Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 September 1937 — Page 15

PAGETS Chicago Stations Ring School Bells To Teach Epidemic-Bound Children; Joe Williams. to Broadcast Tonight AR SHOW. TO STAR ss GAYNOR

MONDAY, SEPT. 1, 1907 OUR BOARDING HOUSE

ISN'T IT ABOUT TIME YOU SHOOK TH! RONES IN YOUR HEAD AND ROLLED OUT ONE OF “THOSE NATURAL INVENTIONS OF YOURS, LIKE THAT COMBINATION ICE PICK , CORKSCREW AND JIGGER GLASS

THE INDI NAPOLIS

] | ’ > With Major Hoople J JASPER By Frank Owen EaAD! YOUR DEDUCTIONS) ARE POSITIVELY UNCANNY, LADS) UME «1 WAS ABOUT TO SHOW YOU A REMARKABLE INVENTION OF MINE «~A PRO- |. GRAM THAT LIGHTS UP WHEN YOU OPEN ITe~ AND THUS CAN BE READ WHILE THE THEATER IS IN DARKNESS «~AND MENUS CAN BE DPECIPHERED IN DIMLY LGHTED RESTAU RANTS /

vex! TH oD. HUNCH-BOWL MUST BE BUBBLING OVER WITH CLEVER SCIENTIFIC IDEAS, AFTER KEEPING TH' LID ON SO LONG (

Ciinir in in Limelight on NBC-Blue Network

Tomorrow.

Serious’ matters engage the at‘tention of broadcasters :in Chicago. Starting today, six of the city’s | stations joined in presenting gram‘mar school lessons over the air to Chicago elementary school pupils who. are prevented from attending classes by ‘the ;dangee of infantile. ’ ‘| paralysis. WENR will co-operate with the Chicago Board of Education and Chicago daily newspapers in ° broadcasting lessons daily except Sunday from 5:45 p. m, te 6 until children can return to their - regular classes. The other sta-_ tions will devote morning periods te the educational series.

General school subjects such as science, history, English and mathematics for grades from one to eight, inclusive, will be taught by teachers selected by the Board of Education.

Five years ago, it may be remembered, when lack of funds forced . the Board of Education to discontinue summer schools in Chicago, - NBC presented a summer school of the air over WMAQ. At that time - NBC hired its own teachers and. printed its -own textbooks.

Chicago broadcasters, --it would | seem, . deserve credit for their ate

Oopr. 1937 by United Feature Syndicate, In

7 2 y NOTHER BUBBLE FROM His sOAP DISH OF GENIUS +=

' BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

“H e's riding for help and a Carnegie medal!”

—By Martin

‘Janet Gaynor (above) is to be featured with Robert Montgomery when the Radio Theater returns to the air tonight with “A Star Is Born.” This is Miss Gaynor’s first radio starring engagement, and the hour broadcast over CBS-WFBM heginning at 7 o'clock is to resume the series of plays featuring Toyo stars. Cell B. DeMille directs the program. -

MISS CORA «MISTAN POFESSAN « Li! MISS ROOTS AM BALK !! SHE NES | 6t%,X%

GRAND TO BE WOME BLZZED OVAW OE WOLSE

AGAIN 11 «NTS FUNNY ,T LEFT WN TO GET AWAY FROM ‘iT ALLw AND HERE 1 AM, COMING BACK FOR THE UERY SAME REASON

' LITTLE MARY MIXUP

= 4

Bay ‘AND Mom ARE FAR AWAY ° AT AUNT EMMA'S '=NoO ONE BACK HoMeE KNows WHERE THEY HAVE GONE

>

WASHINGTON TUBBS Ii

I KNow., MARY, \T ISN'T” LIKE BEING AT HOME ~ UT AT LEAST, WE ARE SAFE, HERE, FROM THAT TERRIBLE ALEY

IT 6 JUST LIKE THAT SOFTEE," MR. WOODS, TO-LET HIS BROTHER ALEX OFF, PAY HIS FINE AND TORN HIM LOOSE ~

0

WEE Won'T KEEP ALeX IN TAIL, WHY CAN'T HE SEND HIM TO AFRICA OR AUSTRALIA OR

M4 Nort AFRAID oF HIM

SOME PLACE. 4

i] EXPECT HiM To ow

Ap T. M.: U.S. PAT. OFF. —

—By Brinkerhoff ANY DAY HOW T

!QYP-- BEVERY STRANGER GINES ME 4A STARY.

CARLOS MisUEL, ou

| FROM THE AIRPORT TO THE HOSPITAL | HER TINY SON | / ' UES DYING |

%

i

(HEY, MISS KELTON! COME QUICK. TON NY 1 OR,

IT WAS A MARVELOUS PIECE OF DEDUCTION ON YES, SHE MYRA'S PART TO TRACE

THE BABY BACK YOUR M

\'/ 1 WAN' MY MONEE, ONNEPSTAND, 1 WAIT ) LONG ENOUGH. EEF You DON’ PAY ME, 1 § CLOSE YOU UPR, 1 THROW You ouT. A

/ BUT, DON CARLOS, THE BONITO LUMBER COMPANY IS WORTH MUCH MORE THAN YOU'VE LOANED US,

/BOT 1 TAL YOU WAT 1 PO. BECOS 2) LIKE THE PRETTY LADY 50 MOCH, T BE VER' GENEROUS, 1 peers AND BUY COMPANY FOR

| WAT You SAY TO THAT 2

1 CANCEL ALL 000. HAH, BEBBY,

SHALL BE YOU,| REWARDED,

THAT MOMENT, MYRA AND DR. JASON ARE BEING USHERED INTO THE COUNTY JAIL, NOT FAR FROM THE HOSPITAL.

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

SHOULD THE GOVERNMENT MANUFACTURE WAR

MoxinoNe?

YES ORNO cess

AG COLL SN "enon ou Biee, Sue 16 BETTER FOR CORE

INT 1997 SNE

NO: If he does he is too coldblooded to deserve a warmblooded bride. He should, however, study her carefully, with cool blood ~—say a little below room temperature. If they analyze each other too critically they will find so many faults they will never get to the marriage altar. But if they would only give each other the very meager analysis of character, disposition, education, background, work and social habits required in the ordinary job application blank—even that much cool intelligence would probably prevent half the divorces.

TM AGAINST IT. No doubt

government is going to put its

pies. yet, nearly everything it does in business is done badly—at least worse and more expensively than by private enterprise. Evidence strongly indicates that some private munition makers do promote war but if politicians got a chance to make munitions we’d be at war all the time. I think munitions shouid be made as a private, undertaking under government * license and supervision, n ”

RIDICULE BY FAR. Mere ~ eriticism gets nowhere. Cold, logical analysis of facts with constructive suggestions if accompanied by ridicule is the true method to

solve our problests, Don Quixote |

chivalry off the map. Re-

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

I PLEASE, SERGEANT- CANT WE HAVE AN IMMEDIATE HEARING? ITS VITALLY

cent burlesque of the strip-tease is doing far more to put it out of business than solemn moral criticism. The same with the fan dance, the sex-appeal type of motion picture, lynching and many of our political and economic ills as well. A nationwide laugh would probably rout the sit-downers quicker than tear gas or injunctions. Nothing stops men quicker than making them feel as silly as they really are. NEXT—How long after you hear

a person speak can you identify his voice?

COMMON ERRORS

Never say, “The cause of his failure was on‘ account of his imprudence”; omit “on account of.”

Best Short Waves MONDAY BERLIN,

4:30 P., M.—Concert of Light Music. DJD, 11.77 meg. ROME, 5 P. M.—~News in English; Concert "of Italian Tole poney; RO’S “Mail Bag 2RO, Ha

His Ma) Noi © 1 Arti ensh s Majesty's Ro al Ar lery. 15.31 meg.; GSO, 15, g.; GSF, 15.14 meg.; GSD, 11 %s me : PRAGUE, CZECHOSLOVAKIA, 6:55 P. M.—Blodek. OLR4A, 11.84 meg. BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA, 7:30 P. M.—Jazz Ofehiestra and Pemale Trio, LRX, 9.6 2 LONDON, 8 .~‘‘Dancing Time,” Victor S oie and his Ballroom Orchestra. SG. 17.79 meg.; GSI, 15.26 meg.; GSD, 1 meg. : GSB, 9.51 meg. EDMONTON, 11:30 P. M.—“After Twilight,” orchestra and soloist. CJRO, 6.15 meg,; CJRX, 11.72 meg. : TOKYO, 11:45 P. M.—New Japanese Music, by Seifu Yoshida and his Troupe. JZK, 15.16 meg. LN AUSTRALIA, 3:30 olla MR, Tussday )—National Program.

By JAMES

of that branch of the art. The sensation of last season’s Metropolitan Opera = performances, Gina Cigna, will sing “the role of Elizabeth of Valois. Francesco Merli has the title part and others in the cast will be Ebe Stignani, Mario Basiola, Tancredi Pasero and Nicola Moscano. The conductor is to be Gino Marinuzzi. This opera, first produced in Paris before an enthusiastic audience in 1867, is the last before Verdi's great “swan songs,” “Aida,” “Otello” and “Falstaff.” “Aida” was written four years after “Don Carlos,” - “Otello” 20 years after, and “Falstaff” appeared in 1893, when its composer was nearly 80. Scholars with a fondness for dividing a composer's music into “periods” mark “Don Carlos” as begin= ning Verdi’s third and final style period. With a string of successful operas extending over nearly a half century, Verdi carried the tastes of his followers upward with his own development. Few composers, with the exception of Wagner, have shown more change in style than Verdi, from the obvious “barrelorgan” tunes of his youin 1 to ithe last masterpieces.

- as 2 2 8 : At 12:30 p. m. tomorrow, on the

a performance of George F. McKay's Quartet, Opus 34, by the Kreiner Siring Quartet.

# ”

Perhaps following the lead of the NBC summer Shakespeare series, Andre Kostelanetz, is going to “streamline” the classics in his new series starting Sept. 29. on CBS-

WFBM. Playing for his same spon-- ‘| sors, Mr. Kostefanetz -is being

A half-hour’s music from Verdi's special studio performance “from Rome at 2 p..m. tomorrow on the NBC-Blue network stations. Thus radio listeners will hear one .of the very infrequent operatic broadcasts : from Italy, traditionally the home.

same NBC network, you may hear |

Good Radio Music

THRASHER “Don Carlos” is to be heard in a

prospectus is most impressive. He will have almost a duplication of the Detroit Symphony’s guest solo-

mention only a handful. And Deems Taylor is to be the commentator. As for the streamlining, Mr. Kostelanetz told a recent interviewer that 60 per cent of a symphonic overture is development of themes;. which the conductor believes is confusing to the layman, | : “1 think it should be permissable’

we. purely melodic passages,” he sai As a starter, Mr. Kostelanetz has pared the 18-minute “Romeo -and Juliet” Overture of Tschaikowsky down to five or six minutes. It will be recalled that Mr. Kostelanetz made his first radio fame by “blowing up” popular songs to symphonic proportions.

NBC Will Lay: Comgssions

Times Special

nerstone of a new $600,000, sixstory NBC building will be laid here tomorrow. New York and Philadelphia radio officials are to participate in the ceremony.

will be the playing of swing music by the Top Hatters’ orchestra perched ‘high among “the.

api) 99000000 | 20292029) apt tia &

ists — such names as Heifetz, Flag-. stad, Spalding, Iturbi and Pons, to

to cut these great works down to.

PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 13.—Cor- |

Novel feature of the ‘ceremonies >

T

RADIO THIS EVENING

(The Indianapolis Times" is not responsible nouncements caused by station changes after press time.)

INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINN AT1 WFBM' 1230 RE 1400 100 (CBS Net.) NBS Net.) (NBO. Mutual) X

T Melodies 5 Tons 2 Ar rmy Band,

(Mutual Net.) * CHICAGO N 720 Army Band

McGre, 1=-Law : Avihag Happens Lowel Thomas

Swing It Arthur Wright . Travel Tour ‘Californians

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Jews-Sporta Dr. Glasser

for inaccpracies in program ane ©

Ensemble James’ Or. - Lum-Abner Eob Newhall

Apnleberry

There Was Time Concert Trio

Ensemble Song Tim Uncle Ezra Fons or. Three Little Words Sports News Fur Rhythm ‘Californians

Heidt’s Or. ”» ”»

Piano Twins Bohemians

Burns-Allen . Burns-Allen

Ben Only

Gaylord’s Or. Lone Ranger ” ”

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Concert Or. ”» »

Radio Theater Fibber McGee Sander’s, Or.

Charm Hour

F ibber McGee

» ) Charm Hour

Mae Opera House

~~ News—Sports " . Elder Lightfoot " Weber's Or. - ” ”

King's or. : 4 RT.

” Contented Hour

© Smith’s Ors " . Basonology

Heatrofatown "0 ”n. ®

Trask’s Or. ~ Angelo” Tenor

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Dorsey’s or. a F. Sullivan Snyder's Or, Andy Kirk

News Jurgen’s Or, Lyons’ Or. Talking Drums 3 2” Olsen’s Or. Town - Tavern or. Or.

Nocturne Varzo’s Or.

Henderson’s Engle’s Or.

TUESDAY PROGRAMS

IANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI INVEBM 1230 1400 (NBC-Mutual). (CBS Net.) WLW 700

Toy NEE Net.) _ Chuck. Wagon Devotions ” .» G

lee Club: :

Tucker’s Or. or. » ; ” Strong’s Or. Sander s, Or.

Molina’s Or. Keating’s Or. ” hg

CHICAGO WGN 720 (Mutual Net.) "Golden Hour Tm ”

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3/58

” ” ” ”

* V. Lindlahr

Early Birds Musie Clock ” ”» ” ” » ” » on» os Varieties

Mrs. Wi Other fo Plain Bill Children

"David Harum Backstage Hartrick Hi-Boys

Unannounced Girl Ale s 1 (C Hraue-Seotly Markets Cuartet

_ True to Life - Tene Beasley - "W. V : Harke ts - ‘Farm ‘Hour

Feter Gran :

slaasla OOD oa So on

wb on

Chandler Ir. Singing Strings x

Get

Fymns Eope Alden Thin Harold Turner

. Fello. Peggy Ensemble

Don Pedro Children Painted Dreams Newark .

Milky Way Linda's Love Magazine Big_ Sister

Aunt Jenny -

H lden Bann G A Hill prea n Helen Teens - Matinee Our Gal : = Women Only

ok ou 00 ou

‘Gospel Singer . a A A 3jerne

Li Salvo “ . Len Are Four

‘Feature Time g » ”

”» ”»

. ” Hour

“Markets oom ll Voice of Exp. ¥etty-Bob P ;

Pepper Young }Ma Perkins Vie-Sade ()’Neills

Interlude : »” , Guiding Light

Pacific Paradise Markets Farm C1 Circle

“Next t Doo “ Wite-Secretary Lucky Girl : . Bea Fairfax

9 po 9

‘Reporter Bon’ Fairfax

Police Court

Kidoodlers Yom Kippur

Concert Trio Fone “Baker Len Salvo ~ Baseball

New ‘A Ton Strings oncert Ha all

5853 Pyis pe ny BEE

Bob Byron Ra / Atonement Day

Lorenza Jones “Varieties

” ”

Waltze. Unannounced

Radioland Or. [Houseboat Be Hary Bason Next Door Bo » » Don Winslow inz Lady 4 Freddie Carlon Kitty Keene " n

Btringtime - Ielodies - Swing It ° ‘News-8 ig MeGre or ! {Hiopement Eve Parsan hits Hall's Interviews _ Lowell Thomas Californians Where to find other stations: Chicago, WBBM 770; WENR 870, WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND 560.

Ray Heatherfon Science Service ) SHhigevat ors : ld’s Corner

Tea Tunes ” ”»

tempt to meet a public ‘emergency. = ss 2 2

The fifth International Congrestof Radiology is Chicago’s other sérious matter of “interest to listen= :

| | ers. Today at 4:45 Dr. Otto Glasser

is to discuss the discovery of X-ray

| over CBS-WFBM

Dr. Glasser is director of the Department of Radiation of the Cleve~" land Clinic Foundation.

‘The congress, which opens” today and is to close Friday, has . never been held in this country before. Four hundred. foreign delegates and visitors from 30 nations besides 2000 delegates and visitors from the United States are expected to be in attendance. Tomorrow at 3:45 p. m. four in_ternationally known. authorities - on.cancer will conduct a roundtable discussion on the disease from the congress over- the NBCBlue network. :

Dr. Francis Caries: Wood of the: Crocker Institute for - Cancer Research, Columbia University, will speak briefly on “What America Is Doing in the War on Cancer.” He will act as chairman. * Dr. Russell Reynolds, London,” chairman of the British delegation; . Dr. Gosta Forssell, Stockholm, director of Sweden's Public In-. stitute ‘Against - Cancer, and Dr.” Fedor Haenisch of Berlin are. other

| speakers.

2 8 =

Joe Williams, Times - sporfs. columnist, has been chosen from alll sports writers available in New York: to make the first football broadcasts of the season on the popular “For Men Only” program. Mr. Williams may be heard at: 6:30 tonight on WLW.

‘WIRE has announced details of its Yom Kippur. program fo be aired at 1:45 p. m. tomorrow. ° Rabbi Elias Charry will discuss “The Message of. Yom Kippur.” . Myro Glass, Beth-El Zedeck Temple cantor, will chant the ‘““Kol Nidrei.” Mrs. Leah Marks will accompany him at the piano. Yom Kippur will be observed to--

| day by a special program under the

auspices of the- United Palestine

‘| Appeal to be heard from 6 to 6:30.

p. m. over the NBC-Blue network.Dx Stephen S.' Wise, Appeal chairman, is to speak on “The Worlds Atonement to the Jews.” Dr. Joa-: chim Prinz, German Hebrew his-: torian and former: president of the"

: Zionist Organization: of Germany, will deliver “A Yom Kipper Mes-

sage to German Jewry.” Also to be heard are selections of sacred music: sung by the choir of the Free Syna-

{gos under the direction of A. wv.

ux RADIO THEATF

Janet Gaynor 4 Robert Montgomery

A STAR IS BORN"

DIRECTED BY

- Cecil B. ‘deMille

ON'T miss the gala opening of the Lux Radio Theatre's new season.~the smash-hit show, “A Staris Born.” pe To “The inside stor y of Hollywood —of the tears and heartaches it costs to become a star. Janet Gaynor in the same brilliant > role she played upon the screen — Robert Montgomery. as the

“man who loved Ler, but broke her heart.

Join the Lux Radio Theatre fans! Listen in tonight and favors ay Monday night to come, to a full-hour show ‘crammed with 0

Sparkling entertninment! at

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