Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1937 — Page 15
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PACTS
JASPER _- ByFrank Owen Hoosier Tunes Open Fair Barn Dance; = 8 Brickbat Boys Await Dial Twists;
* SATURDAY, SEPT. 4, 1937 “} OUR BOARDING HOUSE pr a.
5
7 1 7A 4 A A
With Major Hoople.
HMP war AND HAVE THEM CHUGGING *
IF YOULL JUST 1DENTIFY
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AND HIS THREE
COMPANIONS, | MRS. HOOPLE, |”
1 wiLL BE GLAD 0 FREE THEM AT
YOUR HUSBAND Z ALONG WITH ME INTO
THE HOME GARAGE! 1 WOULDN'T BE SEEN PICKING UP OLD RAGS, IN THER COMPANY re THEY LOOK LIKE A CROSS SECTION OF CAPTAIN RIDDS CRE Wan
1 NEVER SAW ANY OF THEM BEFORE, SERGEANT!
3.
REE
Fk WN NN
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AON Pole
Copr. 1937 by United Feature Syndieate, Ine. \
“You ean back off now, Jasper—Uncle Henry knows how it feels to dance on Mama's corns.
1
—By Martin
(GALLE , DO ME A FAVOR! MAKE A 10T OF | ROWSE IN THE KITCHEN, WIL You 2 1 | WANT TO MAKE A CALL AND 1 DONT
OHH LWWLLE | Now), LOOK. ww DST 1.00
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HELLO ! HELLO!!! =~ GWE ™ME ONG
=
Saengerfest to Sing Folk Songs
RADIO THIS EVENING
(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in program ane nouncements caused by station changes after press time.)
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)
CINCINNATI WLW 00 (NBC-Mutual.)
CHICAGO GN 720 (Mutual Net.)
ed po S253
Tea, Tunes
News-Sports Melodies
Nickelodeons Melodies
Top Hatters
News A. G. Karger
Len Salve Californians Messner’s Or.
oro SE52
Basi’'s Or. Song Tim Harmony ews
e Hall
Israel Message
3 Little Words Bible Inst.
R. F. D. Hour
Sprige’s Or Bob Newhall
Concert Or. Californians
Sports Charioteers
asa i —D SD
- or
Swing ”» »
Serenade » ”
Barn Dance " ”
Music of Stars
Wilson's Or.
Nola Day Quartet
Concert Or, Haenschen's Or, Musie of Stars
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Prof. Quiz
Longacres Race Ruskin’s Or.
Barn Dance
”» ”» ”» »
Barn Dance
”» ”» ”» ”
Hayride a
Sanders’ Or,
Tomorrow's Trib,
XXX ® Ts “Sus
Hit Parade ”» » » ”»
Patti Chapin
Haenschen’s Or, Baseball |
Jamboree ”» ”
”» ” ” ”
Waring’s Or, Philharmonic
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cece | is S=as
Mesoff’'s Or, Sports Johnny Presents
News Pryor’s Or. Goodman's Or, " I)
Henderson's Or.
Chiesta’'s Or Rhythm Console
SUN
INDIANAPOLIS WEBM_ 1230 (CBS Net.)
Aunt Susan's
News Baseball ” ”
” " ”» ”
Collins’ Or. Kemp's Or.
Talking Drums Keating's Or, Strong's Or. Weems’ Or.
Molina’s | Or. Donahue's Or. P. Sullivan Dance Or. Stabile’s Or. Moon River
Moore's Or.
Gasparre's Or, Je ' Or.
$ r Martin's | Or,
Gasparre's Or. Valle's Or, Keating's Or,
Martin's Or, Weems’ Or,
DAY PROGRAMS
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1100 (NBC Net.) Silent »n
CINCINNATI WLW 700 (NBC-Mutual.) Children’s Hour
CHICAGO WGN 20 (Mutual Net.)
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Problems WPA Program Romany
Rangers | CMB Class
”» ” ”" ”
Stardust
» ” ”» ”
Superstitions Poet’s Gold
Serenade ”» ”»
Haymakers Pacific Paradise
Everybody's Music
Bible Talk Rainbow House
Jake Entertains Fair School
Hour Glass " "
Melodies
Rhythm Old Timers
News Thatcher, Colt
Polly Pretends Melodies |
Baseball |
Church Forum Cloister Bells Madrigal
News Neighbor Nell Novelty Or. Cadle Choir Music Hall
Dreams “ Magio Key
”» ”» ”» ”»
Tapestry
Widow Ss, Sons
Melodies .
Concert ,,or.
Review Tune Topics Jewish Program
Edna Sellers
Serenade Comics Alice Blue Edna Scllers
Charioteers Concert Or, Keating's Or.
Martha and Hal Concert Or. Edna Sellers B. B. Headliners
Baseball ”" ”
”
Skyland Scotty and Lulu Belle With Other Fa-
vorites on Bill.
The National Barn Dance troupe is to broadcast two shows from the State Fair Grounds tonight. First performance is to be at 6 and the second at 8. WIRE is to carry the first program. Tom, Dick and Harry, a song-and-patter trio, are to appear as guest performers. Uncle Ezra built tonight's program around Indiana tunes with the Hoosier Hot Shots scheduled to open the show with “Wabash Blues” and “I Wish I Was Back in Indiana.” Sally Foster, accompanied by Verne, Lee and Mary, are to sing “I'm Going Back to Indiana” and “Wabash Moon.” Others expected to contribute typical barn dance entertainment are Lulu Belle and Skyland Scotty, the Arkansas Wood - chopper, Henry Burr, tenor, and Joe Parsons. Lulu Belle and Scotty are really Mr. and Mrs, Scott Wiseman. They were born in North Carolina within 40 miles of each other but never met until both appeared on WLS. Lulu Belle thinks the Ine 7% diana Fair tops, ’ b ut remarked that when it gets hot in Indianapolis it really gets hot. Her hobbies are her husband, her daughter, Linda Lou-—aged 19 months—and staying at home to collect Amer=ican and English folk music. She confesses it’s a tough job being a mother and career woman at the same time. Her solution is to have her career while she can and be maternal when fame and fortune fade. Scotty and Lulu Belle are to entertain the 4-H Club girls at the Fair tonight. Each girl is to bring a folding chair for admission. They
Lulu Belle
MARY HAS CoNE ee AND ISN'T COMING BACK, ¢ ~IT 78 SOMETHING AROUT UNCLE ALEX.
Choral Echoes
Ys NoT AFRAID OF YOUR OLD ONCLE WHEN HE GET S$ OUT- RUT MOM 15 SCARED HE LL DO SOMETHING
¥ IL DONT WANT To Go AWAY! —~ WELL, T'M GOING OVER AND SAY GooD=RYE TO SNOOKER ANY wAY
.- ”
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" are to sit on the Fair Grounds race track as the Barn Dance troupe broadcasts. The 4-H clubbers entertained the Wisemans at dinner last night,
Good BYE « : GoopnYe, sNookenR _Y/ —MAYBE. I. WON'T" J
” ”» ” ”» or. ” ”
WHY, SNOOKER, ~WHATS THE MATTERZ =You 'RE CRYING! -TELL DADDY.
Martin's | Or, Shield’s Or.
2d
Haymakers Bohemians Lombardo’s
Al Wynkoop
S| incges
“weve
Fair Program Band Concert " ” : : 1 - ’ Human Relations Swing Time
-
Chicagoans : 3 : gh As many radio listeners by this
time have learned to stay at home at 6 p. m. on Sunday to hear W. C. Fields and Charlie McCarthy in verbal brickbat exchanges, it should suffice to say the inimitable pair returns tomorrow. Set the dial for WIRE or WLW and relax,
#n n "
As a prelude to the forthcoming Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashana, MBS-WGN is to present a special program tomorrow from 9:30 to 10 a. m. Three rabbis, representing three aspects of the Jewish faith, are to speak, Speakers are to be Dr. Jonah Wise, representing the reform point of view; Dr. Lee Jung, representing the Or‘hodox side, and Dr. bert Gordis, speaking for the conservatives. All three are leaders in New York Jewry. The program is spon=sored by the Synagogue Council of
MONDAY PROGRAMS Yen
INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI CHICAGO Oh, for a little gray home in the LW 700 {2
WIRE 1400 i N 2 West! (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual.) (Mutual Net.) West Coast listeners always get a Sing, Neighbor Golden Hour
better rendition of the Walter O'Keefe Town Hall Tonight program than does the Eastern (and Middle Western) radio audience. Between broadcasts, the first of which is heard in the East, Mr. O'Keefe and his production staff cut the weak parts of the program and “iron” out mistakes. There are some programs which might well be broadcast to Mars first and then improved for earthly Moments ears. Len Salvo o un ”
Harold Turner We Are Four
Martin's Or,
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Workshop Jane Froman Jane Froman Recital Jingles
or
Ensemble Weems’ Or.
Dreams
Summer Stars
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Tom-Dick-Harry Gasparre's Or. Hi. Audience
Saengerfest Don Ameche Don Ameche
”» ”»
Cantor's Hour ” ”» ”» ”
Cummin’s Or, " »
Sanders’ Or. News-Sports
Good will
Khythm
"» American Album W. ” » ” ”» James’
Shep Field
Winchell Or.
Universal Merry-Go-Round
nsw
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Buddies
Foundation " Horse Show "
2
Symphony Or.
”» ” ” ” ” ”
Mysteries Romance ud” ” ” ”
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SET |
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Martin's Or, Weems’ or.
OH, DON'T GET THE IDEA THAT T'M RICH, OR STUCK-UP, PLEASE! PLEASE! WHY, I HAD TO BORROW F300 FOR MY
MOKE. PASSAGE Pow HERE. ym"
NO, SILLY. I INHERITED IT. UNCLE DUDLEY WAS A PEACH, BUT T NEVER BOUGHT [DREAMED HE'D LEAVE ME
Jack Randolph Dance r, Concert , Hour
[OU VISITING RELATIVES ) OH,NO, T HAVE A LUMBER MILL, ANDY WELL, BREEZE, | JUST A POOR v , / 4 \ UP THE RIVER , MAM 2 / BY THE WAY, JUST CALL ME You DON'T YN GIRL, Napoleon's Or. Unannounce
—— BREEZE. BREEZE KELTON. 8 LOOK LIKE A hy HEARTIES.
8: 8: 8: LH 9% 9: LH 9
Freeman's Or. Messner’s Or. HARD-BOILED A STENOGRAPHER, LUMBER JACK. | BY TRADE,SALARY
($80 A MONTH.
P. Sullivan Waring’s, Or. Trask's Or
Stabile's Or.
News Masters’ Kay's Or.
Nelson’s Or, i" ”
Collins’ Or. Hawkins’ Or,
or, Gasparre’s or.
in’ Martin's Or. Martin s, Or. Waban Or Sanders’ Or.
Or,
Moon River Encgle’'s O ” 3 der Rand's Or.
? — > : Nocturne ‘ DN 3 (15 8 Y, oy Henderson's Or. J ”» ”n
Sanders
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)
NN : a NN [Fe AY RES Eo cc ST Chuck Wago SEL LTE ENN a. Dasa AA
-MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE
IVE BEEN DREAD" ING TO TELL YOU, MYRA - BUT HIS CASE 1S PRETTY { HOPELESS. UNLESS ar==—""_""| WE CAN FIND HIS
MOTHER FOR A BLOOD
x Devotions
Quartet Music Clock » ”»
Melodies Varieties
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A LOPR 1537 BY NEA SERVICE ThE T MRE SEAT ort iiss
Good Morning
Feter Grant New, Year
Chandler Jr.
Early Birds ”n ”n ”» ”» ” ”»
E52
—By Thompson and Coll
A FEW MOMENTS ) NOW, MYRA WE'LL. LATER. HAVE TO LAY ALL OUR CARDS ON THE TABLE WITH THE HOSPITAL
AND WE DON'T EVEN STAFF..YOU SEE, 1 MUST KNOW, ND WE REACH THE HOSPITAL: FOR CERTAIN IF THESE BABIES
KNOW WHO SHE 1S OR WHY JM = THIS 13 YERRIBLE! : foam, REALLY ARE TWAS? oR. JASON TRANSFUSION! Al Fr LTR mony lH ea
SPEEDING A Ww 1 La Vy MEYNTY CEE - AN
Hymns Sweethearts Hope Alden Mail Box Get Thin Harold Turner
Kitty Kell . Wiggs Moree Ey Other Wife Varieties Labor Talk Ch
Ruth and Bill Magazine Big Sister Life Stories
BUT SHE S IN EUROPE. w VES, 1 SEEMS ne PRETTY HOPELESS - \& 1 BUT I WANT TO PERFORM 4 AN EXPERIMENT ON
MOSES AS SOON AS
TELL ME, JMWHAT ABOUT MARK ? 1S HE... 2
Virginians Eq semble
XXX | dada | an
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ildren
Don Pedro Children Painted Dreams Store Woman
ooayY
WE FIND MYRA
First Love Personals Live Again Gospel Singer
Girl Alone Mary Marlin Markets-News Rosa Lee
David Harum Backstage Charming Today at
On Mall Grace-Scotty Joe DuMond Women Only
Fair
Hope Alden Edwin C. Hill Helen Trent Our Gal
Feature , Time
BACK THE NY HOSPITAL > > : 1 by IN “THE — oS ) . : aw = A . ol A E oR :
Four thousand of the finest singers in Bildung’'s Verein Eintracht chosen from all over the United States are to be heard
Bob Elson Tom-Dick-Harry Len Salvo Harold Turner
Frim Sisters Tom-Dick-Hary Markets
Home Town Singing Sam
" n Linda’s Love
THIS CURI
DO NOT ALL HAVE FOWR CLOVEN HOOFS/ ONE BREED HAS SOLID, MULE-LIKE HOOFS ON THE FORE
MAN, with the brain he has, would have advanced but little if he had not been able to work with his hands. thumb, which enables him to use the delicate instruments that he constructs, must be given credit right along with the brain.
NEXT—In what country are rockets used to carry mail?
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COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, iNC.
ow COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. TM. REC. U_S PAT. O¢
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| WITHOULT THE
THOMB
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
SET IN OPPOSITION TO THE FINGERS, MAN OULD NOT l HAVE ADVANCED ™ HIS PRESENT LEVEL / HIS THUMB ENABLES HIM TO MAKE AND USE TT™ oBEY
THE IMPULSES OF HIS BrAIN.
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IN THE ONITED STATES THERE ARE ABOUT 50,000 FEWER 8A8B/ES BORN EACH THAN THE YEAR PRECEDING.
choose No. 1.
YEAR.
i race.
q-4
sister should
And the opposable
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SEVERAL
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QOIVRIONT HORT JOUM DIALED CO
NINETY-FIVE PER CENT of |see they hear good grammar and ers. the people we have asked |clear speech and develop an un- CARACA I do not agree with | favorable attitude toward slang at them. Maybe because my life is | home. dedicated to .race improvement I |one child another way is to get up| think he should heart. Much as he loves his mother | language and visit mild, even humshe has fulfilled her mission to the | Orous penalties for errors. Suppose all men had to make | ® ww = this decision and mother—the race would end. The! come though his love for were much the greater because she too may carry on the race. I don't ask everybody to agree with me, but this is my point of view. I xcellent helps at |lying either because they lack sufleast. The first essential is tol ficient courage or intelligence or ~ ¢ 5 J 5 4
| emotional balance to tell the truth. | Many people lie because they have | an inferiority complex, and, in- | stead of solving their problems, lie {out of them. Others want to suc- | ceed and become important so badly { they lie to secure this importance. But, even they learn mostly by practice.
COMMON ERRORS
Never say, “Neither he nor she are here”; say, “is here.”
A GROLP OF YOUNG MOTHERS ASK: "IS THERE ANY WAY TO PREVENT CHILDREN FROM PICK= ING UP THE BAD GRAMMAR AND
OF THE STREETS? SIANG VES OR NO
Best Short Waves
SATURDAY
m. Concert relayed TPA4, 11.72 meg.
News in English.
PARIS—6 . from Radio-Paris. ROME—5 p. m. 2RO, 11.81 meg. BUDAPEST—5 p. m. News from Hungary; excerpts from Lehar's operettas. HAS3, 15.37 meg. BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA-6 Pp. m “Tipica” Band. LRX, 9.66 meg LONDON-6 p. m. A talk, GSP, 15.31 meg.; GSO, 15.18 meg.; GSF, 15.14 meg.; GSD, 11.75 meg. pa RE AR? aLARIS-7 P. m. Talk by Mr #6 THERE BUCH A THING AG A BORN! 4 si inard (in English). TPA4, 11.7 YES OR NO—ee BERLIN—7:45 p. m.. Gardens and gardening talks by German garden=DJD, 11.97 meg. : ( ey m. Conchita Ascanio, singer. VSRC., 5.8 meg. LONDON—S8 p m. An Alphabetical Miscellany, a play. GSG. 17.79 meg.; GSI, 15.26 meg.: GSD. 11.75 meg.: GSB. 9.51 meg. PARIS—-1030 p. m News in English TPA4. 11.72 meg. i TOKYO—11:30 p. m. lish. JZK. 15.16 meg . . SUNDAY SOME people le so easily, BUDAPEST—8 a m. Hungarian next. even | gracefully, artistically and con- | folklore melodies. HAS3, 15.37 meg. his woihers tinuously, that it is hard to believe | BUENOS AIRES—11:35 p. m. Light they were not born that way. How- Dr OR hat mea oF 50 ever, while some people learn much | MOSCOW—3 p. m. The Theater in more easily to lie and pursue it | the Soviet Union. RNE, 25 meters. more persistently and successfully BUDAPEST—6 Hungarian than others, yet a very large re-
p. m. folklore melodies. HAT4, 9:.12 meg. search indicates they have taken to
Where there is more than
save his sweet- competitions in the use of good!
News in Eng-
should save the
LONDON—6:15 p. m, The Band of His Majesty’s Irish Guards. GSP, 15.31 meg.; GSO, 15.18 meg.; GSPF, 15.14 meg.; GSD, 11.75 meg. >
»
CAR —_— S Hes i d | |Z ow — he : 30 "BORROWED" y > \ \ % j PE ‘ it no»
FROM ME. CARSON
Farm Hour Women’s News " » Markets n n Farm Circle Reporter Bookends Bea Fairfax
DD Gdn
Police Court Unannounced Gray's Or. Quartet
2
News Apron Strings Poetic Strings
fk dk bd | 2O C0000
f= own
Lorenzo Jones Fair Faces
State Fair Dictators Havmakers State Fair Clyde Barrie Labor Talk -
5853
{
2
Doris Kerr » Funny Things
5 | io —- adn
LE03
” ”
MeGregor
Tea Tunes i) »”
News-Snorts Labor Talk
mann! www | WH
Where to find other stations:
Anything Happens Lowell Thomas
Farm Hour
Next Door Wife-Secretary Baseball |
Rogers’ Shrine
Varieties Betty-Bob
Pepper Young Ma Perkins Vic-Sade O'Neills
Old Fashioned Kitty Keene Syncopations Guiding Light
Houseboat Next Door "» Singing Lady Cotton Cabin
Melodies Swing It Harold Turner Travel Tour Californians
”
Toy Band Gurney's Or. In-Laws
Chicago, WBBM 710; WENR 870;
WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WPR 750; Gary, WIND 500.
Good Radio Music
By JAMES THRASHER
Another American music festival, | at Saratoga Springs, N. Y., will be | on the air tomorrow with the first | of four NBC broadcasts scheduled | for this week. The first program, to begin at | 3 p. m., will offer listeners the first |
| performance anywhere of Vittorio |
Giannini’s new work, “Tryptich,” for | soprano voice and strings. Emily | Roosevelt will be the soloist, and the | accompanying orchestra is to be | conducted by F. Charles Adler. | Mr. .Giannini is the brother of | the celebrated soprano, Dusolina Giannini. You may remember that | NBC also broadcast the first per- | formance of his Requiem Mass from | Vienna on May 26. Reports that | drifted back after this performance | indicated that the work had been a | great success. Hugo Wolf's “Italian Serenade,” in string orchestra arrangement, will complete tomorrow's program. The orchestra is made up of players from the New York Philhar-
| monic-Symphony.
u 2 n
wast week's announced program for the CBS “Everybody's Music” concert, cancelled because of some | tennis match broadcasts, is to be | given at 1 p. m. tomorrow—WFBM. Howard Barlow is to conduct an hour of Mendelssohn's music—specifically, music , written after the composer's tour®of Scotland. The selections are the familiar “Fingal’s
9
Cave” Overture and the “Scotch” Symphony. ‘ ¥ % #4
The NBC String Quartet, assist- |
ed by Viola Philo, soprano, and
present the Radio City Music Hall program to be broadcast over WLW at 10:30 a. m. tomorrow. Miss Philo is to be heard in a group of songs including “J'ai Pleure en Reve” by Hue; Wolf's Anakreons Grab” and two Schubert songs from “Die Schoene Muellerin,” “Wohin” and “Ungeduld.” The quartet will play the First Quartet by Borodin and, with Miss Schumann, the Dvorak Quintet in A Major.
” » n Another Gershwin memorial concert is to be heard tomorrow when Werner Janssen features the late American's music in a half-hour broadcast at 5:30 p. m. on NBCRed. Allan Jones and Loretta Lee will be the vocal soloists, and Mr. .Janssen will be heard at the piano in an adaptation of the slaw movement from Gershwin's Concerto in
| F.
A group of eight noted opera singers will form a permanent concert company to be heard with Erno Rapee in his new Sunday evening series which is to beggn Oct. 3. Names will be announced later,
over CBS-WFBM tomorrow from 6 to 6:30 p. m. The giant saengerfest is to originate in Cleve~ land. A specially constructed platform is to be used by the mammoth chorus and Prof. Rudolf Schuster’s T75-piece symphony orchestra. Bil= dung’s Verein Eintracht has some 300,000 members throughout the nation and 20,000 of them are reported to be in Cleveland. The sacnger=fest, which is held every five years, will feature music by noted German composers and popular German folk songs and ballads. ” n ”
Question: What is rarer than a new joke? nswer: A radio comedian who won't steal it.
un ” »
“Sodom and Gomorrah,” adapted from the Book of Genesis, is to be presented as one of the: Living Dramas of the Bible over CBS tomorrow from 12:30 p. m. to 1. The production originally was scheduled for Aug. 29. The story of “Jacob and Esau” is to be presented next
Eo : ug he ¢ time. Henrietta Schumann, pianist, wil | Sunday at the same
un " 5 Bob Hope is to be 3000 miles from other members of his cast in the final three broadcasts of the Rippling Rhythm Revue. The NBC show is to be replaced by a new dramatic program starring Tyrone Power. Mr. Hope, comedian and master of ceremonies, is to leave for Holly=wood to fill a screen engagement following the broadcast tomorrow night at 7. WLW carries the program. In the broadcasts of Sept. 12, 19 and 26, Mr. Hope's portion of the programs is to be picked up from Hollywood, while Shep Fields’ orchestra and Del Casino, tenor, are (to be heard from Radio City, as I usual, The Tyrone Power series is to oc= | cupy the same spot starting Oct. 3.
PRESS SERVICE _ RENTS QUARTERS
| Times Special NEW YORK, Sept. 4.—As part of its plan to transcribe a series of news broadcasts, Transradio Press Service, Inc. has leased new space in the RCA Building, for occupanty next month,
