Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1937 — Page 20
TUESDAY, NOV. 2, 1087 OUR BOARDING HOUSE
1 ALWAYS HAVE MY SPRAY-= GUN LOADED FOR ANY GERM THATS FLYING AROUND TRYING TO NEST IN MY ACREAGE THATS HOW 1 KEEP MY HINGES FROM CREAKING / YOU DON'T CATCH ME LETTING MY GUARD DOWN WHEN 1 STEP INTO THE RING WITH MICROBES!
GERMS MUST RUN AMUCK AMONG YOu HOOPLE S wn FOR YEARS, “TH MAJOR PERIODICALLY HAS GARGLED A STRONG REMEDY YO COUNTERACT A DEADLY GERM THAT HAS ENTERED HIS CIRCULATION BY SNAKE BITE!
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Sy 77 7
I = [© VoD LIZZIE BETTER “Off BE ON HER GUARD= fl)
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
With Major Hoople
HUM ~~ WHAT ss
THIS? A STRANGE 4
MALADY CALLED SPOTTED FEVER/ VICTIMS OF THIS PLAGUE BREAK OUT WITH RED SPOTS ane UM=MenasSHE'S A HYPO CHONDRIAL, EME UMF-FUFF vw BY JOVE! ™IS MAY COME IN HANDY!
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES HOLD EVERYTHING
siz |SOPR.1937 BY NEA SERVICE. ING. J
“There goes the brainiest boy in the game. invented a soap that will float in a shower bath!”
¥
5 rh,
He just
—By Martin
PAGE 19
b Cvs Lvs | anny Ross and Al Jolson to Be Hosts
To Gladys Swarthout and Menjous;
Indiana History Series to Begin on WIRE
GETS FIRST CO
URTESY AWARD
Arn AED
a
rn ARIANA AR FAA FRO ~
Indianapolis Story Told By Vivian Della Chiesa To NBC Friends.
Continuing the popular vogue of presenting screen stars as radio guest artists, Lanny Ross and Al Jolson, film actors themselves, will present three popular Hollywood artists on their radio shows tonight.
Gladys Swarthout, opera soprano who transferred her activities to the films, will appear on Lanny Ross’ NBC-WIRE broadcast/at 8:30 tonight. She will endeavor to turn comedienne in repartee with Mr, | Ross and expressionless Charles Butterworth. In a more familiar role, she is to sing operatic arias and introduce new numbers from her latest picture, “The Yellow Nightingale.” Miss Swarthout was originally scheduled for the Oct. 19 “Mardi Gras” program but a cancellation of this appearance was necessitated in order to provide for President Roosevelt's fireside chat.
Adolphe Menjou and his actress wife, Verree Teasdale, will be interviewed on Al Jolson's CBSWFBM musical variety program tonight at 7:30 o'clock. Of course, Martha Raye and Parkyakarkus add to the general merriment.
8 ” as
\
(AG PEEVED AS YOO ARE WITH MALES IN GENERAL , COOKIN’ MIGHT BE TOO GREAT A TEMPTATION
(S0eT LEASE \T TO I 00,1 THK ME TLL OO TRE fl YOU'D BBTTER TAX\NG , AND XOUL TOTE TH’ TRANS
[tas 18 YouR
BVUB\E ST T\ME The first in a series of broadcasts
WO BABE ~ 1 THOUGHT ) 20 on early Indiana history will be pre-
MANBE I COOLD WEP NOL
gus ALL TW BOvs | IN, BETWEEN CLASSES FOR A
OF OAN, \&\N'Y 2°
SNACK | BUY »w
WALT ON TRE
go .M. REG. U. 8 PAT! Be) —By Brinkerhoff
phir
NRADY, YOU FOLLOW ALONG IN THE OLD BUS. WE ‘LL STOP IN THE WoHobs JUST BEFORE WE GET INTO TOWN.
BBS Ii
AERE § THE WOODS - You DRIVE THE B16 CAR DaAcK AND I'LL GO ON IN THE oud BUS.
Now I LooK LIKE 4A
2 MAN QUT oF WORK ~~ MOM 1 18 SMART TUT SHE'LL, FALL
FOR. THIS
—By Crane
ON, POOR | (T'S MY BET HE GOT AWAY, THE KID 1S SMART! HE'LL BE
EASY RETURNS [TWATT AND HIS GANG -- THEY ) BLEW UP THE LOCOMOTIV WHAT HAPPENED? )\ AND I COULDN'T FIND ae:
MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE
SHOWING UP SHORTLY. HOW'S THE ANKLE?
(WASH DIDN'T GET AWAY, EASY, OR THE SHOTS WOULDN'T CONTINUE! HE NEEDS HELP- — AND (T'S UP TO YOU! DON'T COME BACK UNTIL YOU FIND HIM!
NE
Mrs. Marie Auld, 3720 N. Pennsylvania St., was chosen the city’s
most courteous driver on the first day of a campaign sponsored by City police and WIRE.
Chief Morrissey is shown presenting Mrs. Auld with her recogni
tion card. Every day a driver is cited as the day's most courteous driver and his name announced on the WIRE's “Police Court” broadcast.
-
RADIO THIS EVENING
(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in program an-
INDIANAPOLIS WFB
M 1230 (CBS Net.)
(NBC Net.)
nouncements caused by station changes after press time.) INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400
CINCINNATI
CHICAGO LW 700 ‘GN (NBC-Mutual)
iN 20 (Mutual Net.)
Follow Moon Tea Tunes “ "
{ Hilltop House
All Hands Bh Science all's Or.
Jolly Joe News Flashes WPA Concert Do You Know
Nurse Corps Jack Armstrong Singing Lady Singing School »
Opry House
Rakov's Or. 3 Little Words
Orphan Annie Tom Mix
Harold Turner Californians Charlie Chan Orphan Annie
Angelo Serenade Bob Newhall Lowell Thomas
Phenomenon
J Ang Review Piano Twins News
Easy Aces Vocal Sports-News Charlie Chan
Varieties
Amos-Andy Vocal Varieties Lum-Abner Tonic Time
Concert Or, Bob Elson Stoke's Or. Californians
Big, Town
Al Jolson
Johnnie
Wavne King LL ”n
Smith's Or. Arden's O
Johnnie " ” r. Rhythm “> Symphon
Can Be Done
Oakie College
Voy, Pon, Mardi Gras
Housewarmers Lopez's Or, Comedy Stars
Mysteries ” J Tomorrow's Trib,
Polly Follies
J. Fiadler Arden’s Or.
Operetta Symphonic Strings
J. Fiddler Northerners Men at Work sid n
Poetic Melodies News Olsen’s Or.
Amos-Andy
NEWS Variety Show
Organ Weems Martin's Or.
Paul Sullivan Sissle’s Or. Wilde's Or. Cummins’ Or.
Musio tf Or.
00 Count Basie's Or. Berry's Or.
Heidl’s Or.
145
12:00
Fio Rito’s or.
Reflections " »
Childs’ Or. King's or.
Heidt's Or. King’s Or.
Indiana Roof
Williams’, Or.
MN RESPONSE TO MYRA'S PLEAS, U PIGEON SHUFFLES UP TO THE CELL BLOCK.
DO VOU THINK THE DOCTOR WOULD MIND IF 1 WAD SOME MEDICINE ? 1-1 HAVE AN e—] AWFUL HEADACHE -
Wel,
US WORLD
et ceg— wn 1
By William Ferguson
ARR
| | 7 sAcTNESS OF [ETRE = SEAWATER. IS SO SIMILAR, TO THE SALTNESS OF
HOMAN BLOOD, THAT TISSUES ARE KEPT ALIVE IN LABORATORIES '‘N MODIFIED SEAWATER, SOLUTIONS,
MUST HAVE NO MORE "THAN ONE 2/7" TO BEVERY 20 OUNCES TO QUALIFY IN THE LONITED STATES AS
STANDARD \. ST TW
LIAL IT UNTIL the past Oct. 10, a 20-ounce can of cherries could have two seeds and still be regarded as of standard quality, but the new law sets the limit at one pit per 20 ounces. Cherries containing a higher ratio must be labeled “partially pitted,” thus warning the consumers. re Wy NEXT—What race of women must never pronounce the names of husbands?
IT CONTAINS AIR SPACES.
GUE 8 VA CAN'T
\ 1 (Sa TLL
GET IT FER VA -
—By Thompson and Coll
WATER.
MOMENT LATER, || {1 PIGEON 1S BACK WITH THE MEDICINE AND A GLASS OF
“THANKS A LOT, PIGEON ..YOURE A PAL...
[oA THEN, AS MYRA REACHES OUT TO TAKE THE MEDICINE AND WATER, SHE SUDDENLY SEIZES THE MAN'S WRISTS WITH
EVERY OUNCE OF HER STRENGTH.
NIE TR LE
“a
IF THIS WRITER means any woman can get a husband worth a hoot, he-—-or—she—is talking through his or her hat. Some women are located so the men they can contact are so different in life and habits that only by throwing themselves away—as they look at it —could they get a husband. Also
disagreeable that the only thing that keeps them single is not their will power but the man's. a woman be in love and refuses marriage because of duty to others that does take the greatest will power in the world. on ” ® ACCORDING to the Journal of
Experimental | Physiology each
/
some women are so masculine and |
Of course, if |
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
KNOWLEDGE TEST QUESTION: 1© THERE ANY PARTICULAR TIME WHEN IT 1S EASIES TO WAKEN A
SLEEPING ERNE
MOST SPEECHES BY PROM= INENT MEN AND WOMEN ARE WRITTEN BY
of nue SHOSTWRITERS
person has a pretty regular “sleep | pattern,”—periods of deep slumber, half waking periods, almost awake, | tossing about, etc. The deepest sleep | usually occurs during the first hour and then gradually tapers off until final waking, although some people fall into a short period of deep sleep | shortly before waking—darkest hour | before the yawn, so to speak. The
easiest time to waken a person, how- |
ever, is just after he has moved or turned over. = ® o CERTAINLY, if they represent the speaker's ideas. But they are hardlv honest when they give the speaker about all the ideas he ever had, which is true of many
public people. According tq Literary
12:15 12:30 12:45 ” ”
Silent ¥ Kent's Or.
Williams’ Or. Dance or.
Moon River " H
© WEDNESDAY
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)
1400 (NBC Net.)
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE
PROGRAMS
CINCINNATI LW 700 (NBC-Mutual)
(Mutual Neti) CHICAGO WGN 520
Civic Choir
Round Up Chuck Wagon
Devotions
aN 0 wo
Sing, Neighbor
Silent Merrymakers ’
\
Early Birds Musical Clock
”" ”
Varieties
Appleberry Peter Grant Before Breakfast h
”» ”
Good Morning
Gospel Singer
As You Like It Breakfast Club
Value Varieties " " Apron Strings Rose Room
Hymns Hope Alden Lady Be Good ’ Widder Jones » x
Merrymakers Good Morning
Kitty Kelly Myrt and Marge Mrs, Farrell
Mrs. Wiggs Other Wife Plain Bill Children
Linda's Love Crane-Joyce
Get Thin Mail Box
Magazine David Harum Big Sister Charming Life Stories Party Line
Backstage Wife
Don Pedro Children Painted Dreams Harold Turner
News Road of Life Carson Robison Goldbergs
Home Town Singin’ Sam Linda's Love Farm Hour
Mary McBride Edwin © ill
Farm Circle Market
Store Woman Melody Time Quin Rvan We Are Four
Girl Alone Texans Farm four
Feature , Time ” ”» ”» »
tk SONI
- oD
Reporter Police Court
”» ”» " ” Voice of Exo. Kitty Keene
Bob Elson Buckaroos Seryices "
| 2 {| ASTD
Art Speaker Stroller's Mat. May Robson B. Fairfax
Woman's Eyes Hope Alden School of Air
Concert Or. Wife vs. Seo. Lucky Girl B. Fairfax
Once Upon Time Contemp. Writers reat N west
Cont. Varieties Mat. Varieties
News Dentist Says Jenny Peabody Acad. of Med. " »
TOT 21D | rbd pk rt |
OD | ee NOMS | Ow
Romances June Baker Good Health Harold Turner
Pepper Young Ma Perkins Vic-Sade O’Neills
Curtis Inst.
» ”»
Lerenzo Jones Club Matinee P A Program
www |
Dr. Mary Sothern Mary Mariin Hatterfields
Four Stars l.adv of Millions Len Salve Opry House
Friendly
Dr. Dafoe
|
Lipmd | apn
Follow Moon Tea Tunes
Hilltop House
News tiashes McGregor Yes or No
asa | NDI nIdNI
Ross Lockridge
Nurse Corps » Jack Armstrong " Singing Lady Singing School
Digest ghost writing is now a large and profitable industry. Both the late Al Boasberg and Dave Freedman—the best story tellers I ever knew—sold - “ghost gags” to radio, vaudeville and screen stars for from $1 to $500 each. A good gag to my mind is worth $500.
NEXT-—Can you afford to pick up a pin?
COMMON ERRORS
Never pronounce forbade—forbade’ (to rhyme with aid); instead say, for-bad’.
War is contagion whether it be declared or undeclared. We are determined to keep out of war, yet we cannot insure ourselves against the disastrous effects of war and the dangers of involvement.—President Roosevelt.
Best Short Waves
TUESDAY
SCHENECTADY -—5:35 p. m.—Short Wave Mail Bag. W2XAD, 15.33 meg.; W2XAPF, 9.53 meg. LONDON-—§ . 1h, “Hamstead Heath, the story of London's famous Northern Height. GSP, 15.31 meg.; GSD, 11.75 meg.; GSB, 9.51 meg. . BERLIN—6:30 m. — Episodes, Songs asd Verses. DJD, 11.77 meg. SANTIAGO, Chile--7:45 p. m — Symphony: Opera: Latin American, Chilean and International Music. CB960, 9.60 meg. LONDON—8:15 p. Pink,” an Empire 11.75 meg.; GSC, 9.58 9.51 meg. PARIS—10:45 p. m.—Musical cordings. TRA4, 11.72 meg. TOKYO—11:45 p. m. — Popular Songs. JZK, 15.16 meg. SYDNEY, Australia—12:15 p. m.— Talk on Australia. VKIME, 859 meg.
m.— “All revue meg.;
in GSD, GSB,
Re-
Where to find other stations:
Chicago, WBBM 770; WENR 870,
| WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND 560.
Good Radio Music
By JAMES THRASHER
We can only hope that the Fates governing shortwave reception are
kind tomorrow, for Arturo Toscanini
is scheduled to be heard conducting
the First and Ninth Beethoven Symphonies from London at 2:15 p. m.
on the NBC-Red network. The performance will be by the | BBC Symphony Orchestra and | Chorus, and the soloists are to be | Isobel Baillie, Mary Jarred, Parry Jones and Harold Williams. The program is listed for only an hour | and a quarter, so it is obvious that | | we shall hear only a portion of the | complete concert. It remains to be seen whether the | renowned conductor's magic touch will make itself felt over the diffi- | culties attendant upon transoceanic broadcasts. Or whether the so- | pranos’ high A’s in the choral symphony’s finale will improve with distance. {
8 n ” Scholastic Indianapolis is about to break into the music news on Fri- | | day. The Arthur Jordan Conserva- | tory of Music will begin a 15-minute | | weekly series over WFBM at 5 p. m. ion that date, and will increase the | time to 30 minutes in December. | And WIRE, at 2 p. m. on Friday, | is to inaugurate a weekly set of pro- | grams from local high schools.
8 # " | Alfred Wallenstein is listed for {an hour's “continuous perform- | ance” this evening over MBS-WOR. | At 8:30 o'clock his Sinfonietta or- | chestra will offer Mozart's “Paris” | Overture, companion to the so{called “Paris” Symphony, and the late Albert Roussel’'s “Le Fest in D’Araignee.”
| | | { | first American performance of %
~
During the following half-hour, Mr. Wallenstein will direct his string orchestra in performances in
Torelli's Sinfonia No. 6, ‘Perslis Clock” by Parsley, and a Novelette by Gade. 2 n "
The Curtis Institute program, featuring Elsie MacFarlane, contralto, and Fritz Krueger, tenor, which was scheduled for last week and postponed, will be heard at 3 p. m. tomorrow on CBS-WFBM.
sented by Ross F. Lockridge, Indiana University Foundation lecturer, on WIRE at 4 p. m. tomorrow. The programs, which will be heard at that time each Wednesday, will center on George Rogers Clark, Mad | Anthony Wayne, Willlam Henry | Harrison, Abraham Lincoln, LaSalle, the New Harmony movement, Civil War stories and other phases of Indiana history.
a ” un
If you're interested in the outcome of the New York City election and if you can get WOR on your set you can hear the last minute returns tonight.
A review of the day at the polls and early returns will be heard at 5:30 p. m. Beginning at 7 o'clock bulletins on the trends of the counting will be read every half« hour. Starting at 10:30 p. m. continuous information will be given until the majority of deciding returns are in .
Other New York stations will have similar schedules.
” u »
The success story of a 27-year-old New York advertising executive who pioneered in outdoor electric signs with motion picture methods is to be told on Edgar A. Guest’s “It Can Be Done” program tonight,
Douglas Leigh started the ven~ ture six years ago. Mr. Guest is to interview him on the NBCBlue at 7:30 p. m. Gamba, one of radio's newest finds, will bring her violin music to a new NBC-Blue series beginning tonight at 9:30 o'clock. Gamba, who prefers to be known simply by her last name, has been studying the violin since she was 4 years old. She is said to have received six scholarships at Curtis Institute. In order to be featured on the air she is supposed to have turned down an offer to play in the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. She will be accompanied in her radio series by a large orchestra and a girls’ trio.
» u ”
Mary Margaret McBride, woman radio columnist will discuss George M. Cohan's new play, “I'd Rather Be Right” on CBS-WFBM at 11 a. m. tomorrow, Miss McBride will not discuss the musical comedy as a satirical ate tack on the New Deal. Instead she will devote her remarks to such subjects as how Mr. Cohan dons the make-up for his imitation of President Roosevelt, the bustle of the wardrobe room where chorus girls go for last-minute costume repairs, how star dressing rooms are assigned, the rapid shifting of stage scenery and many other ane gles of backstage life. n n » Vivian Della Chiesa, NBC soprano, is back at Radio City and delighting her friends there with stories of her difficulties at the Indiana State Teachers Assuciation. When she arrived for her concert at the Cadle Tabernacle, teachers had already so filled hotel rooms that she and her mother were assigned a salesman’s sample room. Her accompanist, George Pfau, had arrived earlier and found better accommodations. He exchanged them with Miss Della Chiesa. ou 2 "8
Radio Notes—Myrt and Marge celebrated their seventh anniversary of broadcasting with yesterday's program. . . The Court of Missing Heirs program has at last uncovered a man who claims he is heir to a $16,000 estate publicized on one of the broadcasts. Ted Weems, orchestra leader, is displaying in the lobby of the Trianon ballroom” in Chicago his favored “museum piece,” a red 1905 car. Some wag has dubbed the Singing Lady’s opera programs for children “Baby Grand { Operas.” . . . Pinky Tomlin is said to be experimenting with a new type of electric guitar which can be made to sound like an organ, a vibra-harp or an accordion.
NLS il
A grand hout of entertainment containing two big shows— “Jack Oakie College
and Ben
ny Good-
man’s" "Swing School”
WFBM
M. ;
The RAN BLEND OF
