Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1937 — Page 25
‘With Major Hoople
CHECK HAS BOUNCED BACK AGAIN “aan YOU'VE TRIED TO PASS YOURSELF OFF SO MANY TIMES, 1 CAN sEE"NO GOOD” STAMPED ALL OVER You! 1 THOUGHT 1 HAD YOU STORED AWAY FOR THE WINTER /
[ BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
HOLD YOUR TONGUE, WOMAN! RILE MY. TEMPER FURTHER AT YOUR PERIL! EGAD/ EVEN A HOOPLE MIGHT FORGET HIS GALLANTRYAxFUFFE ~F-FUFF BAD ENOUGH TO FIND THE DOORS OF MY DOMKILE LOCKED AGAINST ME, BUT WHEN MY, OWN WIFE MOCK = INGLY REFUSES TO RECOGNIZE: ME AT THE BASTILE, AND SAVE ME FROM IMPRISONMENT SPUTT—SPUTTZ : \
1 HAVE STOOD ENOUGH ! - BUT FOR INFLUENTIAL FRIENDS, IT SHOULD HAVE ROTTED IN A PUNGEON CELL! ,
Copr. 1937 by United Feature Syndicate, Ine. 9 «9
“Now that you've made me walk four blocks. out of the way to pass your girl's house, let's go catch up with the band!”
—By Martin
THERE'S BOOTS ,.NOW \ AWWW , Poor TWO cme TRINNY OF STUFF >) BET w=.
" [LITTLE
ee) LSSEN , SKIPPER + NOW THAT , 1 MEAN w. OR, WELL » WHY. DON'TCHA FERGEY WT 2 HUW 2 C'MON «~ RANE A GOOD TIME 4! S-0-R-E !'Y FERGET TLUERVYTIHWG
[SORE YA CAN! LETS WAGE A SAW. ON \T | WHERE'S BILL'S BOAT ? SAY, CONT YA TIE \T OP ?
1 6GLESS 1 TOREOY
9 \COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T.M. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF,
FORGOT ? A, FER ww 1018 GOSH | BOOTS « I'M SURE SURPRISED AT NA DOWNY’ SUCH A SWAN THING AS THAR
SF
—By Brinkerhoff
“WHILE MARY | || WooDps--T know
AND MOM ARE MAKING THE REST OF BEING AWAY, — BACK Home - MR, WooDbS 1s HAVING SOME ANYIous
JAYS —D
BROTHER = =
' WASHINGTON TUBBS II
COME, COME , MR
“15 HARD THO APPEAR ATAINST YOUR OWA
IT
BUT THIS ALEX 1S & BAD ACTOR — A YEAR oR So BEHIND BARS MIGRT DO HIM Goon.
I KNow You WANT To DO Your DUTY BY Your JOB --BUT CANT SBE MY owx BROTHER SENT UP. IF L cAN HELP IT~
He BELONG S -
ALL, RIGHT, IF THATS TH= WAY Yod FEEL ABOUT IT. ilis OFFICE WILL ACT, WE LL PUT THAT
WITHOUT You! SCAMP WHERE
WELL, MISS KELTON,YOU WANTA KNOW Y/ OH, BY ALL WHY YOUR LUMBER COMPANY'S LOSING MONEY, AND I'M GONNA BE FRANK =.
HERE'S THE FACTS: MOST OF THE MAHOGANY'S GONE, AND THERE'S NO WAY. OF GETTING WHAT'S LEFT TO MARKET -
WORSE. COMPANYS BADLY IN DEBT AS THAT? / AND LOSING MONEY HAND OVER FIST, STILL A CHANCE OF PULLING THRU, THO, IF YOU GOT A FEW THOUSAND DOLLARS IN CASH TO SPARE = _/
—By Thompson and Coll
; ISNTY THERE il : ANYTHING WE. CAN § DO FOR HIN, Ji? I FEEL SO HELPLESS!
WE'VE
DONE EVERYTHING POSSIBE, MYRA.. HE NEEDS HIS
FAILS ME, NOW! 1 CAN'T BEAR THIS WAITING!
THERE, SO MUCH...
Mk Dion WERE PLANTED BY THE ° UNITED STATES FOREST. SERVICE IN 1986 /
Fe TRIANGLE. SPIDER. _ KEEPS HER WEB TAUT BY TAKING UP SLACK IN THE SUPPORTING LINE AND HOLDING IT UNTH. AN INSECT STRIKES THE WER/ THEN . THE SLACK IS RELEASED AND THE ‘SHAKING WEB ENTANGLES o
‘THE PREY. COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.
CN
FLOWERS on display at a flower show in Omaha, Neb., had been brought tq maturity without any contact with the earth. The chem-
+jcals, used with excelsior and water, were secured from the Umiversity
“of California.
«
NEXT—After what are the Troy weights named? vidal
RE, MYRA - YOU'VE BEEN THROUGH BUT YoU
MUSTN'T NEGLECT LITTLE MOSES, YOU KNOW -
YOU'RE RIGHT, JIM. { WONDER WHAT'S _ TO. BECOME OF
T THAT MOMENT, FAR ACROSS THE DARK ATLANTIC, A GIANT PLANE STARTS ON THE PERILOUS WESTERM
CROSSING.
22 | S002 | nan | tuna | 2a S853 | 6853 | 5353 | 5853 | §8
Bool
3ook ‘Grand Old Lad Dummy Don Juan "Wo
27
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McGrady at Country's Call, His Boss Says
MRS. WIGGS STILL POPULAR
One’ of the daily dramatic serials that has kept its popularity through several years of continuous broadcasting is Mrs, Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch, heard over NBC-WIRE at 8 a. m. Monday through Fridays. Rehearsing in the studio are (left to right) Betty Garde as Ma, Andy Donnelly heard as Son Billy and Robert Strauss, who
the role of Pa.
plays
RADIO THIS EVENING
(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in program announcements caused by station changes after pres time.) R INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)
INDIANAPOLIS WEFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)
CINCINNA'T]
CHICAGO WLW 300 G (NBC-Mutual)
N 20 (Mutual Net.)
Tea Time Fair Races ” ” x ” ”» McGregor
New-Sports Interviews
Hall's Or.
. Bohemians hr. Science Bohemians News
Easy Aces
Variet
3 Li Kidool Rudy Vallee - ”» ”»
Concert Or. ” ”
Maj. Bowes Health Drama
» ”
» ” Arden’s Or.
True Adventures Bob Burns ‘Maren of Time n ts
Amos-Andy
Poetic Melodies Len Riley ews Baseball |
Master's Or. Government News ” ” Fiorito’s Or. » ig Norvo’s Or. Zola’s Life 5» ” Tavern Or.
52 | E852 | £853 | 5853 | BRE | subs! sibs
pC . . POX | TOVD | RXNN | arstater | AAD | Moaren | hain
BEER | s€a2
[od eS &8
Nocturne Chiesta’s , or. Engle’s Or
p— pod oo
Joy’s Or. Gaylord’s Or. Strong’s Or. § Or.
Sander’s
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.) Cluck Wagon
Devotions Showmen . -.
Early Birds Music Clock
» Melodies y » Varieties
Mrs. Wiggs Other Wife Plain Bill Children
. David um Datid, Har Charming Today at Fair
Rutt Kelly yrt-Marge
Mrs. Farrell Magazine :
Big Sister Life Stories
H Alden Edwin C. Hil Helen Trent Our Gal Sunday
Feature Time ” ”»
”» ” ”» ”»
Religious
Je ud eo28
Women Only
Women’s News Farm Circle Haymakers Bookends
" Reporter Bea Fairfax
ies ttle Words ep
FRIDAY PROGRAMS
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)
Marine Band
Swing It Black-White
en Salvo Californians
Modernaires Rogens or. In-Laws Lowell Thomas
Bert Lytell Varieties Lum-Abner Bob Newhall
Concert Or. Concert Trio
ports Californians Gasparre’s Or.
Haenschen’s Or. Cummins; Or.
Rudy Vailes ” ” ”» ”» ” ”»
Sanders’, Or.
Tom-Dick-Harry © Tomorrow’s Trib.
Show Boat ”» ”»
”» ”» ” »
Gasparre’s or.
-Bob Burns ‘Weber's Or.
.” ”» ”» ”»
” ” Martin’s Or. Weems’ or.
Amos-Andy avis Or. Stabile’s, or. ~ P. Sullivan Tucker’s Or.
Gasparre’s or.
Joy's Or; Sanders’ Or. ”» ”
Sprigz 's., or. Moore’s Or. ” ”
tHICAd0 (Mutual Net.) Golden Hour ” ”»
CINCINNATI (NBC-Mutual)
Sing, Neighbor Home Songs x
Peter Grant " Re!
” ”» Bag Good Morning Chandler Jr. no
Sweethearts * Mail Box Get Thin Harold Turner
Hymns Hope Alden Virginians Ensemble
Linda’s Love ‘Personals We Live Azrain Singer
Giri | Alone Melodies i Len Salve
Don Pedro Children Painted Dreams Woman in Store
Harold Turner Yar ite We Are Four
3 Spades Tomi-Dick-Harry Markets Farmn Hour
”» 2» ”» ” Varieties Beity-Bob
Bob Elson +Tom-Dick-Harry Markets-Musio Concert Or.
Next Door Wife-Secretary Lucky Girl Bea Fairfax
: esT AT iF A BOY 18 BO nove
NO. The Institute of Social . »and Religious Research studied this question on an immense scale with 10,000 boys and girls, 8 to 44,
Jand found that no one has “general
honesty”—honesty that: applies to all circumstances. He has only a lot of separate “honesties.” He is honest in one set of circumstances and dishonest in others. A boy may be a model at home and yet lie, cheat and steal in school or vice versa or even lie in the schoolroom and yet be perfectly “honorable” on the playground. Building a sound, consistent character, therefore, depends on weaving all these: separate honesties into a general pattern or-ideal of honesiy that will cover practically all situations. rs
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MI
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM .
DONT.FORSET YO OSE MY PERFUM] D STATIONERY ON J— AT LETTER!
, : AN | CAN. BUGINESS WOMEN DEAL AS MAN TO MAN WITH MEN-IN BUSI NEoo MATTERS
"FEM
ARPLAN e WAS"
HAD AN ACCIDENT MORE OR AN ANY: OTH Gr TORE A ons
I DOUBT IT. I think it rare when any woman in business forgets that she is a woman, and the men can’t forget it either. Often it is unconscious but’ she: either assumes or demands some concessions which either custom or nature has decreed belong to her sex— either to her woman’s weakness or woman’s power. these poimts, perhaps grudgingly, but nevertheless yield them. Women can never be men or fill their places in the world and men can never be women.
8B 8
‘YOU would naturally suppose that
And men yield |
ving one accident would “careful, Possibly it | |
ND
does but it often reveals the fact that he is the kind of person who has accidents—the “accident prone” individual. James E. Hoskins, authority on statistics, told aviation officials recently, that calculations showed conclusively that the pilot with a previous accident was, as a rule, more likely than other pilots to have an accident.
NEXT-—Which are the safer— private airplanes with trained pilots or commercial planes?
COMMON ERRORS
Never say, “Both pistons raise at once”; say, “rise.” 3
A combination of money and politics—wholly within the’ law—can spring prisoners from a penitentiary—Preston. E. Thomas, former warden of Ohio State Penitentiary.
Best Short Waves
: THURSDAY BUENOS AIRES. ARGENTINA—S p. m. Viennese orchestra; Cuban orchestra; - jazz band and Mexican or- . chestra. LRX, 9.66 meg CTADY—5:30 W2XAPF,
SCHENE p. m. The Science Forum. , 9
.53 meg. LONDON—6:50 p. m. “Let's Go to the Theater,” 1 and songs of GSO, 15.18 még. ear Tia ent , 15. eg.; . 15.14 meg.; GSD, 11.75 megs” i
PRAGUE, CZECHOSLOVAKIA—6:55 p. m. Moravian songs. OLR4A, 11.84
meg. PARIS—T7 p. m. Talk by Mme. de Sramont (in English). Ad, 11.72
CARACAS—17:30 music. YV5RC. 5. LONDON—8 p. m. Music of the sea, the BBC Empire orchestra. GSK, 17.19 meg.: GSI. 15:26 meg.; GSD, 11.75 meg.: GSB. 9.51 meg. VANCOUVER—11:30 p. m. “From fhe Coastline radio drama direction, 3 . CJRO, 6.15 meg.; CJRX, 11.72 meg. ig TOKYO—11:45 . m. _ Japan bamboo flute selections JZK, 18 11.80 meg. :
. ¥ m. Equatorian meg.
meg.; JZJ, 1
= re my Am a 4 J wpe Le rain
|
Police Court
News Apron Strings Stabile’s, Or. Tennis ” » Fair Features
Lorenzo Jones Varieties
. State Fair © Quartet Raymakers State Fair
Marion_Carley . Three Trevs Heatherton Funny Things
Tea, Time "
1912030 | pu ru | 5863 | 58
' Races ” ” ” ”»
News-Sporis Tennis Summary
Where to find other stations:
McGregor Aisle Seat
niin | conc 5853 | H8%3
WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 150; Gary, WIND 560.
‘Good Radio Music By: JAMES THRASHER
If you are enjoying the current violin and piano sonata series offered on CBS by Nicolai Berezowsky and Emanuel Bay, you may have a special interest in meeting the versatile Mr. Berezowsky as composer and conductor at 6 o'clock this evening on CBS-WFBM. This young artist will be featured on the new Columbia Orchestra series, and he is to include an Introduction and Allegro of his own composition on tonight's program.
Pepper Young Romance Mz Perkins
Vic-Sade O’Neills
Baseball Helen Nugent > Kitty Keene Studebaker » Guiding ‘Light
Houseboat De. ib Door ” ”» oir Toy Band 8
Sun. Melodies Swing It B. McKinley Accordiana In-Laws Travel Tour Lowell Thomas Californians
Chicago, WBBM 770, WENR 870,
”» » ” ”
Concert
In addition there will be
two favorite examples of ‘commis-¢—
sioned ‘““occasional” music: Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 4, and Mozart's “Haffner” Symphony. - The Bach concerto is one of six written when he was at Coethen in the service of Prince Leopold; the “Haffner” Symphony was written for a prominent family of that name. Having delivered the work, Mozart forgot it completely. A famous story has it that Mozart came across the score a few months later and, having read it, expressed to his father a perfectly innocent admiration for its composer.
” ” # :
Margaret Daum has been a busy young lady since the first of this year. Her debut in a new CBS series with Howard. Barlow's concert .orchestra tomorrow at 4 p. m. is the latest event in the soprano’s rapid rise. - A graduate of Wittenberg College in Springfield, O., and of the Ithica Conservatory, Miss Daum was signed by the Columbia Artists concert bureau in January. Shortly after she dppeared as soloist on the CBS “Story of Song” series
| and with Mr. Barlow’s “Music of
the Theater” concerts. : On May §, Miss ‘Baum made her
‘Metropolitan Opera debut as Mu-
sefta in “La Boheme.” This summer she had an engagement for the St. Louis Municipal Opera season, during which time she was heard weekly frorn KMOX each Thursday. Last IPriday, while waiting for the Barlow series ito begin, Miss Daum was guest soloist on Jack Shannon's “Song Time” program.
‘ The staple fare of this new series
Lt : x |
seems to be ‘light classics,” judging from the initial program. Miss Daum is to include the Polonaise from Thomas’ “Mignon;” Bemberg’s “Chant Hindou;” “The Little Dam-
ozel” by Novello, and the Czardas |
from Johann Strauss’ “Die Fledermaus” among her solos. For orchestral interludes, Mr. Barlow has chosen “L’Automne et L’Hiver”. from Glazounov’s “The Seasons,” and the Overture to WolfFerrari's “Secret of Suzanne.”
Radio Artists Want Hour Pact
Times Special ; : . NEW YORK, Sept. 9.—Negotiations for wage and hour schedules and other regulations governing the employment of all radio performers will be sought by the American Federation of Radio Artists with networks and advertising agencies in the “near future,” union officials announced. A drive to complete organizing work in New York, Hollywood and
Chicago is to precede negotiations, officials said. Approximately $30,000 has been contributed to the organizing fund by the Screen. Actors’
Comedian Bert Wheeler will Be Guest on 'Showboat.'!
-_ ‘
Mae Robson, Hollywood's “grand old lady,” Charlie Ruggles, diffident screen comedian, and Ray Middleton, baritone, are to aid Bob Burns, Van Buren, Ark. boy “who made good with a bazooka, on the Kraft Music Hall tonight. The program is to be heard, as usual, over WLW and WIRE at 8.
Miss Robson, who is reported to have toured jevery theater in the United States, will be interviewed by Mr. Burns. Bob used to do a blackface turn in vaudeville until he heard the siren call of the networks. More Arkansas stories by Bob are promised as well as songs by the Paul Taylor Choristers and popular humbers by Johnny Scott Trotter's band. Mr. Burns, it may be poin out has been ral in Donte ing the easy, informal atmosphere of the Music Hall during Bin, Crosby’s absence. The Music Hall, like Rudy Vallee’s program which
is to be heard tonight at 6 over
WLW-WIRE, is one of those all too few shows which the oft-dis-
. appointed dialer may depend on to
be actually entertaining, a2 a»
Charlie McCarthy, according to usually reliable sources is the talk, not to say the toast, of Hollywood today. 3 Charlie, it seems, recently threw a punch sociable on Edgar Bergen’s lawn and “wowed” his guests by appearing in a cowboy costume, complete with six-shooter and 10gallon hat,
For three whole hours, Charlie, the irresistible, held a corner on affairs of the heart while the male guests—among them such attractive guests at Don Ameche, W. C. Fields, Nelson Eddy, Lum of Lum and Abner, Robert Armbruster and Fred Perry, the tennis star—sulked in the pantry. : Even Dorothy Lamour, it is said, forgot that her husband, Herbie Kay, was coming back to town as she held Charlie’s hand while cameras clicked, and magazine and newspaper writers trampled one another in a scramble to interview the wooden-faced Don Juan. “Oh boy, did I.wow ’em, or did I wow ’em!” modestly exclaimed Charlie as Mr. Bergen put him away for the night in his suitcase. It was the first time since his arrival in| Hollywood that Charlie doffed top hat and monocle and showed the film colony that beneath the starched shirt front of a sophisticate there beats the heart of “Two-Gun” McCarthy.
s # »
Elmer | Davis, native Hoosier, author, veteran newspaperman and world traveler, is to be heard today in his weekly analysis of current, events over CBS from 5:30 to 5:45 p. m. ch week at the same time Mr. Dayis delves behind the headlines, applying his wide experience as an editor and foreign correspondent to sy the background of current news flevelopments.
: | \ ” 2 » so. Bert Wheeler of the comedy team of Wheeler & Woolsey is to be the working guest of Charles Winninger (Cap’n| Henry) on the Show Boat program to be heard at 7 tonight over NBC-WLW. :
More comedy will be provided by Hattie McDaniel, Show Boat’s mammy cook, and Eddie Green, her heckler from Harlem.
Warren Hull will be heard for the first time on the program.in a featured singing role. His solo is to be the title song from his new motion picture, “Paradise Isle.” Virginia Verrill’s solo will be “Rhythm of the Rain.” :
Meredith Wilson’s Concert Swing orchestra and the Show Boat singers will be heard in “Join the Navy,” “We Saw the Sea” and “That Old Feeling.” The ensemble is to present “The Big Apple,” current dance rage of the South. Bix ne : ” ” ” In confirming the appointment of Edward F. McGrady, former Assistant Secretary of Labor, as lahor relations director for the Radio Corp. of America, David Sarnoff, Radio Corp. president, said: : | “es . As is indicated in the correspondence between the President of the United States and Mr. McGrady, his special services always will be available to the Government should they be required ... . “He (Mr. McGrady) will carry out the company’s labor policy, which is that labor is entitled to representation of its own choosing uninfluenced by management. Mr. McGrady’s task will be to vitalize and humanize our labor relations that we may meet more effectively the present day requirements of industrial | management.’
Padraic Colum, Irish poet and dramatist, has inaugurated a series of poetry readings that are being heard each Monday at 11 and each Friday at 10:45 a. m. over the NBC-Red network. The poet shares the program with Joseph White, Irish tenor. Mr. White has been known to radio
audiences ever since the days he
was billed as “The Silver Tenor.” : Mr. Colum is the author of many books of - poetiy, folklore, childres’s stories, essays and plays. ; s ” = 8
Add hardships of a radio performer’s life: ; ward Phillips, CBS singer, once ormed under a most discouraging handicap. Having knocked the microphone to the floor with a sudden romantic gesture, he got it tangled up in the wires and had to get down on all fours to sing into it. Perhaps the most disturbing dent ever to occur during a studio broadcast .took place one day in a CBS station when thousands of bees, which a lecturer had brought to the station for demonstration purposes, escaped from ett hive and stung engineers, ouncers and ‘performers. After b a while into the microphone, the bees retired into the
Masked
Guild, American Guild of Musical Artists and Actors’ Equity.
‘
1 te various
ventilating system and were swept offices ‘of the building. | Sad
i 1
