Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 November 1937 — Page 27
THURSDAY, NOV. 4, 1937 OUR BOARDING HOUSE
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES With Major Hoople HOLD EVERYTHING
CALM YOURSELF, JASON wan 1LASSURE YOU THESE SPOTS ARE NOT THE RESULT OF A DISEASE, BUT MERELY AN
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PAGE 27
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the birdie’ stuff. Just watch
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—By Martin
—By Brinkerhoff
7 MoM, MAY WE HAVE SOME RREAD AND NUTTER WITH BROWN SUGAR
B'KE A BUNCH OF CACKLING HENS THE PYGMIES DRAG WASH TO THEIR VILLAGE YOUNG AND OLD GATHER TO FEEL HIS BEARD, TO MARVEL, AND TO GASP v THEIR AMAZEMENT.
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WE'RE PLAYING INDIAN AND MAKING A TENT-. — WE TORE Your NEW TABLE SPREAD.
BRINGUM FOOD BRINGUM DRINK!
ALL RIGHT~ ~I CAN MEND IT
AND LETS us D WE PLEASE
&IVUM HOUSE PLENTY EATS OR FED OR
QUEENIE -I HEAR SOMEONE COMING LIP
KNOW THEM FOOT-
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ARE USED FOR RACING PURPOSES IN ENGLAND/
IN A QLARTER. MILE. RACE, THEY CAN GIVE A GREVHOUND A
FOR. EVERY SQU MILE OF ORY LAND.
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COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. {j~ THE cheetah, leopard-like animal of Africa, is considered to be
the fastest mammal on earth, for -@ short distance, but it has little endurance. Although the animal is cat-like In appearance, it is more
closely related to dogs.
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FORTY YEARS / WHEN THE ENTIRE SURFACE. HAS BEEN FINISHED, IT IS TIME TO BEGIN THE JOB ALL. OVER AGAIN.
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HITE PYGMY | T DON'T WANT A HOUSE!T DONT WANTA BE FANNED NOTRIN', T GOTTA GET AWAY Tg HERE SEE! I GOTTA
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—By Thompson and Coll
HEY, PIGEON! WHERE ARE YOU? TH' MOBS WAITIN' 70 START!
TT ALWAYS TAKES A OF SCIENCE!
EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
DO QUITE ORDINARY
GREAT SCIENTIFIC
DISCOVER
48) PEOPLE OFTEN MAKE »
1€S
AND INVENTIONS?
N YES ORNO cen
LEADING PSYCHOLOGIST GAYE ™ EVERY ONE WOULD BE A THIEF, BUT FOR FEAR, CUSTOM, TRAINING AND WILL POWER? RIGHT WRONG 29
ACCORDING to Waldemar Kaempfert, scientist, writing in Think we must get rid of the notion that scientific advances are made only: by rare, mystical genuises. He says it is “social tension,” the stimulus of social need that rouses many good but not great minds to study and observe and make discoveries This is evidenced by the fact that at least 148 major inventions and discoveries have been made by different persons at the same time. Of course, to discover the great original laws and principles ‘of science requires great original minds.
Wades
| building.
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can get, and man is no different in this respect. But, when he organizes into groups, tribes, societies and nations, certain natural tendencies have to be repressed especially such tendencies as killing, stealing, sexfreedom, etc. These, therefore, become crimes—Xkilling becomes murder, taking another's property becomes stealing, sex-freedom becomes criminal. To teach people to turn all these natural tendencies into new channels in the interest of society is the object of all character
* ® = LOVE ALWAYS comes sudden-
«F ly. Very often two people who
CERTAINLY ‘they would. The
love. The circumstances may be favorable or unfavorable for love making—when one makes a chance remark that wakens some forgotten longings in the other and, within an hour, to their own surprise, they find they are in love. Of course, the abiding affection and life-long love of marriage grow gradually—deepening with the years.
NEXT—Can APES ape sound?
COMMON ERRORS
Never pronounce avenue—av'-e-noo; say av’-en-yu.
. - You may think we are anxious to fight—that we are anxious for war. That is not so. My country wants peace. Strong peace. We helieve that strong peace is the only lasting peace.—Vittorio Mussolini.
It is good for us to have freedom of speech but we have to learn to take the criticisms that come with it and not be made bitter.—Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt.
Best Short Waves
THURSDAY
~-News and ProRAN,
MOSCOW-—6 B: m. jon for English Listeners. .6 meg. PRAGUE. CZECHOSLOVAKIA —6:30 . m.—Songs from Czech Films. LR4A, 11.84 meg. CARACAS—6:45 p. m.—Juan Alvarado, singer. YV5RC, 5.8 meg. LONDON-—8:15 p. m.— “This Week,” talk by the Dowager Marchioness. SD. 11.75 meg.: , 9.58 meg.; SB. 9.51 meg.
lL. G G BERLIN—8:30 p. m.—“ “No Time-— Time Enough.” DJD, 11.77 meg. TOKYO—11:45 p. m.— Orchestra Selections. JZK, 15.16 meg. SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA—3:30 a. m. (Friday) es from G. RB O. Sydney. , 9.59 meg.
To Clyde Levi 22 Film Stars to Open New Series,
‘Good News of 1938’ on Air Tonight; WIRE to Broadcast H. S. Music Series
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IN RADIO PREM
IERE TONIGHT |
Jeanette MacDonald (left) and motion picture stars who will be broadcast of the series which suc
The feature of the first program, which is to be heard over NBC-WLW at 8 p. m., will be the re-enactment of scenes from the “The Firefly” by Miss MacDonald and Allan Jones.
|
®
Opening ‘Town Meeting’ To Feature Debate on Foreign Policy.
Twenty-two motion picture stars will be heard in the premiere broad - cast of the new radio series that succeeds Show Boat on NBC-WLW tonight at 8 p. m. The new series, which is under the same sponsorship, is called “Good News of 1938" and will present a group of M-G-M film stars on each program. The feature of the first program will be the re-enactment of scenes from the “The Firefly” by Jeanette MacDonald and Allan Jones. Also performing in tonight's opening show in comedy, music and dra-
| matic spots will be such other well
| Smith,
Judy Garland are two of the 22 heard tonight in the premiere ceeds the “Show Boat” program.
RADIO THIS EVENING
(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in program announcements caused by station changes after press time.)
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM_ 1230 (CBS Net.)
Unannounced News Flashes Strin Do
Kogen Or. 3 Little Words Orphan Annie Tom ix
ollow Moon ea Tunes
30 wuDud
ou Know
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Hall's Or. Easy Aces Vocal Varieties
Sport Slants Charlie Chan
Rudy Vallee
Phenomenon Sports Casa Loma Or. News
Kate Smith
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Ensemble
|
CINCINNATI
CHICAGO 7 ‘GN 720 (NBC-Mutual)
(Mutual Net.) Nurse Corps Jack Armstrong
Singing Lady Singing School
Opry House
”» ”» ”
Len Salvo Californians Charlie Chan Orphan Annie
Angelo Serenade Bob Newhall Lowell Thomas
Amos-Andy Vocal Varieties Lum-Abner Pleasant Valley
Rudy Vallee
Toycenter Bob Elson Concert Trio Concert Or.
Smith's Or. Arden’s Or. King’s Or.
Arden’s Or. Looking In
Al Wynkoop
Ma Bowes
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”» ”» Clark’s Or.
Concert Or.
Bing Crosby » ”
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Good News Kyser's Or. Comedy Stars Tomorrow's Trib.
Forum Lopez's Or. Weber's ,, Revue
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Amos-Andy
Poetic Melodies V ews Variety Show
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Masters’ Or. Goodman's Or.
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fartin’s Or. egms’ OF.
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Pryor’s Or. Childs’ Or. Rapp's Or.
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Dance Or.
King’s Or.
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Silent Williams’ Or.
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FRIDAY PROGRAMS
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)
Chuck Wagon On Mall
Devotions Musical , Clock n Varieties Dessa Byrd ” Rose Room rs. Wiggs ther Wife
Plain Bill Children
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Early Birds » »
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Value Varieties Apren Strings Kitty Kelly
Myvrt-Marge Mrs, Farrell
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Magazine avid Harum Big Sister Life Stories
Mary M. McBride dwin C. Hill arm Circle Market Reports
Charming Party Line
SOP | VDDD | XRNW | a¥nirlar | OD
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Home Town Sing’ Sam Linda’s Love Farm Hour
on C22 pt 5202
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Feature , Time
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Police Court
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Art Speaker Svlvia Clvde ay Robson B. Fairfax
Shortridge or.
Woman's Eyes Hope Alden School of Air
News Bohemians Jenny Peabody Four Clubmen
TODD 0D | pt ek bk ek
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Lorenzo Jones Road Builders Club Matinee
Bookends Gold Coast
Dr. Dafoe
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Follow Moon Tea, Tunes
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Hilltop House Where to find other stations:
WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND 560.
Good Radio Music
By JAMES THRASHER
Having followed up his highly with some equally publicized apologi
hope) to the winter's serious business of conducting and concertizing.
INDIANAPOL. WIRE 1400 (NBC Net.)
D News Backstase Wife Road of Life
WIRE Reporter
Williams’ Or. Moon River
Williams’ Or. Burke’s Or.
1s CINCINNATI (NBC-Mutual)
Sing, Neighbor Merrymakers
CHICAGO WGN 720 (Mutual Net.)
Silent Silent Good Morning
» ve "
Spplenerry eter Grant Arthur Chandler Gospel Singer
Petty Crocker ope Alden Lady Be Good Widder Jones
”
Merrymakers Good Morning
Linda's Love All Answers etty and Bob ‘boat Hannah
Crane-Jovce " »”
Get Thin Mail Box
Don Pedro Children Painted Melodies
Buckaroos Dreams
Goldberss
Girl Alone Texans Farm Hour
Store Woman arold Turner uin Ryan e Are Four
”» yy
Bob Elson Buckaroos Seryices "
Voice of Exp. Kitty Keene
Concert Or. Wife vs. Sec. Lucky Girl B. Fairfax
Mugic Aporec.
Romances June Baker Good Health Harold Turner
Pepper Young Ma "Perkins
O’Neill’s
Dr. Friendly ary Sothern ary Marlin Hatterfields
Four Stars Lady of Millions Len Salvo Opry House
”» ”» ” ”» »” ” ”
770; WENR 870,
Nurse Corps Jack Armstrong Research Lab. Singing School
Chicago, WBBM
publicized jibes at American music es, Jose Iturbi is settling down (we
As conductor with the Rochester? Phjlharmonic Orchestra, which he heads, Mr. Iturbi is to be heard tonight in a program on the NBCBlue network at 8 o'clock.” The broadcast portion of the concert will be devoted to Beethoven's Sixth Symphony. This work is one of the most interesting, though certainly not the greatest, of Beethoven's immortal nine. Standing between the mighty Fifth and Seventh, it is the composer’s only frankly descriptive symphony. All the movements bear programmatic titles, but the first and last are largely subjective. Between them we have the slow movement, with its “bird calls”; the Scherzo, amusing for the trio which suggests a slightly inebriated oboisl and bassoonist at a rustic celebration, and “The Storm,” which is neither much better nor worse than a lot of other storm music. n ” on
Walter Damrosch will tell the schoolchildren of the nation about fugues (Series C) and Johann Sebastian Bach (Series D) in tomorrow's Music Appreciation Hour. But queerly enough, Bach, the greatest master of fugue writing, will not be represented in the illustrations of that subject. Instead there will be the. “Cat Fugue” by Scarlatti, and Mendelssohn’s familiar Fugue in E Minor. The Scarlatti fugue is said to have been suggested by the composer’s cat when it walked up the keyboard—on a diminished seventh chord. The resulting fugue subject seems to bear out the story. Bach selections will be from the] English Suite in D Minor, the “Passion According to St. Matthew,” and the cantata, “Sleepers Awake.” 2 ” ” Waltzes, simple, sorrowful, gay and elaborate, will be heard on Victor Bay's “Essays in Music” program over CBS-WFBM at 9:30 o'clock tonight. Weber, Strauss, Sibelius, Tschaikowsky and Ravel will be among the composers represented. “
8
Duke Spurned by British Stations
S| | NEW YORK, Nov. 4 (U, P.).—| If the British Broadcasting Co. | doesn’t act soon, the Duke of Wind- | sor’s former English subjects will hear his radio greeting to America | Nov. 12 ‘only over powerful sets | capable of pickihg up U. S. short- | wave stations. | When plans were completed to- | day to give the former ruler of the | British Empire almost a world-wide | radio audience for his broadcast, | BBC—which monopolizes British | radio transmission—made no sa |
to link England in the chain of stations which will carry the address. | The speech, which will be heard at 6 p. m. from Washington, will | be carried by the major networks | and many of the Eastern shortwave | stations in this country. The | Duke's . former Canadian subjects | may hear a rebroadcast of his ad- | dress through stations of the Ca- | nadian Broadcasting Commission. |
Around the Dial: Burgess | Meredith and Margalo Gillmore are | to play scenes from “Ned McCob's | Daughter” on Kate Smith's program | tonight. . . . Major Bowes’ Amateur Hour will pay tribute to Knoxville, Tenn., on tonight's broadcast. . . .| The three guests on the “We, the ! People” broadcast tonight will be | Gen. Pepino Garibaldi, adventurer | son of the famous: Italian liberator, | a woman who speaks 340 words a | minute and a telegraph messenger boy who was requested to deliver & birthday kiss for an absent lover. . . . Bing Crosby will introduce Giovanni Colonna, a singer whom he discovered in Spokane, Wash., on the Music Hall broadcast tonight. Other guests are to be Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and Fay Bainter of the movies. . . . Walter Huston will be heard in a one-act play, “Journey Postponed,” on Rudy Vallee's program tonight. toe
| trend toward
known screen personalities as Sophie Tucker, Eleanor Powell, Pete Ted Healy, Una Merkel, Judy Garland, Buddy Ebsen, Igor Gorin, Helen Troy, Betty Jaynes, Ilena Massey, George Murphy, Gus
| Edwards, Eva Tanguay, Trixie Fri- | ganza, Cliff Edwards, Irene Frank-
lin, Arthur Rosenstein and Dave
| Gould’s dancing girls.
The master of ceremonies on to-
| night's show will be one of M-G- | M's directors, [who 32 years ago was starring in | two-reel hart will be the musical conductor
Robert Z. Leonard,
thrillers. Herbert Stotfor the series, and music will be supplied by Meredith Willson’s orchestra and a 20-voice chorus. Ted Pearson will be the announcer. Provision for the exclusive radio use of the film company’s talent by a single sponsor marks the - first agreement of this kind in radio history. With allowance being
| made for previous commitments the
entire acting and writing personnel of M-G-M will be available for the program. Many of the film company’s important pictures will have radio previews on the program, with stars playing the roles in which they are to be seen later in the pictures. It would seem that the sponsors of the show, recognizing the popular the employment of screen talent on radio, have stolen a march on their competitors.
”® » »
WIRE today announced plans for a series of broadcasts that will feature musical organizations from all the Indianapolis high schools. Beginning tomorrow at 2 p. m., the first in the series will be heard with the first program originating from Caleb Mills Hall at Shortridge High School. The music presented on the program will be played by the Shortridge concert orchestra. The broadcasts, which will be known as “High School Music on Parade,” will be heard cvery Friday from a different high school through WIRE'S remote control facilities. Various types of music will be featured on the broadcasts which parents are invited to attend. Bill Frosch, who has arranged the series in cooperation with local school officials, will announce the programs.
The schedule as completed for this vear follows: Nov. 5, Shortridge; Nov. 12, Crispus Attucks; Nov. 19, Washington; Dec. 3, Broad Ripple; Dec. 10, Manual, and Dec. 17, Technical. The series of future broadcasts after the first of the year will be announced. 5 u o
A four-cornered debate on “What Should Be America’s Foreign Policy in the Far East?” opens the third season tonight of America’s Town Meeting of the Air” program, which is devoted to the discussion of foreign affairs. Presented under the auspices of the League for Political Education in co-operation with NBC, the Town Meeting, scheduled for 22 weeks, will be heard over NBC-Blue from 8:30 to 9:30 p. m.
Four divergent views on our Far Eastern policy will be expressed by James G. McDonald, former League of Nations High Commissioner, who will outline the Administration's viewpoint; Frederick Moore, American adviser to the Japanese Embassy and spokesman for the Japanese; Nathaniel Peffer, famous writer and lecturer on the Far East, and Prof. Edwin Borchard of Yale, who favors a strict neutrality policy. As in previous seasons, questions and answers between audience and speakers will feature the program immediately following the talks by ths exponents of the different points of view. George V. Denny Jr., director of the League. for Political Education, who conceived the Town Meeting program, again will preside. According to Mr. Denny, the meetings are unrehearsed and uncensored and seek to revive the traditional town meeting of early America.
‘MEMORY ROOM’
Sophie Tucker doesn’t believe in pasting her pictures in a scrapbook. Instead, the actress uses them to paper the walls of her “memory room.”
Hear Ye! Hear Ye!
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