Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 October 1937 — Page 43

DAY, OCT. 1, 1937

®' "FRIDAY pr 8 . OUR BOARDING HOUSE

O HAW, LADS! How po 7 YOU THINK I WILL LOOK ASTRIDE A CHARGER? THIS IS THE UNIFORM I WORE WHEN 1 WAS CAPTAIN OF THE ROYAL DRAGOONS IN THE TRANSVAAL / KAFF — KAFF Z EGAD, WON'T MY SISTER ELIZABETH, ADMIRE ME IN THIS OUTFIT2

WON'T! SAYw YOU COLILD WIN ANY RACE, BY

A Nose!

YT

[ KINGDOM FOR A HORSE =

COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T. M. REC: U. 8. PAT. OFF.

— = = ==

“a

' BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

YOU MIGHT WIN TH’ MERRY-GO-ROUND DERBY: RIDING A GLASS-EYED ZEBRA, IF You DIDN'T FALL OFF/

"COPR. 1937 BY NEA

“The captain says for us to come right up, the ship's sinking.”

—By Martin

=)

LEMME IN

305 ME nee

GCOODRVYE « WE #AD A GRAND TIME

2 IN hs

lia

PRAVE-- HE SEEMS CHEERFUL -You’D NEVER KNow HED LosT ALL

His

NOW ,FERD «YoU KNOW 1'™M NOT OATWNG! 1 TOLD You YL WAS GONG TO SPEND TRE ELVENWNG ALONE , READING | BUT te WELL,

GET BACK FROM THE MOVE ,\F YOU WISH TM « REALLY GLAD

AROUND TOWN DON'T AsK #iM TO DINNER AND EVERYTHING <THE WAY TREY DID

NEAR! T SORIA FIGGERED NY '\WOLLD

NOU CAME =

lal

2

+\_COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T.M. REC. U.S. PAT.OFF. J

WHY 2 orn NOW) 1 <5 WHY YOU LOANED ME THAT FRIGHTFUL TAYSTERY SOOW

%/»

—By Brinkerhoff

HE WAS A

WELL, MARY AND HER ff MoM ARE WELCOME To RIM -- AE THOUGHT

RIG B_USI-

NEss MAN AND Now H#E'S ELAT ;

ITS A SHOWDOWN, UNDERSTAND! J WE DEMAND OUR) EEF wOU DON’ YOU'LL PAY OFF MY CONTRACT, BACK WAGES! SIGNORITA, T

N

ys

EVERYTHING! T KEEK You Out!

RA

| MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE

{ TW' DERNED OLD ROBBERS! \ ) JUST WAIT! I GOT A LOTTA 2 MONEY HID IN MY MATTRESS,

ME

d BEC. U. 5. PAT, OFF

—By Thompson and Coll

MNTERRUPTED BY A DISTURBANCE IN THE HALL, MYRA HURRIEDLY LEAVES THE OPERATING

Brame,

’ WHAT DO YOU MEAN BY

CAN'T YOU SEE THE © DOCTOR. IS OPERATING?

COPR. 1937 B ¥ NEA SERVICE, INC,

THE FIRST : z AIYDROGEN BALLOONS WERE SOAP BUBBLES. TIBERIOS CAVALLO, ABOUT 1781, OPENED THE WAY FOR GAS FILLED BALLOONS ley EXPERIMENTING WITH GAS-FILLED BUBBLES.

AN IRELAND, : Grow oN TREES/ - THE TREE IS NOT RELATED TO THE TRUE STRAWBERRY, HOWEVER, AND THE FRUIT IS NOT

SOMETIMES MEASURES 12 INCHES IN LENGTH,

NOT COUNTING THE o

es] aaa lO,

THE strawberry tree is known scientifically as Arbutus unedo, and is a distant relative of the blueberry, huckleberry and cranberry. The strawberry character of the fruit is only skin deep.

alitt RAE Fea

7 Fv] ! ! NEXT—How often do “17-year locusts” emerge in the southern United

RAPPING ON THE WINDOW?!

LET'S TAKE A LOOK AT YA,

=r IF IT ISN'T A DAME! SWEETHEART!

HOW DARE YOU! NOW TLL HAVE TO STERILIZE ANOTHER. MASK —

NO YOU WONT, BABY = THEY'LL GET ALONG IN THERE ALL RIGHT WITHOUT YOU - SAY — You ANT HALF ’

1 4 Lester A

00

2

&rr

: © IT POSSIBLE TO FIND a PLEASURE IN CHERISHING

THIS

COPYRIGHT IQ BT JONN DI LE Oy

1 WHEN IT comes to capturing men practically all women use their entire stock of wiles to capture us poor, weak, foolish men; but, as a matter of fact, men and women know very little about capturing each other. In courses now being given in some colleges on lovemaking and mate-selection, psychologists are teaching both sexes a lot about the capturing business they didn’t know. Maybe the psychologists, too, are learning something. ; ®. 8 ” WHEN one is grief-stricken he has two courses open—first to face

oe

CH EN KNOW AS ND > Hoel To CAPTURE A gpa ’% A® THEY THINK THEY DO

5 on ORNO —— © Us

AN OLD

IND!

RECENTLY INV! HAS PROVED TO B

LEER GRIEF 2 Feo0orNO— ESTNAN THA

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM :

AN

oK

REINIA~ 0 BE:

E SMART EVER LIVED?

affection and thus find his way out, not by fighting his grief, but by fighting for new objects and persons to love and admire and work with. The other is to cherish the grief, tell ourselves that life has deprived us of our rightful happiness, that people should pity us and that we have a right to indulge in self-pity. In this last way, we find greater pleasure in cherishing the grief than in facing life as it is and fighting to make it better.

% i. .

SOME of the higgest skulls— those of imbeciles, and some very

*

’e the facts bravely, look about

3

smart you are does not depend on how big your brain is. Some brain anatomists think intelligence prob-

of sharp pointed cells in the brain —those shaped like a pyramid—as compared with the number of round cornered ones—those that are shaped like a pear. .

NEXT—Does overwork nervous breakdown?

COMMON?’ ERRORS

Never pronounce associate—as-so’-se-ate; say, as-so’-she-ate.

cause

He was just so darn mean I had to shoot him.—Andrew Buck, 83, Racine, Wis., explaining why he peppered his son-in-law with buckshot.

I'd rather be shot again than ride this thing through town.— Wallace Beery, in ambulance after accident on movie set.

ft —-

ably depends largely on the number B32

Best Short Waves

FRIDAY | BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA p. m. Folklore Singer. Viennese Orchestra. LRX, 9.66 meg. . ROME—5 p. m. News in English; concert. IRD, 11.81 meg. LONDON—5:30 p fa, Mig of , 13.14 meg:

.m. “The Do Li Sing, GSO. 15.18 3 GSD. 11.75 meg. CARACAS—T7:45 B m. Cancert orchestra. YVSRC. 5.8 meg. NDON—8 p. m. “Men of Har- ’ a dramatic feature. GSG, 17.79 meg.: . . .+ GSD. 11.75 meg.: GSB, 9.51 meg. . PITTSBURGH—10.30 .p. m. DX Club. WS8XK, 6.14 meg. REGINA—11:30 m. At | Gap Social. GIRO. 6.15 meg. CIR 11.72 meg.

TOKYO—11:45 p. m. A talk. JZK. 15.16 meg. : ]

IA — 3:40 program.

| on CBS at 5 p. m. tomorrow.

|| Scriabin’s

“LYNDHURST, AUST! a. m. (Saturday). Nation VKSLR, 9.58 meg.

and brains—ever measured were small skulls and brains were those

Justice Black May Address Radio's Largest Audience in Speech Tonight: Hoosiers to Hear Three Grid Games

These three men will conduct the new NBC symphony orchestra which 1s to open a weekly series of concerts Nov. 13. Pierre Monteux is at upper left, Artur Rodzinski at upper right and the famous Arturo Toscanini 18 at the right. -

DIRECT NEW NBC SYMPHONY

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)

Sal. Army Band Tea, Tunes

WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)

Community News Flash McGregor Funny Things Yes or No Concert Or. Kogen's Or. ” gd 8 Little Words News-Sports Orphan Annie W. D. Lane Tom Mix Phenomenon Mysteries por Uncle Ezra V. Shepard News

S. Gillian Carl Baker

Music Hall Mgster Mind

Kemp's or.

Center § es J

RADIO THIS EVENING

(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in program announcements caused by station changes after press time.)

INDIANAPOLIS

CHICAGO

om

~

WG 0 (Mutual Net.) Baseball |

” ”

CINCINNATI (NBC-Mutual)

Sun. Melodies ack Armstrong Symphonette Unannounced

”» ”

Swing It Harold Turner Travel Tour Orphan Annie

String Ensemble :

Lowell Thomas

Californians Unannounced Sports Review Appleberry

Smith’s Or. Stokes Revue Lone Ranger

Amos-Andy James’ Or. Lum-Abner Unannounced

Tonic Time Unannounced Death Valley

Hollywood . Hotel Hugo Black

"Waltz Time Hugo Black

Sonx Shop ” »” Arden’s Or. Poets Melodies

ews Roller Derby Felton’s Or.

Lombardo’s Or. Fiorito’s | or.

»

First N ighter

J. Fidler D. Thompson

Amos-Andy Aloha Island News Gould’s Or.

Boyer’s Or. Cummins’ Or. Waring’s ; or.

DCS | Pore | Bunn | wu.iil| saaa| avon | sees S| GS53 | GELS | S853 | 5853S | KS53 | HEn3 | H86S

fk pd fk

Stabile’s or.

Indiana Silent Sanders’ | Or.

’ ”»

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.) Chuck Wagon ”» »

WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)

Devotions On Mall Early Birds

Musical ,, Clock ” » Varieties Breakfast ‘Club ”» ” Unannounced

” Ed

Ray Black altons Fiddler's Fancy

Stringers Charioteers er Pretend . ” » Variety Show

”» » ”» ”»

Army Band

Serenade

”» Child's Hour

tit 2992 | ovo | ®wR® | daa] a

8 | 6853 | 5853 5353 | HH | &8

ok ft

” ” ”» »

Markets Farm Circle

Meditation ‘Dr. e Buffalo , Presents

Home Town Safety Club

” ”»

pd neh ey @W

Farm Hour ” ”»

Reporter Campus Capers

Unannounced Three Graces Palmer House Football

” ” ” ”»

Madison Ensemble Ann Leaf

ews Football

” ”» » ”

” ” » »

” ” ” ”

” ”» ” ”

”» ” ” »

»” ” ” ”»

Kindergarten

Scholarshi

win | 0036000 | 19101000 | uit 5853 | 5353 | 5353 | &

WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS '820;

can for the concert hall. ‘

Talented Musicians Mad Hatters

Where to find ,other stations: Chicago, WBBM Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND 569.

ER. ,Ripley Unannounced

Sanders’ Or.

Weems’ Or. Tomorrow's Trib.

First Nighter J. Fiddler Angelo

King's OF Curtain ,. Time

Weems’ Or. Martin’s Or.

Paul Sullivan Rapp’s Or. Salute Sprigg’s Or. Cummins’ or. Barron's | or. Waring’s , or. Moon River Stapile’s Or. Sanders’ Or.

Serenade Goodnight

SATURDAY PROGRAMS

INDIANAPOLIS

CHICAGO

CRW 500 WGN 720 (Mutual Net.)

(NBC-Mutual)

Mail Bag Doc Schneider

Good Morning Peter Gran Before Breakfast

Silent ”» ”»

Good Morning

Golden Hour

» ”»

Breakfast Club » Lindlahr

Air Synagogue Ladies’ Day

V.

Crane-Joyce ” -

Get. Thin Mail Box

Live Stock Ward-Muzzy dicine ubs

Serenade Army Band

Arden’s Or. Farm Hour

Serenade Van Dyne Quin Ryan Edna Sellers

Bob Elson Harold Turned Midday Service

Campus 3 Capers

Buffalo Football ” ”»

Concert Or. Ih

( Concert Or. Baseball

» ”» ” ”

’” ”» » ”

» ” ” »

” ” ” ”

2» ” ” ”

Kindergarten

Swing It Serenade,

Keating’s Or. 770; WENR 870,

Good Radio Music By JAMES THRASHER

What a remarkable difference there is between radio recital programs of today and those of a few-years ago. Such is the faith in listeners’ developing taste and appreciation that the artist nowadays may use even greater originality and freedom in selecting broadcast material than he

Not so long ago the opposite situation prevailed. I remember that | the pianist Hans Barth, in his first broadcast, chose such things as Nevin’s |

lish Dance” for his listening public. As a contrast, we might consider the program which Grace Castagnetta, young American pianist, is to play

She has chosen four such rarely heard items as the Casella transcription of Vivaldi’'s D Minor Concerto; a Rondo in A by Haydn; “Poem Tragique,” and the “Trois Danses Fantastiques” by Shostakovich. : Miss Castagnetta appeared as soloist with the New York Philharmonic Symphony and the Federal Music Theater Orchestra in al

fresco concerts this summer. She is an honor graduate gf the Berlin

|

“Narcissus” and Scharwenka’s “Po-&— : ‘Hochschule fuer Musik and winner

of the MacDowell Club piano composition award. A volume of Christmas carols, her second book in collaboration with Hendrik van Loon, is to be published this month, and she has a Town Hall recital scheduled in New York for Nov. 7.

8 = 2 : Alfredo Casella, the transcriber mentioned above, will be represented again on tomorrow's programs when his ‘gliciliana e Burlesca” is played Ly t:* Compinsky Trio at 10:30 a. m. tomorrow on the CBS network. The: Compinskys also are to play the Trio in C by the Spanish cellist, Gaspar o Io. ,

>

| League's Efforts to Avoid

War to Be Told On Air Today.

When Associate Justice Black faces the microphones of all three major networks at 8:30 tonight to answer the charges that he has been or is a member of the Ku-Klux Klan, it is possible that he will be addressing the greatest American radio audience in history. Radio officials, who rank the address as one of the most outstanding and dramatic ever to be broadcast, estimate the probable audience at 30,000,000 to 50,000,000 persons. The chains canceled previously scheduled programs for the halfhour period which is classed as the “best radio time” of the day— when Easterners are at their fire sides and Westerners at dinner. Both WFBM and WIRE will carry the broadcast. Justice Black has been allotted half an hcur, although the speech probably will occupy only about 20 minutes. Radio executives today said the speech ranks with talks given by President Roosevelt, Edward VIII, Hitler, Mussolini and the Pope.

Place of the broadcast, was announced this morning by CBS as the Washington residence of Claude E. Hamilton Jr. assistant general counsel of the Reconstruction Finance Corp. :

8 nn

Three football games involving teams of importance to Hoosier and Big Ten fans will be aired tomorrow afternoon.

WIRE is to carry the MinnesotaNebraska game starting at 1:45 p.m. A 15-minute review of football highlights and predictions will precede the broadcast, and scores will be heard over the same station at 6 p. m. WFBM also will carry the Minnesota tilt.

WLW will bring listeners the Notre Dame-Drake contest with Red Barber at the mike. Mr. Barber is to follow the Rambling Irish throughout the season. Tomorrow's broadcast is scheduled to start at 1:45 p. m. : The Purdue-Ohio State tilt at Columbus, O., will be heard over the following stations: WHK, WADC, WHEKC and WSPD.

» = o

The League of Nations’ efforts to alleviate the international crises in China and Spain will be described in a broadcast from Geneva at 6:30 p. m. today. John B. Whitton will speak on “The League of Nations’ Efforts in Behalf of China and Spain.” Over CBS. : Mr. Whitton at present is visiting

tional Students at Geneva. He formerly was professor of political science at Princeton.

# 2 2

The cast of Hollywood Hotel will celebrate the fourth anniversary of the veteran “big name” series . during the broadcast tonight from 8 to 9 over CBS-WFBM. Warren William who, with Claudette Colbert, appeared on the inaugural program back in 1934, is to be heard with Gladys George ad John Beal in a radio version of “Madame X.’ Comedian Ken Murray, his stooge “Oswald, and blond Marlyn Stuart will be added to the roster of regular talent which includes Frances Langford, Jerry Cooper, Anne Jamison and Raymond Paige's orchesira. 8 8 =»

Several local broadcasts dealing with developments in the Indiana State Conference on Social Work are to be heard this week-end. Winthrop D. Lane, New Jersey juvenile ° delinquency bureau director, will be interviewed by Robert S. Richey, Indiana NYA director, over WFBM at 5:45 p. m. today. At 6:45 p. m. Mr. Lane will speak over WIRE. Mr. Richey is to discuss the problem of juvenile delinquency in Indiana with Mr: Lane. NYA recently completed three surveys on the problem in the state. : Thurman A. Gottschalk, Indiana Public Welfare director, is to speak at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow over WIRE. Miss Jane Hoey, director of the public assistance department of the Social Security Board, will conclude the series Sunday at 5:30 p. m. with a 15-minute talk.

) PM. EVERY SATURDAY

-—.

sokimriatiay wo om” si THE. QHIQ OIL

professor at the Institute of Na-