Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 September 1937 — Page 31

THURSDAY, SEPT 2, 1087 __ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES i = PAGE 31 OUR BOARDING HOUSE JASPER By Frank Owen |: A] +.l iis. te GE iron: Dials to Take Uppercuts Tonight as Clem And Others Relate Marathon of Socks; Major Bowes Returns for Third Year

THE HOOPLE SELF COOLER! EGAD, IN THE LOCAL RADIO LIMELIGHT

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With Major Hoople

HE PROBABLY" SPRAINED HIS BRAIN THINKING BACK 00 FAR TRY-

vEH I THEY OUGHT TO PARK HIM IN TH' RoWDYGARAGE AND KEEP HIM OFF TH! HIGHWAYS, BEFORE HE LOSES COMPLETE] CONTROL OF HIS

THE ENTIRE SUMMER MONTHS HAVE BEEN TAKEN UP WITH ITS COMPLETION! UMF-FUFF-Fw~ OBSERVE “THE MECHANICAL PERFECTION OF ING TO RECALL THIS WORKING MODELw~AS WHERE HE MISLAID. YOU ROCK, THE ACTION OF THE [77 HIS GREASE — CHAIR SPINS THE FAN THAT | SPATTERED SENDS A COOLING BREEZE THINKING MACHINE, TO DISPEL THE P28 AND CRACKS UP /f HEAT OF summer’ Zr 4 : &

WIRE to Broadcast Talks By Social Conference

Leaders.

Boxing fans who get home by 6 o'clock tonight may switch on the radio and begin listening to one of the most unusual fight programs ever arranged in this or any other country. For tonight’s the night when the Twentieth Century Sporting Club will present four 15-round championship bouts at the Polo Grounds in New York. : Fighters who will battle are: Middleweights, Fred Apostoli of San Francisco vs. Marcel Thil of France; welterweights, Barney Ross of Chicago vs. Ceferino Garci of the Philippines; lightweights, Lou Ambers of Herkimer, N. Y., vs. Pedro Montanez of Puerto Rico; bantame weights, Sixto Escobar of Puerto Rico vs. Harry Jeffra of Baltimore. Clem McCarthy will head a staff of four sports experts who will give blow-by-blow accounts of the mauling, which may go on for hours. The NBC-Blue network will carry the broadcast. Assisting Mr. McCarthy, who may be depended on to give dialers all the color and excitement available, will be Lynn Brandt, Bill Stern and Tom Manning. > # 8 = Those three Thursday night standbys, the Rudy Vallee Hour (WLW-WIRE at 6 p. m.), the Music Hall with Bob Burns (WLW-WIRE at 8 p. m), and the Show Boat (WLW at 7 p. m.) will be with us as usual this evening. Mr. Vallee is to feature Doc * Rockwell, comedian; Tommy Riggs and Betty Lou; the Six Queens of Hearis, novelty vocal sextet from Vienna, and Quentin Reynolds, sports and fiction writer. : The Six Queens of Hearts, who specialize in novel arrangements of classical music, recently arrived in New York from Vienna to appear in a new Broadway night club. Tonight they will offer lyrics written for the “William Tell Overture” and Liszt’s “Second Hungarian Rhapsody.” Alice Brady and William Gargan, ornaments of stage and screen, and Charlotte Boerner, operatic so= prano, will support Bazooka-blower Burns on the Music Hall program. Miss Brady and Mr. Gargan are billed to vie with Mr. Burns in the telling of tall tales. The fasttalking Miss Brady, we venture, will give the Arkansas funny man some tough competition. Miss Boerner, formerly of Phila= delphia opera, will sing several numbers. More music will be offered by Johnny Scott Trotter's orchestra, Paul Taylor's Choristers and the Foursome. Eddie Green and Hattie McDaniel will provide ‘their version of “Robe inson Crusoe” on the Show Boat program. Cap'n Henry is to feature the rest of his cast jp an oldfashioned harvest festival. Warren fa) eng Virginia fd are schede sing “Lord and La Qonsert Or. i %y Cummins’ or. 2 2 2 Add little tragedies-of the air: A chorine on the Hollywood Mardi Gras missed the broadcast last Tuesday by several seconds, Varieties and while her colleagues went on Harlord's On the air she sat outside the locked 9 in doors of the studio and sobbed. “I wouldn’t feel so bad,” she wailed,” if our ads didn’t say we are using 72 voices in the show. But what will the audience think when they hear only 71 voices singing?” ® ”» 2

| Radio programs come and go, but Maj. Edward Bowes and amateurs seem to go on and on. Maj. Bowes, whose program may be hearl tonight at 7 on WFBM, is entering the third year of broadcasting with his amateur programs, and his contract has jist been renewed. Tonight the Major will honor Spokane, Wash. Another Maj. Bowes stage unit opens at the Lyric tomorrow for a week. Twelve amateur graduates, billed as Maj. Bowes’ “Second Anni-

Feature Foods versary Revue” will display their NS an wares,

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4 : - May) ons Final American Legion Conven5 Fv hi tion broadcast will be carried toPainted Dreams night at 6:45 by CBS. The program Woman in Store | wi)] originate from the liner, George Melodies : Washington, where a dinner will a umer be in progress in honor of the newly Joe White We Are Four elected commander. He will be inFrim Sisters Bob Eicon terviewed for Columbia listeners. 1 Tom-Dick-Harry ®” 8 =» Yoon 5 ove : ae our Plans for broadcasting four: : » = » » programs in connection with the Women's News forthcoming Indiana State Con-

Markets Bo" hu : Farm Circle Bevorter . Experience ference on Social Work have Bookends ea Fairfax been announced by WIRE.

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“The stripes are only lipstick, Jasper. All you do is turn round and ‘round till Papa gets a barber pole!”

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COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T.M. REG. U. 8. PAT. OFF. —By Martin

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[AM SNUCKED IT UP WIFOUT NOBODY | SEEN \T, CAUSE AN WNOWED OY '0 ASM A LOT OF QUESTIONS! YOU HE GWINE STAN 7 \S HE HAPPY ,0R || Wows now ; Boned MESSE LONESOME HUM 2 \& WE , An er 3 Le 51 | MEANS , DO RE =: OA \S . WHAT'O OW , THANK / : BE SAN, REAL

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\COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INE.” Y. M. REG. U. 8. PAT. OFF 31 —By Brinkerhoff 77

. THis 15 A LONELY ROAD — NO CARS, NO STORES OR ANYTHING wee SOMETHING SPOOKY ABOUT, A ROA

Irene Beasley, upper left, stage and radio singer, is to be the guest star of “Linda’s First Love,” heard daily over WIRE at 11:30 a. m. during the week of Oct. 4. Other guests are to follow. At upper right is Ben Wilbur, new WFBM announcer. Mr. Wilbur, who came here from Columbus, O., replaces John Holtman, who has joined the NBC staff in Chicago. : Below are actors in “The Monticello Party Line” whick WIRE has added to its morning programs. Left to right are Aggie and Clem Tuttle and Sara and Curley Peters. The program is to make its debut on WIRE Monday and is to be heard daily, Monday through Friday, thereafter, from 10:45 to 11 a. m.

RADIO THIS EVENING

(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies nouncements caused by station changes afier pres time.) : INDIANAPOLIS INDIANA OLS CINCINNATI CHICAGO

W_ 700 GN 20(CBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual) . (Mutual Net.) Tea Time Sun, Melodies Swing It 39 ” Kogen’s Or. Harold Turner New-Sports Hall's Or.

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McGregor Interviews

—By Crane PF LSTEN, STUPID, HE'S A LIAR, A THIEF AND A SKUNK! HE'S TRYING TO ROB HER! BUT, <0 HELP ME HANNA, HE'S NOT GOING

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Early Birds Music Clock Eeligions

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QUALIFICATIONS. OLDER MEN OFTEN LET DOWN

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thority in this field, says: “The British know better (than we do). They realize that when unemployment seriously attacks an industrialized capitalistic system its grip cannot be completely loosened again. The British have decided to

by all means possible, cushioning its inroads. Eventually we shall reach the same conclusion.” We have only bggun, in this country,

_ | to realize the colossal nature of both

our unemployment and relief problems. It is the new challenge to statesmanship; but it is going to be a permanent challenge and not an emergency. And it would be just the same with socialism, communism, £ or any other ism.

8 8 8 : YES. Dr. Herbert Gurnee, West10logist, re-

JOANNA C. COLCORD, an au-|

live with unemployment, checking it |

statements. He then took the votes of the entire group on each question. He found that the majority vot was not only better than that o the average individual but was equal to the judgment of the individual who made the very highest score. So it seems that several heads are better than one. ?

2 ” 2 WE have had a host of letters from readers on this very point ‘and the majority say, emphatically, No. 2. One says: “If they marry that way, though, they will never have any honeymoon. I'd wait.” ‘This girl hasn't the right.stuff. A girl with grit and love will be ready to help her husband out with whatever problems he may have—finan‘cial or otherwise. It is commonly taken for granted a husband will do this if he marries a girl with

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his studies. In 1924, when he was 21, the young composer won a fellowship at the Juillard School of Music in New York. : Mr. Giannini returned to Italy in 1932, having won the coveted Grand Prix de Rome. His first opera, “Lucedia,” was received favorably at its first performance in Munich thrge years ago. He also has written a second opera, ¢The Scarlet Letter,” based on the Hawthorne classic. During the past summer you may have heard a shortwave broadcast of his Requiem Mass,

which had its premieve in Vienna.

Helen Nugent Guiding Light ary Marlin Ellis Frakes

Houseboat Unannounced

Choir : Kitty Keene

Concert or.

Len Salvo Baseball .” »

Sun. Melodies B. McKinley In-Laws Lowell Thomas

Chicago, WBBM 770, WENR 870,

Californians

WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND 560.

Good Radio Music By JAMES THRASHER

One of the prominent composers of the past radio year, Vittorio Giannini, is to take the baton in the final CBS Thursday guest-conductor series at 6 o'clock this evening on WFBM. Though a native of Phliadelphia, Mr. Giannini probably is better known in Europe than in this country. Much of his study has been in Italy, where he went when only 9 as a scholarship winner at the Verdi Conservatory in Milan. Four years later he returned home, and played

-

in a hotel ensemble and continued ®

conducts a Prelude and Fugue and the “April Nocturne” from his “Cantata Primavera.” He also is to present his arrangement of a Siciliana by Pergolesi. Completing the p“ogram, Mr. Giannini will offer Wagner’s “Siegfried Idyl” and the first suite of Respighi’'s “Antiques Airs and Dances,” which includes a Balletto, Gagliarda, Villanella and Passo a Due e Mascherata.

Soe pe pa j A Haydn piano concerto in D

major will feature Alfred Wallen-

stein’s Sinfonietta broadcast over WOR-Mutual ’ :

:30

"On Sunday, Dr. F. M. Vreeland

of DePauw University, president of the 46th annual Indiana Conference, will speak at 1:45 p. m. On Friday, Oct. 1, Winthrop D. Lane, director of the Bureau of Investigation of Juvenile Delinquency of New Jersey, will speak at 6:45 p. m. Thurman A. Gottschalk, Indiana Department of Public Welfare Administrator, will be heard on Satur-

day, Oct. 2, at 1 p. m. The series |

will conclude Oct. 3 at 1:30 p. m, with an address by Miss Jane Hoey, director of the Division of Public Assistange of the Federal Social Security d.

a 2 2 Chick Meehan, Manhattan College football coach, will be Eddie Dooley’s guest on the latter's program at 4:30 this afternoon over CBS. Mr. Meehan is to describe the prospects of his own team for the coming season and will give his opinion of the national gridiron situation. Other nationally known coaches are to be heard on future broadcasts. ; Morris Hicks, who is to return to the air with his Sport Splants program Monday at 6;30 p. m. over WIRE, also will survey the football outlook on his first broadcast. He also is to broadcast local sports news about football, bowling, wrestling, boxing and basketball. His program will be heard daily except Sunday.

seum with two editions published during Haydn’s etime. Milton Kaye will be the soloist. To complete the program, Mr. Wallenstein will salute Italy in the

works of three composers of dif-

ferent countries.

The numbers are Serenade”;

to- | Hugo Wolf's “Italian Se

rs