Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 November 1937 — Page 27

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THURSDAY, NOV. 11, 1087 _ OUR BOARDING HOUSE

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ME NETINEV van HE'S STAIR BACK WITH MY OLD ALMA MATER wan TUEEY 1S OPS AS PASSER waa LAST SATURDAY HE TOSSED A FORWARD “THAT TRAVELED 65 YARDS, AND ON “TH' NEXT PLAY HE CARRIED TH’ BALL FOR 18 YARDS FOR A TOUCHDOWN!

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MAJOR, MEET TUFFY |Z] EGAD, TUFFY! YOUR EXPLOITS SMACK ) FAMILIARLY OF MY FEATS WHEN I WAS A STAR AT OLD EL “A FUFF «F wae MY ARM HAD BEEN FORTNIGHT, BUT WITH HARVARD & POINTS IN THE LEAD, AND ONLY 30 SECONDS TO PLAY, I WAS CALLED INTO “THE Game / 1 HEAVED A PASS FROM MY OWN BE-VARD LINE AND SPRINTED THE LENGTH OF “THE FIELD, TO FORM INTERFERENCE FOR THE RBCENVER! TO MY AMAZEMENT, | 1 SAW THE BALL SPIRALLING ABOVE ME. 1 CAUGHT MY OWN FORWARD PASS, OF ) SOME 90 VARDS, AND WENT OVER

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IN A SLING FOR A

FOR A TOUCH = DOWN wa KARE - KAFEF wa “THEN I KICKED GOAL TOR THE WINNING POINT!

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F “THERE (|) WERE LONGER PASSES, HE | THREW THEM=

"With Major Hoople HOLD EVERYTHING

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“What’ll we do .

, eat him, or send a message?”

—By Martin

BOOTS AND HER BUDDI

[1 SAY, CORA HAS |BOCTS HEARD ANY FURTHER WORD FROM STUFF, INCE HE WROTE THAT NE WAS MARRIED ?

4

1M [ SHE HASN'T MENTIONED HIS NAME | I PARE GAY SHE'S FORGOTTEN ALL ABOUT

!' TO LOSE

(WELL, AT LEAST. FOR THE PRESENT! T AMAGINE THAT'S WHY SWE WAS BEEN Eo) BUSY, HELPING OUT AT THE TEN Room!

\S TO FORGET ONESELF \S

SELF TO BE GANER | HORSE FN

TO 8E AN

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BY INGO, VOU HAVE YO 6\VE THE YOUNGSTER CREDIT | TUS JOLLY WEL REMARKABLE , THE GOO

0, HOUND SENSE SHE RNAS

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—By Brinkerhoff

No-No- NO. NO! LETS DON'T ASK MOM 2 FOR MONEY FOR, SQUYWATER, YET w THE POSTMAN HASN'T COME ~

WHAT S THE POSTMAN GOT TO DO WITH

STK Lt=u WASHINGTON TUBBS II

YES - A LETTER FROM Your DADDY”

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MOM , MAY. WE

AAVE SOME MONEY \ ROR SOUY WATER < i

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PONT DOTAER ME Now/ AY PocKET Boo 1s ON Ian TABLE. BLP YOURSELR2 Sy

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cR.M - BRINE HEE 1 J NYE

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—By Crane

MH! VA, PODNER. I WAS BEGINNING) SAY, IT WAS KINDA TO GET WORRIED ABOUT “YOU! "WORRIED, A TIME 0 TWO, MYSELF,

et ik ps

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PYGMIES, THEY THINK TM ONE OF THEM, AND

I CAN'T GET RIDOF i

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{T WAS A GOOD THING THE DOC TOR TOLD ME THE CELL BLOCK COULD BE SHUT OFF FROM THE REST OF THE HOUSE: LAvea HAS SUCCEEDED IN HER BOLD PLAN 0 WRAP VON! BODEN AND HIS GANGSTERS IN THEIR OWNS PRISON, AND NOW...

AND NOW... MY NEXT MOVE 15 TO FIND OUT WHAT HAS

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BECOME OF DR. JASON =

N THE MEANTIME, JACK LANE, ACCOMPANIED BY FEDERAL OPERATIVES AND A VIRTUAL ARMY OF POLICE, BEARS DOWN ON THE HOUSE OF THE NOTED CRIMINOLOGIST

WHOOOEEEE

COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE. ING.

MINNEAPOLIS, MINN, IS HALF WAY BETWEEN THE NORTH POLE \ AND THE EQUATOR. nn OXWVSEN., A HOUSE FLY may lay a half dozen or more batches of eggs in one summer, each batch numbering from 120 to 150 eggs. In warm weather the eggs hatch in from 8 to 24 hours, and in five days the insects are mature, ready to breed and carry on the work of propagation, * *

NEXT—What average elevation above sea level has the State of Delaware? 4

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maki thing

THIS'LL BE THE SENSATION OF THE VEAR, CHIEF)

diags

—By Thompson and Coll

JM! HOW DID YOU GET HERE IN THIS HOSPITAL BED? WHY, YOU'RE HURT!

RRR E ADY ASTOR SAID," MORE WOMEN LOOK AT MEN THE LESS TREY HOW ABOUT ITP

i

I JUDGE her ladyship meant that the more women discover men’s true character, the more they feel superior to them. If so, I think she was wrong. I think the more either sex understands the other the more they find to admire. She was correct that women — feminine women—do not wish to be like men.

Very few of them wish to adventure, fight, explore, build empires, own the moon: but they do wish to find in men the completion of their own qualities—the fulfilment of their dependence, motherliness, sympathy and passion for co-operation in life a richer and better each could make it alone.

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

Sede | UTH ARE THEY CORR

WHEN ARTE i CLAIM

pu Ba AE. IVORCE, CAPITAL ETC THE ROKE | EN LEARN PR VES ORNO

NOT in the least. All that has 4 changed is their memories. They remember a particular cold winter or hot summer or big wind and as time goes on they come to think this represented all the winters and summers and winds of their childhood days. Climate does change but only over periods of thousands of years. The Gobi Desert was formerly a fertile land and the many skeletons of tropical animals show that the Northern United States and Canada were formerly hot countries. But during anyone's life time the climate makes no chang» that can be noticed. ” ” 2 IT is a pretty general rule thal

‘WJ the less ‘a man knows the

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positive he is in his opinions. We see this in the violent, even bloodthirsty, views of people in backward districts, about problems of marriage, divorce, parental and governmental authority and the like. Enlightenment is the only thing that makes people tolerant of the other fellow’s point of view.

NEXT-—Will you lose your personality if you imitate someone whose personality you admire?

COMMON ERRORS

Never pronounce gigantic—jig-an’-tik; say ji-gan’-tik.

What we need most today is the attitude of growth, the sense of humility before the presence of God and the ultimate goal of perfection as revealed in Jesus Christ.—Rev. E. H. Hoefer, Rochester, N. Y.

Best Short Waves

THURSDAY

LONDON 6 & m, ‘The Part that x-Servicemen Can Play in Promating World Peace,” a talk by Major Sir Francis Fetherston-Godley. O, B, E,, Chairman of the British - Legion. SP, 15.31 meg.; GSD, 11.75 meg.; 9.51 meg. SCHENECTADY 6:30 §eisrss rum. W2XAD, 2XAF, 9.53 meg. CARACAS—6.:45 p, m, Juan Alvarado, singer. YVS5RC, 5.8 meg. PRAGUE, CZECHOSLOVAKIA --7:40 p. m, Czech Dances. OL RIA. 11.84 meg. BERLIN—8:15 p.m Contemporaty German concert music. DJD, 11.7

ONDON-0:30 bn. and __Reme meg.; GSC,

p.m. The 15.33 meg.

tans Va of ce. h 9.58 mex; 88h: OKYO--11:46 0. m. Orchestra selections, JZK, 153s meg. $ . —3:3 G.'P.

SYD! A ALIA 0 a, MN. (Friday. Chimes rom 0. gyaney. VK . 9.50 meg.

Radic Technicians Sit Down Siri

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Keeps WOR, Outlet for MBS, Off Air;

CBS Is to Dramatize Red Cr

APPEAR ON SUN

DAY PROGRAMS

Pierre Monteux (left), distingu the newly organized NBC Symph

Saturday night over 140 stations of the combined NBC Blue and Red He will conduct the first three of 23 weekly scheduled conOlga Samaroff Stokowski, eminent American pianist, will appear as guest soloist with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra on next Sun-

networks. certs.

7 1 {( | 12:45

day’s broadcast over CBS-WFBM at 8 p. m.

ished French conductor, will direct ony Orchestra in its first concert

RADIO THI

(The Indianapoils nouncements caused by station changes

INDIANAPOLIS

WERM, 1230 (CBS Net.) (NBC Net

Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in prozram ane

INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1

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Nurse Corns Jack Armstrong Singing Lady Singing School

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(NBC Net On Mall Devotions

Early Birds "

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Hoagland’s Or.

FRIDAY: PROGRAMS

INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400

Williams’ Or. Hoagland 's Or.

Joy's or, Moon River

CINCINNATI (NBC-Mutual)

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CHICAGO WGN 52 (Mutual Net.)

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Pub, School Prog. Pepper Young H " g Ma Perkin

Concert Or. Wife vs. See.

Lucky Girl B. Fairtan

Romances June Baker Good Health avallo’s Band

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Tea Tunes Hilltop House Where to find other stations:

Organ Recital Yes or No

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Symph, Speakers

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

Good Radio Music By JAMES THRASHER

Maria Maximovitch, Russian-born soprano who has gained considerable European distinction, may be heard in her American radio debut at 5 p. m. tomorrow cn CBS, Accompanied by an orchestra under Howard Barlcw’s direction, she is to sing “Ritorna Vincitor” from “Aida,” the “Air de Lin” from Debussy’s cantata, “L'Enfant Prodigue,” and Gretchaninoff’s

Dr. Friendly ary ary o n Hatterfields

rog. Nurse Corps Jack Armstrong Fairyland Lady Singing School

Chicago, WBBM 770; WENR 870,

Four Brats Lady of Millions Len Salvo Opry House ”» ”» ”» ”»

“Over thé Steppe.” Mme, Maximovitch won the CGirand Prix de Chanteat the Paris Conservatory, from which she was graduated in 1931. She spent two years at the Paris Opera and has sung with success in various other music centers. To complete the half-hour program, Mr. Barlow will conduct the Overture to Cimarosa’s Opera, “The Secret Marriage”; the Allegro Giusto from the “Aida” ballet music, and two Debussy compositions, “Fantoches” and the Passapied from the “Suite Bergamesque.” 8 ” ”n At the same hour tomorrow on WFBM, the Arthur Jordan Conservatory will offer the second “edition” of its “Jordan Music Weekly.” A group of the school’s instructors will present the musical program. They are Jules Salkin, viola; Marie Zorn, piano; Virgil Phemister, basso; Charles Munger, trumpet, and Jennings Saumenig, percussion. Walter D. Hickman, who formerly conducted WIRE's “Magazine of the Air,” is serving in a similar capacity on the local music school’s broadcast series. nH. vv At 8:30 o'clock tonight, Alfred Wallenstein will conduct his Sinfonietta in a program made up of Wagner's “Siegfried Idyll,” a set of Swabian folk-dances by the contemporary German, Fortner, and the seldom-heard Overture to Weber's “Aub Hassan.” The broadcast will be on WOR and Eastern Mutual stations. 5 n n Ralph Vaughan-Williams’ song cycle, “Wenlock Edge,” which is a setting of six of A. E. Housman’s “Shropshire Lad” poems, will be sung ®y Charles Haywood, tenor, during a CBS broadcast at 2 p. m. tomorrow. Bernard Herrmann will direct the accompanying chamber orchestra.

yy n. % Radio Bhorts: From Hollywood

Actors Guild and American Federation of Radio Artists are planning to clamp down upon free radio appearances of screen celebrities. One feminine radio broadcaster who depends entirely upon her ability to get stars to broadcast gratis is said to be plenty worried over the proposed move. . . . Hollywood's salute to Eddie Cantor on his 25th anniversary in show business cost his radio sponsor and his studio $12,000 . .. A series of three phonograph records by Irene Wicker, the Singing Lady, has been released by Decca as the latest of their Children’s Story Series.

WLW WILL MOVE OFFICE LOCATION

Times Special CINCINNATI, Nov. 11, —Although not expiring until Dee, 15, the lease oh the offices and studios of WLW and WSAI in the downtown Union Central Annex has been discontinued, and the facilities will be centralized in the Arlington studios, some 12 miles from the downtown sector, The eighth floor of the combined studio and manufacturing plant is being remodeled at a cost of between $12,000 and $15,000 to accommodate 300 actors and reserves, as well as | 50 employees of the continuity, sales | and music departments. The mant- | facturing plant will be moved from

Karloff Is to Feature Vallee Hour Tonight.

WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 (U.P) = Radio's first sit-down strike today silenced WOL, Washington outlet for the Mutual Broadcasting Sys tem. Technicians and radio operae tors ceased work in a dispute over union contract negotiations,

Technicians, organized by the Committee for Industrial Organiza. tion's affiliated American Come munications Association, voted 4a strike last night when contract nee gotiations with the station were deadlocked.

At 6 a. m, today the station was scheduled to go on the air. Technicians reported at the statioi but sat idly at their posts, declining to make the broadcasting hookup.

Negotiations for settlement of the strike were underway but there was no indication when or whether agreement would be reached.

All technicians at the station were on strike, four being posted at the radio control room switches and three at the transmitter in the WOL studios. Announcers and radio performers, idle besause, of the strike, chatted with the technicians, but no move was made to put the station back on the air. Service over the Mutual Broadcasting network was not inter rupted. Chain programs ordinarily routed through Washington wete diverted to other channels so that programs of stations in other cities would not be disturbed. No change in Mutual schedules was necessary as no programs had been planned for origination here today.

The WOL management said that it had been in the midst of contract negotiations when the strike was called without warning.

“The company refuses ta negotiate further until the station has been put back on the air,” a statement said. “But we will resume negotiae tions immediately on the happens ing of that event.” Officials of the American Come munications Association said that they had not authorized the technicians’ strike but that since it had been called they would “back it to the limit.” WOL officials said that the con tract proposals of the technicians atked a wage scale equal to that in effect at a more powerful New York station and that other clauses were unsatisfactory.

n ¥ #

The annual American Red Cross Roll Call is to get under way with a broadcast, titled “Human Interest CGiuaranteed,” over CBS-WFBM at 9:30 p. m. today. The program 1s to dramatize various services which the Red Cross performs and is designed to explain the need for raising funds to carry on the organization's work during the coming year. The Red Cross’ work ih teaching children how to save the lives of drowning persons, its visiting nurse system, its service to the Army, Navy, Marine Corps and war vet erans, its highway aid stations and its rescue work during such disasters

| a8 the floods early this year, are to

be pictured on the program, The latter playlet is to emphasize that Red Cross work does not end with the subsiding of flood waters, but continues in the task of rehabilitating homeless families. Copies of scripts for the dramatizations are to be distributed to organization chapters throughout the country, to be used by workers in soliciting funds for the Roll Call. Twenty radio actors and actresses are to produce tonight's program, with music to be provided by a symphony orchestra under the direction of Victor Bay. u » »

Rudy Vallee is to present an un usual dramatic feature on his program at 7 p. m, today over NBO. WIRE, when Boris Karloff does a special Armistice Day drama in the form of a monologue soliloquy. The drama is called “Resurrection.” William 8. Hart, cowboy star of the early films, is to be the subject of Mr, Valiee's weekly interview. The broadcast also is to introduce the Novello Brothers, comedy feam who get laughs by fmitating birds. Music by Cappa Barra’s harmonica octet and a two-way conversation between Tommy Riggs and the figment of hig imagination, Betty Lou, are to round out the variety hour.

® 8 @»

Joan Crawford and Spencer Tracy are to be costarred in a radio preview of “Mannequin,” their recently completed M. G. M. picture, as the feature of the second broadcast of “Ctood News of 1938” at 8 p. m, today over NBC-WLW, “Mannequin,” the first picture in which Mr. Tracy and Miss Crawford have played together, has its setting ih a New York tenement district. Ih supporting roles are to be several members of the film cast,

Hear Ye! Hear Ye!

The United States Government insures ‘your ‘savings (up to $5000) inh the First Pederal Savings an Loan, : We offer you absolute safety, convenience, ‘and an uninterrupted record of substantial dividends.

TUNE IN ON ‘WFBM

the eighth to the seventh floor. Crosley officials stated that the | change is being made because’ the company’s new $1,000,000 radio building, now under construction at, | Chickasaw and Warner Sts, would | be ready for occupaney in the spring and the new $500,000 plant at suburban Clifton Heights would be completed late next summer. A new auxiliary plant at Richmond, Ind, | has been completed, and will consti tute a relief unit for the »!

comes the report that the Screen

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nati plant, officials said.

545 TONIGHT | Listen Ani id

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