

Ensembles Rhythms Lum-Abner Boh Newhall

Aisle Seat Uncle Ezra News-Sports Jimmie Allen

/ Pleasant Valley Gaspa rre’'s Or.

Frank Morgan Death Valley

Irene Rich Carl Baker Audingraphs Sportsman

: Varieties

Kemp's Or. Lone Ranger

> Hollywood Hotel Waltz Time Boh Ripley Concert , Or.

Mystery , Pianist

00 115

3

Unannounced " n " ” ” "n " n

Melodies First Nighter Orson Welles J. Fidler Fidler Curtain Vs

8:00 Grofe's Or. R:15 » » ‘ Dorothy Thompson Dorothy Thompson

8:30 8:45

Transeription Haenschen's Or,

"

Weeks' Or. Jurgen's Or.

Amos-Andy Madhatterfields Angelo Rapp's Or.

Amos-Andy News Varros’ Or.

Melodies Sportslight Crosby's Or. P. Sullivan Sanders’ Or. Dance Or. " Statute “

Ra pp's Or.

Collins’ Or. Henderson's Or.

non News in:1s Garber's Or . Hamilton's or. Denny s or.

10:45

Sprigg's ,or.

Moore's Or, » ’

Talking Drums Dance Or.

Hawaiians Strong's Or. Reveries

SATURDAY PROGRAMS

INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI WIRE 1400 WLW 00 (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual)

Nocturne Dance Or.

Chissta’s Or. Sanders’ Or.

; CHICAGO INVERN 12380 WON 520 3 (Mutual Net!

(CBS Net.) 0 0 Chuck Wagon Devotions Musicale Golden Hour » " Glee Club " ”

> |

: Early Birds Musie Clock Peter Grant 5 #4 » ’ n Devotions 3 I" n Larry-Sue Lee Erwin

”"

Morning

wtatatat |

" Varieties

Graham x

Margery Mail Bo Melodies Harold Turner

Sweethearts Raising Parents Synagogue ’

Your Garden Richard Maxwell Let's Pretend

‘Charinteer Vass Family Symphony Or.

Pat Ryan Minute Men Rhumba Or, Dixie Debs

Youth Cali Medical Talk Markets

| mwwm |

Melodies

Cup Races Len Salve

Hymn Singer Minute Men Nag 's Or.

0 Fred Feibel

LLL

Concert Hall

Youth Call Talented Musicians Get Married

RL Jack Shannon 5 Orientale

Melodies June Baker Melodies

but these are tonight's headliners. n » »

Miss Rich's one-act Arch Oboler drama, “Four’s a Crowd,” winds up the actress’ New York activities, and her Friday night program next week will originate in Hollywood. Then on Sunday, Aug. 15, she begins a new series of Sunday evening broadcasts, also on NBC. Her broadcast next week will be her 150th without a vacation. Now heard at 6 o'clock on Friday evenings over NBC-WIRE, Miss Rich will broadcast at 7:45 P. m. on Sundays,

u on »

Miss Dunne's leading man tonight will be Randolph ‘Scott, who played opposite her in the film version of “High, Wide and Handsome.” Tonight's radio appearance will be their first together, though each has guest-starred previously for “Hollywood Hotel.” You may recall that Johnny Green's orchestra “previewed” “High, Wide and Handsome” music on the NBC Tuesday evening show several weeks ago. At that lime there was a report that the “Holly wood Hotel” condensation of the Paramount film had been canceled, but apparently someone relented. "High, Wide and Handsome” is publicized as one of Hollywood's important pictures of the vear, and Maestro Green's “scoop” was of considerable importance in radio circles. n n Miss Thompson (Mrs. Sinclair Lewis in private life) titles her new NBC series “People in the News,” and she promises candid word pictures of well-known persons from all corners of the world. Since going to Europe in 1920 with $150 and ambition to be a foreign correspondent, Miss Thompson has become one of our foremost and highest salaried woman writers. She was an NBC commentator at hoth national political conventions last year, but her forthcoming broadcasts are her first, 1 believe, on regular schedule and with sponsorship.

on N

Since going to Hollywood, where film and radio players live under a publicity spotlight, Igor Gorin has been a worry to his family back in Vienna. Not long ago the “Hollywood Hotel” vocalist received a letter from his brother telling him they had heard of a Charles Gorin who played in American pictures, and the brother was curious if there was relationship. Charles is the name given Igor when he signed a film contract. Then this week Igor had a letter from his father telling of a real shock caused by misunderstanding or misinformation. A Vienna newspaper had called his father, asking if rumors of Igor’'s death were truth. His worried father was about to place a telephone call to Hollywood when he recalled it was Friday night, and he could hear his son by shortwave radio, if his son were alive and able to sing. “Radio,” Igor's father stated simply in his letter, “is a good thing.” I know this sounds like a press

n

Cup Races

Hall's Or. Hessherger's Or.

Edna Sellers

Bob Elson Wayne Van Dvyne Melodies Cup Races

Ensemble

Women's Clubs Haenschen's Or. News-Markets Farm Hour

» » Home Town John Sturgess Safety Club Buffalo Fresents ” 3 Mediation

>

Farm Hour

fo fo ok et | Iw

" "

Concert Or. Markets Three Graces Reporter Devotions

‘Bohemians - Farm Circle

”»

Festival | Concert Or.

» Headliners

Baseball |

yD | NDN2D

Herman's

Police Court Concert - Miniatures

1:00 1:15 Revue

Revue ”" ”

1:30 1:43

Commerce Clyde Barrie

—- py "

2:00 Cub Races » " »"

2:15 Dictators Ya ' 2:30 Dancepators Bryant's Or. Bryant's Or. 2:45 Cup Race

3 Top Hatters

News A. G. Karger

a Swing It Serenade Orchestra

”"

Box rgarten

Soa Kin

3:00 Grayson's Or, Baseball | 3:15 1 » 3:30 3:15

Revue Kindergarten

Len Salvo Sally Nelson Californians Cup Races

4:00 Tea Tunes Baseball | News-Spot ts Dance or. Melodies »

4:1! 4:30 “4

Where to find other stations: Chicago, WBBM 770; WENR 870; WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WPR 750; Gary, WIND 560.

Good Radio Music

By JAMES THRASHER

Winding up the two-broadcast series of the Bach Brandenburg Concertos, a ne will be presented by a string and woodwind ensemble at 5:30 o'clock this afternoon on NBC Red network stations. The concertos in F. B-flat and G major, numbers 2, 6 and 4, will be heard. Feri Roth will be the solo violinist and conductor, and assisting soloists will be the Rot’ “tring Quartet and E. Robert Schmitz, pianist. The

program comes from u.. Stanford John Tasker Howard, Who has

Lverdity 7 > the : : : , br hg i ut USD: been turning the social and historother thr

ical spotlight on music, will take $ ight. / pi : gi. gi Ror were written for | P rad ots COutY In 00 Lectures the Margraf of Brandenburg and |¥!Uh-MUs : - m.

represent one of Bach's earliest ee i A music critic and biCos rt he age teri | CgEapher 1 lo be assisted by an or grossi,” with a group of instrumen- | Shestra Cireeiet he SC ude for talists rather than a single player | oon by Fuleihan (in manuscript): taking the solo pans Rati coh | the Prelude from “Two Pieces for certo employs a eren |String Quartet” by Shostakovich, group. > | and the Scherzo from William Grant : x | Still's “Afro-American Symphony.” The Chicago Philharmonic Or- | 4s i 5 chestra is to return to the air to-| “Three Trees,” a composition by night from Grant Park with a half- | Willy Stahl, will be played tomorrow 18 m i | by the Compinsky Trio, to whom the hour NBC broadcast at 7:30 o'clock. | work is dedicated. They also are Conductor Richard Czerwonky has [{o do the composer's Trio No. 1. selected Tschaikowsky's “Nutcrack-| The broadcast is set for 9:30 a. m. er Suite”; the “Caprice Espagnol” |On WFBM. of Rimsky-Korsakov; Massenet's | Mr. Stahl is associated with the “Unter den Linden,” and the Pacific Institute of Music and Fine waltzes from Johann Strauss’ “Die Arts, where the Compinskys, two

agent's dream, but it could have happened, couldn't it” » ” y Network and local station educational talks on Friday evening include WFBM'S NYA series at 5:30 o'clock, CBS' President's Cabinet series at 8:30 o'clock, and NBCWENR'S “Story of Business” talks, also at 8:30 o'clock. Robert S. Richey, NYA state director, will speak over WFBM each Friday evening this month. His topic tonight will he “Jobs for Juniors.” Next Friday he will discuss opportunities for vocational training in NYA projects; “The NYA Girls’ Program” will be diseussed on Aug. 20, and “Lending Libraries Assistance” will be the Aug. 27 topic. Secretary Woodring will speak on CBS-WFBM at 8:30 o'clock tonight in the junior chain's series which brings a different Cabinet member to the microphone each Friday. His topic has not been announced. Executives of several Chicago business organizations will participate in NBC-WENR'S “Story of Business” roundtable discussions which open at 8:30 o'clock tonight. » ” » OOTNOTES and Futures—Alice Faye will sing numbers from her new picture, “You Can't Have

| Everything,” which opened at the

Apollo today, during her broadcast with Hal Kemp's orchestra over CBS-WFBM at 6:30 o'clock this evening. . Florence George, young NBC soprano, has been signed for the Lanny Ross-Charlie Butterworth show opening next month. a Frank Black is vacationing from numerous NBC shows by working on his farm near Doylestown, Pa, . . . Bert Lytell heads a guest list which includes Robert Weede, baritone; Claire Willis, rhythm singer, and Allie Roed, young Norwegian singer, on the CBS-WFBM “Music Hall” which moves from Tuesday evening to Friday evening at 6 o'clock, . . Lanny Ross’ brother, Winston, plays in radio drama on the West Coast, but under an assumed name. . . . Conrad Thibault guest stars for Ben Bernie next Tuesday evening. . . . Margaret Speaks, vacationing from her Monday evening show, returns

Fledermaus.” | brothers and a sister, also teach.

to the air on Aug. 30.

_DACR.. PAGE 29

Irene Rich, Irene Dunne to Share Top Radio Honors With Dorothy Thompson; Igor Gorin’s Fortunes Worry Parents