Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 August 1937 — Page 16

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PAGE 15 With Major Hoople By Frank Owen

Ina Claire and Osgood Perkins to End = ~~ Short Dramatic Series With Comedy;

hg WIRE Arranging Schedule for Fall

EGADP, RADIO THIS EVENING,

BEING A FORMER (The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies, in program announcements caused by étation changes after press time.)

SCOTLAND INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI WFBM_ 1230 WIRE 1400 WLW 700

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SHAKE YOSELF OUT OB DE GEN'MEN/ LOOK,

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AND HERE COMES TH' TOWN CONSTABULE, WITH AS MUCH STEAM AS A FACTORY WHISTLE wae I'M GLAD « HOOPLE

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Nelson Eddy Joins Cast Of Charlie McCarthy's

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Top, Hatters

News-Music A. G. Karger

Len Salve Sally Nelson Californians Cup Races

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COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. 1. M

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DIRTY WEATHER IF EVER I SAW JAVYE, SKIPPER,

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SINKING FAST. WERE IN FOR A SUMMER

FAND THEN COME MOUNTAINOUS &' SEAS THAT ALMOST SMOTHER THE "HESTER"

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AL THE HELPLESS BABIES SHE HAS PROTECT.

WITH FEAR FOR

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KEEP YOUR CHIN UP, MNRA . «+ THIS WON'T BE THE FIRST STORM THE » "HESTER" HAS SAILED

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CAPN , THE CRANE JIB JUST RIPPED LOOSE AND PITCHED SMACK, INTO THE FORWARD WATCH i FIVE MEN ARE HURT, zm

"GREAT GUNS, AND { WERE WITHOUT A DOCTOR OR A

YOUR ANSWER ce

DON BESTOR, ORCHESTRA LEADER ASKS: "WHO 16 Yoo LIKELY TO BE MORE PONCTOAL-A ~ OR A WOMAN?!

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WHEN ACCENTED ON THE FIRST

SYLLABLE, AND A

SNAKES vary in size and weight as much as they do in range The pythons, largest of all, may weigh in the neighborhood of 300 pounds, and measure 30 feet in length, while the tiny purrowing , snakes are but slightly thicker than toothpicks, with a length of only five inches. ; :

and habits.

NEXT—Do male bumblebees survive in the winter

COPR. 1937

LANDS TO ICELAND... ARE FOUND IN DEEP FORESTS, ARID DESERTS, SALTY SEAS, FRESH WATER. PONDS, AND MARSHES, AND SPEND THEIR LIVES UNDERGROUND, IN TREES, AND ON THE SURFACE.

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BOTH are always late anyhow, so it is hard to tell which is later than the other. experience has been that more women than men are late but that they offer more apologies than the men for “keeping you waiting.” Maybe that is because when they see the man they wish they had come sooner and regret the lost time. I think the best answer is that of our hired hand on the Indiana farm, Billy Muchmore, who used to say, “Two chances fo one the man will be late and then again, two chances to one the woman will be late.” » ” = AS Joseph K. Folson, sociologist, says in his book, “The Family,” & lawyer became exasper-

HOMER. T. HAYWARD, ELV-CASTING ON THE NORTH PLATTE RIVER, COLORADO, CAUGHT A ROBIN ON

BY NEA SERVICE, INC. THE WING. 2-7

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. LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

CAN JOUANGwER THIS ON WITHOU

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2000 HLDREN P EX S DECIDED VIEWS AS TO HOW BRING UP PARENTS, SHOULD PARENTS 6IVE * THESE VIEWS CONSIDER ated because his witness gave long complicated answers and insisted he answer directly “yes” or “no.” The witness said he could not answer some questions this way without incriminating himself. The lawyer defied him to ask such a question and the witness quietly asked, “Have you left off beating your wife?” President Roosevelt in replying to the question whether he would run for a third term said this was like the above question as he could not answer either way without putting himself in the hole.

® = » NOT only careful but prayerful consideration. These views were collected by Miss Alice Sowers,

PR Te Ea . g i

parent education specialist of the

National Parent and Teachers Congress and according to them the following parents sadly need reforming: Those who base discipline on emotional outbursts instead of sound reasoning; parents who allow themselves to be coaxed into breaking positive rules; parents who squelch children by saying, “You're too young to understand”; parents who say “When I was your age,” etc, etc. All voted they wanted to be proud of their parents when in company and boys wanted free companionship with their fathers. I vote with the youngsters.

COMMON ERROR

Never say, “That there dog is a fighter”; omit “there.”

Best Short Waves

SATURDAY

PARIS—4:15 p. m.—Concert from Radio-Paris. TPA4, 11.72 meg. LONDON—5:30 p. m.—Students’ Songs. GSP, 1531 meg; GSO, 15.18 meg.; GSF, 15.14 meg.; GSD, 11.75 meg. BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA — 8:30 p. m.—Viennese Quartet, LRX, 9.66 meg. SANTIAGO, CHILE—8:40 p. Dance Music. CB960, 9.60 meg. LETHBRIDGE—10:30 p. m.— "Sport Week.” CJRO, 6.15 meg; CJRX, 11.72 meg. TOKYO—11:45 p. m. — National Program. JZK, 15.1 meg.

SUNDAY BUDAPEST, HUNGARY—8 a. m.— Concert and Talks. HAS3, 15.37 meg. BERLIN—10:10 a. m.—Symphonie Concert. DJD, 11.77 meg. MOSCOW—3 p. m.—"Third FiveYear Plan.” N. TOKYO—3:45 p. m.—National Program. JZJ, 11.80 meg.; JZK, 15.18 meg. ; LONDON—8 p. m.—Poetry Anthology. GSG, 17.79 meg.; \ 15.26 meg.; GSD, GSG, 11.75 meg.; GSB, 9.51 meg. PARIS—10:45 p. m.—Concert of Recordings. TPA4, 11.72 meg.

1 i 1 = 1

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Molina's Or. ews Coburn’s Or.

Whiteman's or.

Collins’ Or. Farmers’ Or.

Talking Drums Cugat’s Or. Strong's Or. Dance Or.

SUNDAY PROGRAMS

INDIANAPOLIS WFEM 1230 (CBS Net.)

|

: Aunt Susan's

&2

INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)

Silent ”»

Barn Dance ”" 0

” ” " ”

P. Sullivan Dance Or. Dailey’s or.

Moon River

Moore's Or.

CINCINNATI WLW 708 (NBC-Mutual.) Children’s Hour

Gasparre's Or. Jurgen’'s Or. Williams’ Or.

Mayhew's Or. Gasparre's Or. Kent's Or.

Tuecker's Or.

CHICAGO GN 20 (Mutual Net.)

Silent "on

Problems WPA Program Romany

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Bible Talk

Ensem ble

Church Forum

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Novelty Or. ” ”

News Neighbor Nell Novelty Or.

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Melodies |

Superstitions Poet's Gold

St. Louis Blues

Bible Dra ma

Hour Glass Melodies ‘

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News Thatcher Colt

Cale Choir Musie Hall

Magic Key » ”

Review Tune Topics Quartet "

Chicago Chapel

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Trib.-Comics

Alice Blue Edna Sellers Ensemble Sally Nelson Baseball |

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Everybody's Musie

Polly Pretends

Symphony Or.

Danny Dee Symphony Or.

Spelling Bee " »" ”" ” » Musiciale ” "

Lombardo’s Or.

Melodies | Baseball “ ”»

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Melodies Cheral Echoes

Drama Skit Shields’ ,Or.

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Summer Stars

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Jane Froman Recital : Buddies Don Ameche " ”"” ”» ”

Band Music

Relations

Dance Or.

Swing Time

Jane Froman Ensemble Dreams Don Ameche

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Jurgen’s Or. Williams’ Or: Duchin’s Or. Gasparre's Or.

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Interpreter News

Varzos’ Or. » LL

Field's Revue

W. Winchell James’ Or.

Smoke Dreams Mysteries Randolph’s Or.

Riley’s Or. Congert Hour

High Audience Sanderss’ Or, Good will Romance " ”" " "

Jurgen's Or. Williams), Or.

News Masters’ Or, Garber'’s Or.

Nocturne Engles Or, Henderson's Or.

Rapp'’s Or. Collins’ Or, Childs’ Or. Dance Or,

P. Sullivan Scoggins’ Or. Dailey’s ,0r. Moon River

Moore's Or, ” "

Denny's Or. Gasparre's Or. Jurgen’s Or.

Williams’ Or. Sanders’ Or.

MONDAY PROGRAMS

" INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.) Chuck Wagon

Early Birds

”" ”» ” ”»

Kitty Kelly Myrt-Marge Louise-Lads Mrs. Farrell Magazine

Big Sister Life Stories

Hope Alden Ed C. Hill Helen Trent Our Gal

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Feature Time » ” ”» ”» ” ”

Women’s News Markets Farm Circle Bookends

News Apron Strings Pop, Concert

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Bob Byron Dictators Pla y Days

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Clyde Barrie Eton Boys Doris Keer Funny Things

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Tea Tunes

News-Sports Hall's Or

INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.) Devotions Quartet

Music Clock

Melodies Varieties

Mrs. Wiggs Other Wife Plain Bill Children

David Harum Backstage Charming Interviews

On Mall Grace-Scotty Joe Dumond Women Only

Home Town Singing Sam Linda's Love Farm Flashes

”» ”» » ” Reporter Memories.

Police Court Singers Tal

Over Safety First

Lorenzo Jones Varieties »n ” ” ”» Top, Hatters

Don Winslow Jackie Heller

Army Band

McGregor Interviews

CINCINNATI (NBC-Mutual.)

Home Songs

Peter Grant Devotions Mail Bag Chandler Jr.

Hymns Hope Alden Virginians Fa semble

First Love Personals Live Again

. Gospel Singer

Girl Alone Mary Marlin Markets-News Rosa Lee

Frim Sisters Male Trio Markets Farm Hour

Varieties Betty-Bob

Pepper Young Ma Perkins

. Vic-Sade

(’Neills

Vicki Chase Kitty Keene

Rhythms Guiding Light Houseboat

Singing Lady H. Middleman

. Toy Band " Mari Cozzi

In-Laws Lowell Thomas

CHICAGO WGN 20 (Mutual

Golden Hour

”" ”" ” ”

Good Morning

Sweethearts Mail Box Get Thin Harold Turner

Don Pedro Children Painted Dreams Store Woman

Moments Len Salvo Unannounced We Are Four

Bob Elson Tom-Dick-Harry Markets-Music Harold Turner

Concert Or. Wife-Secretary Lucky Girl Next Door

Romance June Baker Unannounced Harold Turner

L. Salerno Harold Turner Dance Or.

Concert Or. » ”" Hanser’'s Or, » ”n Swing It Harold Turner

Travel Tour Californians

Net.)

QR

Where to find other stations:

Chicago, WBBM 770; WENR 870;

WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WPR 750; Gary, WIND 560. -~ x

Good Radio Music

By JAMES THRASHER

Months ago, soon after CBS commissioned six American composers to write music especially for broadcasting, Roy Harris announced that he

would write a “Time Suite.” WFBM at 1 p. m. tomorrow. Mr. Harris’ title shows that he

matter of specifically “air-conditioned” music.

He did, it's done, and you may hear it on

has gone to the root of this whole The minute, he tells us,

becomes a unit of space in music as the square foot is a unit to the mural

artist; we need to fill that minute ®—-

as an organic thing for which the music seemingly has grown.

I should like to quote you many other things Mr. Harris has said anent his new composition, for they are all enlightening. However, Henry M. Neely doubtless will enlighten listeners during tomorrow’s broadcast. The “Time Suite” is in six movements. Each has a title, but Mr. Harris says the titles are rather dedications than clues to the musical content. At any rate, here they are, with their corresponding durations: “Broadway,” one minute; “Religion,” two minutes; “Youth,” three minutes; “Radio,” four minutes; “Philosophy,” five minutes; “Labor,” four minutes.

In case you don’t know who Mr. Harris is, he is head of the Westminster Choir School's composition department. Most of his work is brusque, dissonant and unswervingly American as regards subject matter. To complete tomorrow’s 60-minute broadcast, Conductor Howard Barlow quite appropriately has selected Haydn's “Clogk” Symphony to accompany “Time Suite.”

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Tonight at 5:30 o'clock, WLW is to carry the Robin Hood Dell broadcast, with Jose Iturbi conducting. A feature of the concert will

be Dohnanyi’s delightful “Variations on a Nursery Theme,” with Harry Kauffman of the Curtis Institute faculty as piano soloist. Mozart’s “Don Giovanni” Overture and the Haydn Serenade for Strings, Opus 4, will complete the program.

NBC launches a week of 47 worth-while music broadcasts with the Radio City Music Hall hour at 10:30 a. m. tomorrow on WLW, Henrietta Schumann and the Radio City String Quartet will play the Mozart G Minor Piano Quintet.

Symphony orchestra broadcasts tomorrow include one by the Chautauqua Symphony at 1 p. m, (NBCRed) in which Mischa Mischakoff will be both conductor and violin soloist; and the Lewisohn Stadium orchestra at 8 o'clock on WFBM, with ‘Willem Van traten conducting.

— ' Fred

|

Sunday Show.

With programs rather definitely set for the rest of the summer, network and local station directors rather talk about fall offerings than about cuurrent shows. The CBS-WFBM fall headliners already have been reviewed in this space, and include such favorites as “Radio Theater,” the Detroit Symphony concerts, and most of the CBS Sunday : comedians, i It’s no secret pa SE : { at WIRE that i Allen's FR 3 “Town Hall” i will be carried by that station when the comedian returns to his program

—==1lin October.

| WIRE also will

| |

|

Red's

carry NBC“Court of Human Relations” each Friday night beginning Sept, 3. Marion Talley’s Sunday afternoon programs will be aired through WIRE starting Sept. 26, and that accomplished monologist, Sheila Barrett, is to be heard over NBC-WIRE in a new series called “Time of Your Life,” starting Oct. 3. If you have followed your radio, it's easy to- predict the new season's stars. + Miss Barrett, for instance, has guest-starred on several pro= grams, particularly Rudy Vallee's, and she was a likely candidate for her own show. WIRE also will carry NBC's “Orphan Annie” serial, beginning Sept. 27. The Crosby-Burns “Music Hall” recently was added to the WIRE program list, and with these fall additions, the local station will have most of NBC's important shows. The Erno Rapee symphonic concerts will be resumed on NBC on Sunday, Oct. 3, according to the senior network, and some time ago the Philadelphia Fhilharmonie Orchestra was scheduled by NBC for Monday evening opposite CBS's “Radio Theater.” The tremendous task of compet= ing with NBC's topflight comedian, Jack Benny, falls to Jeanette Mac Donald, who will be heard over CBS each Sunday evening, beginning Oct. 3. This series will be the able film singer’s first on radio, though she has guest-starred a few times. Her

Sheila Barrett

— | conductor will be Josef Pasternack,

and her sponsor will be the one which brought Nelson Eddy and Grace Moore to the microphone in previous seasons. " n ” NBC comes forward with plans to continue its Sunday evening drama broadcasts, though its stars, Ina Claire and Osgood Perkins, will conclude their three-appearance series tomorrow evening. Miss Claire's last vehicle will be Frederick Lonsdale’s “The Last of Mrs. Cheyney,” a clever play which served the brilliant comedienne as a stage vehicle long before she thought of radio. Last week's opus, Sir James Barrie's “What Every Woman Knows,” and “Camille,” originally scheduled for Miss Claire tomorrow evening, are the current drama vogue's prize examples of bad judgement, Miss Claire's tallent as a comedienne is unquestioned, but someone at NBC insisted on casting her in the emotional “What Every Woman Knows.” And “Camille” for Miss Claire—that’'s even farther beyond understanding. Miss Claire was said to be extremely nervous about this whole radio business, and no wonder. But she should be at home in “Mrs. Cheyney,” and if you're one of those rare listeners who can miss W. C. Fields and Charlie McCarthy, I suggest you tune in— NBC-Blue at 6 o'clock tomorrow evening. Miss Claire's series will be fol= lowed by hour-long plays written especially for radio, and on Sunday, Aug. 15, a play called “How Dark a Harvest Moon,” will be heard, with a cast yet to be announced. The radio drama was written by Ray=mond Scudder, an NBC writer. These offerings may be NBC's challenge to CBS’ “Workshop,” which each Sunday afternoon pre= sents plays written especially for radio presentation. t on n Charlie McCarthy always gets into this department sooner or later on Saturdays, so I just as well report here that he, too, will be a movie star very soon. You've probably already seen him in film shorts, but Universal announces he and his master, Edgar Bergen, will be starred in a full-length feature picture. No name has heen given the film, but the story is ready, and John M. Stahl, who gave us “Magnificent Obsession” and “Parnell,” will direct. The Bergen show’s cast becomes even more superlative tomorrow evening, with Nelson Eddy’s addi= tion. The singer headed his own shows for several seasons, but now he becomes a costar to a dummy and a bevy of important players.

” ”n n EEK-END program notes— Jan Peerce guest stars on “Your Hit Parade” over CBS-WFBM at 8 o'clock this evening. . . . Reporfs that William Powell and Myrna Loy would star in a radio series featuring the “Thin Man” characters have been squashed by M-G-M which has the players under contract. . . . A fantasy of the world’s most famous waltzes will be’ played by D’Artega’s orchestra as: part of Jane Froman's NBC-WIRE broadcast at 5 o'clock tomorrow af--ternoon. . . . President Roosevelt is: booked by the major networks for: a talk on Sept. 17... . Dr, A. R. Da« foe resumes his CBC broadcasts on Oct. 4. . . . Col Jay C. Flippen, popular comedian and master of ceremonies, and Beatrice Kay, vo=calist, will guest star for Harry Ven. Zell over CBS-WFBM at 5:30 p. m. tomorrow. . . Irving Reis, CBS “Workshop” director, leaves for Europe Aug. 25 to direct plays in London, and his productions will be

shortwaved to America for CBS lis= tenera

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