Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1937 — Page 15

MONDAY, NOV. 22, 1037 OUR BOARDING HOUSE

(Fz

A REVOLVING DOOR VYOKED UP TO A DYNAMO TC UTILIZE T™' MAN POWER THAT SPINS TH' DOOR! BARY/! THAT GIVES ME AN IDEA! sAY, IF YOU COULD TRAP TH’ POWER THAT MY TVYPETAPPER GENERATES,

ESAD, HORACE «AT HAVE WITHIN THE HOUR BEEN IN CONFERENCE WITH BIS POWER MAGNATES WHO ARE DICKERING FOR MY IDEA) A MILLION DOLLARS WAS MENTIONED ~KAFF wa KAFEE wa JUST THINK!

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES HOLD EVERYTHING

PAGE 15

By Clyde Lewis

Stories of Milk to Be Dramatized On Commerce Department Program; Children’s Theater Broadcasts Set TEST DISGUISED MICROPHONE ||

‘Margaret Sullavan and

Herbert Marshall

in

1 HOLD THEIR DESTINY IN THE HOLLOW OF MY HAND! WHY IT'S sTureNnpous’!

MANGLIN' UM, \You'D HAVE MAIN STREET

| SO LITUP ITD HAVE N A HANGOVER J] C - Nt 7:30—Margaret

mA A AL = - & = are fe WIRE. { A : : — / : , 4 : ; iin. 4 8:00—Radio Theater, CBS-WFBM. ET % ¥ s 9:30—Fashion Futures, NBC-Red.

Radio Play.

TONIGHT

7:00—~Burns and Allen, WIRE.

NBC-

Speaks, NBC-

*

="

> 9:30—Brave New World, CBS. 11:00—Tommy Dorsey's Orchestra, A ee Hs : i J) CE a S a , MBS-WLW. 4 : ¥ RS h 5 § 12:30—Kyser’'s Orchestra, " : : i ES WIRE.

MBS-

Louis Pasteur’s accidental discovery of the process of milk purification through heating will be on the Department of Commerce's “Stories of Industry” program tomorrow at 3:30 p. m. over CBSWFBM. Harry R. Daniel, heard regularly SE : ih ; : on the program, will relate other Sa SE : So Th i Fe : | interesting stories about milk and COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T.M. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. > ¥ | associated dairy products. Another : | dramatic episode will describe how

What appears at first sight to be an attractive centerpiece on this | D0lly Madison, wife of President super table in the Rainbow Room at Radio City, New York, is nothing Madisen, made te} Cheam jor else but a camouflaged NBC portable microphone. Such a microphone Le ri pat ) » fr tl will be used tonight in the broadcast of Fashion Futures over NBC=- B ae ar po pea of pont 1 ie Red at 9:30 p. m. Announcer Ban Grauer and NBC fashion editor Susiness Advisory Council wi .

i ‘ : R. E. Flanders, Jones and Lamson Betty Goodwin are shown giving the unusual piece of equipment a ‘ aed i test prior to its official debut. Machine Co. president. His subject

Ecc will be “Machines Make Jobs.” Also taking part in the program will be the U. 8. Marine Band. The dramatic episodes are being presented through the courtesy and co-operation of the U. 8. Office of CHICAGO Education. WGN 320 vy 4 » (Mutual Net.) Mrs. William R. Higgins, speak ing for the Children's Civic Theater, will be heard in three broadBR Singing Semaol 0 casts over WFBM this afternoon, Santa Claus Terry-Pirates borelo tomorrow and Wednesday at 5:30 ik tie Wor i A qpily, Joe p. m. On the programs she will

Let's Talk Psveh. 3 Little Words Serenade Buddy-Singer Civic Theater Orphan Annie Bob Newhall Charlie Chan tell Hans Christian Anderson's famous story, “The Princess and the

Local Govt. Tom Mix Lowell Thomas Orphan Annie Swineherd.” The broadcasts are

Shenominoh Freeman's. or. being made in connection with the i ms Children’s Civic Theater presentaHeidt's Or. tion of the fairy tale at Caleb Pick and Pat Mills Hall, Shortridge High " g School, next Saturday. " ” o Herbert Marshall and Margaret Sullavan are the featured artists to« night in the Radio Theater's production of Robert Sherwood's stage and screen success, “The Petrified | Forest.” Tonight's drama, heard at 8 p. m. over CBS-WFBM, will mark Mr. Marshall's fifth appearance on this program and Miss Sullavan's first. Mr. Marshall, as Alan Squier, will be cast in the role of the romantic vagabond which Leslie Howard por trayed so capably in both the stage and screen presentations. Miss Sullavan will appear as Gabby, and Eduarfio Cianelli, screen heavy, is cast as gangster Duke Mantee. & % “Where Do We Go From Here” will be the subject of an address by Senator Vandenburg (R. Mich.) when he speaks on the National Radio Forum broadcast tonight at 9:30 p. m. over NBCBlue. Senator Vandenburg is expected to discuss problems confronting the country and conditions which made necessary the calling of the special session of Congress, which convened last Monday. i ————— " & 8 Pon Pedro Ben Ames, veteran foreign cor= Painted Dreams respondent and world traveler, will Morning Melodies | oive CBS listeners “An Uncensored View of Spain” in a broadcast from 6:35 to 6:45 p. m. tonight. He recently has returned from a tour of the Spanish front. Ames, who inspected conditions in Madrid, Valencia and other spots along the war front, will be describing, for the first time, Spain as he saw it. Rigid censorship in effect in Spain pre=vented his broadcasting while there, Concert Trio » u ” Two major networks are to broadcast portions of the pretentious style show in the Wal-dorf-Astoria Grand Ballroom tonight. Both NBC and MBS will be on hand when 2000 stylists, fashion editors and executives of the fashion industry gather to witness the elaborate four-hour pageant of America’s latest styles. The scene of the show will be strictly “no man’s land,” as far as male announcers are concerned. Virginia Pope, New York Times fashion editor; Mrs. Ethel Holland Little, Woman's Home Companion fashion editor, and Hildegarde Fillmore, McCall's Magazine beauty editor, will be heard on the NBC-Red broadcast at 9:30 p. m. Martha Manning, Macy's adver=tising executive; Alice | Hughes,

o (edY THE TIME HE ARRIVES HOME ITLL BE A < RiLLION= =

~~

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES Look! DREAM ME LP A HALF DOZEN py WRAP

. -— OH. THERES TRE PHONE «TLL ANSWER \ LVRGERS ~N

\ = \y : ® 1 DONT RANE A S | ¢ 1 MM LP, OATE THiS BUENWNG, Pa bh. WILLYA ?

EN ay 2a

“What do ya say, Albert? Let's call it a day.”

—By Martin

VEAW «= OUT OF MY NEXT WEEK'S ALLOWANCE

RADIO THIS EVENING

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

INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI WEBM 123 VIRE 1400

230 WLW 00 (CBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual.)

YOU WANT TO TAKE THEM \F ANNONE WANTS T'RNOW

Bonnie Stewart unior Nurse

Follow Moon J Interviews Jack Armstrong

Ozark Minstrels Tea, Tunes * "

” ”

‘15 Hilltop House

Concert Trio Snorts Review Weber's Or. Concert Trio

Weber's Or. Unele Ezra Sports-News Charlie Chan

Amos-Andy James’

asa] on :

= GSHS

Money and Music

Burns-Allen Men Only "

Burns-Allen Foreign Affairs 1 3% Gavlord’s Or. Marearet Speaks Lone Ranger

ol HSnS

I'M 80 ASHAMED. IL BUSTED IN THERE, MAD AS A WET HEN -AND THOSE WOMEN WERE ONLY SERVANTS THAT MR.WooDs ENGAGED

7 BNE DAY HE ASKS ME T™ MARRY HIM AND THE NEXT DAY HE HAS THREE 2 LADY CALLERS _I'M GONG RT 15 FIND OUT ABouT THIS

Fibber McGee Kyser's or.

Charm Hour

“Radio Theater a.

Fibber MeGee ”» "”

Charm Hour Gypsy Concert

Tomorrow's ILrib,

- S Me

MR WOODS ENGAGED

King’s Or. Jury Trials Jury Trials Three Victors Arden’'s Or

Contented Hour ”» »

Sweet Adeline

Paul Sullivan " " Cummin’'s Or, ” " Meroff’s Or. Impressions

"” Melody Pageant

S352

Forward Indpls.

| soos] BBRmM| waters |

Poetic Melodies News

Amos-Andy } New Kaye's or.

News Meroff's Or. Variety Show

—— TOD pee | “Iud

=

Dorsey's Or. Hines’ Or. » »

Berry's Or. Dorsey's Or. Dorsey's Or. i "

Gavlord's Or.

Hamilton's Or,

i TF TF

gy py

Wise |

Himber’s Or. Gaylord’s Or.

Stapile’s Or, Kyser's Or.

Mpon River

Silent Stabile’s Or.

ts

B Kyser's or,

TUESDAY PROGRAMS

INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI WIRE 1400 ‘LW 00 (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual.) On Mall Mail Bag Devotions Merrvmakers

ee p—

WASHINGTON TUBBS II

CHICAGO 'GN 120 (Mutual Net)

INDIANAPOLIS WEBM 1230 (CBS Net.)

OROVY, LOCKIT Us GO! ONG! B

et — m— 6:30 Chuck Wagon 6:15 ” ”

ESPECIALLY YOU! [res HUNDREDS OF LOGS PARKED) BUT HOW “OU BY TH RIVER, HO HO! AN' YOU ~~ GONNA GET BOBIES THOUGHT I WAS: J WHOSE LOCS Dowh UGH \ h- J 2 = ; ONE OF 'EN ~~

OH, I GOT THAT FIGURED s3__ OUT, 10

~ o!

NR silent

Charioteers Sunshine Time Peter Grant ” y Chandler Chats Gospel Singer

Early Birds Musical Clock 3 Eb Varieties Music Box ”» » » » " "

“Valuer 5553

"Music in Alf “Merrvmakers Ayre ", i Evervday Words V “ Lindlahr

Musical Clock Dessa Byrd

2

Hymns Hone Alden Hello Peggy Widder Jones

Linda's Love All Answers Betty and Bob Houseboat

g

Morning Chat Apron Strings

Kitty Kelly Mrs. Wiges Myrt and Marge Other Wife Mrs. Farrell Plain Bill n id Today's Children

| sommes | ] Cre | me

or

Rose Room

Crane. ,Jovee

Get Thin Mail Box

|

y=

| wy

David Harum Backstase Wife Music Memories Party Line

Milky Way Magazine Big Sister Life Stories

News Road of Life Hi Povs Goldbergs

lt | ISD SPT

TX A |

2 §

Girl Alone Boy and Girl Arden’s Or. Len Salve Farm Hour Qun Ryan » We Four

Home Town Singin’ Sam Linda's Love Farm Hour

Swingin ‘dwin Farm Cirele Farm Burean

Blues Hil

\ MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE

E Arie R

A LENGTHY CONSULTATION WITH COMMISSIONER JOHNSON REGARDING THE STRANGE CASE OF WILLIE STEEN, : KILLER AND ¥ ; a 7 COUNTERFEITER 7 h A WHO DODGED 1 SENTENCE ON A | PLEA OF IN SANITY, MyRA / AGREES 10 p : Y 4 oY NN BECOME A / / \\

| Sl |

DS | yD

”» id » » Experience Kitty Keene

The Artist Agriculture Literature Ld »

Bob Elson Maine Gir! Midday Service

"Feature Time Govt. Market » ”» » »

Reporter Police Court

a

Wooo

1D HATE 70 YZ [77 JEALOUS, ARE YOUT WELL, YOU'LL TELL YoU P77) || SOON GET OVER THAT WHEN WE A A ARRIVE AT THE SANATORIIM AND Hone Alden WPA Concert GET NTO THE WILLIE School of Air May Robson

WHAT I'D vi 2 SE 7 7 7. 2 RL B. Fairfax

THANKS COMMISSIONER - ¥ ILL DO MY BEST, AND 7 DON'T WORRY ABOUT MR, LANE ~11L SEE THAT HE ON \ 58

Ta

ITS GREAT OF YOU TO HELP IN THIS CASE, MISS NORT!4, “CRE ARE YOUR | CREDENT/ALS. “POM NOW ON, YOURE ON YOUR OWN EXCEPT, | OF COURSE, WHAT ASSISTANCE VOU MIGHT BEG OF THE HANDSOME SERGEANT LANE,

~ a 7 GOOO0 LUCK!

/ WELL JACK - IT SEEMS

THAT ['M YOUR BROTHER Bohemians Don’t Look

it i | NISNS | SUD

Bea Fairfax

CALL 17) a Concert Trio Pepper Young g Varieties Ma Perkins i Jy Vie-Sade O'Neills

/ News Music of Eng.

Jer Concert or.

7

" ”»

Harold Turner

Bonkends Beh Byron Story of Indust,

pr. Friendly Concert Or, Marv Sothern f.adv of Millions Marv Marlin Rhvithm Ramblers Hatterfiields Songland

Lorenzo Jones Club Matinee

" ”»

~ “) ? iN nt ;

1X) 7 am ) y Te) Tes = =

<\ . 12 wl BEREAN THIS CURIOUS WORLD By William Ferguson ”Y LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

) Follow Moon Teg, Tunes

Hilltop House 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

The Philadelphia Orchestra broadcast tonight will include both an in- | novation ana a return to normal. The innovation will be in the program . | itself, for the Philadelphia will abandon the symphonic reper‘ory temspectations” cause practically all dis-| porarily in favor of the opera.

Nurses Ozark Minstrels Jack Armstrong * " Ringing Lady "» »

Singing School " »

Nellie Revell News Flashes String Ensemble Do You Know?

aia | WWysey | Wigiz1o |

\ E>

wT

DEFINITION OF A TEMPERANENTAL PERSON "ONE WHO 16 28 CENT TEMPER AND : PERCENT MENTAL" 1© TRI® TRUE? YESORNO___ 4

mild | Jat Fr

appointment, because they are so | rarely fulfilled.

NEXT-—Do you forget important |, and Tokatyan, Sidney De Vries engagements because you want to (and Louis D'Angelo. Alexander forget them? { Smallens, the able and experienced

opera conductor, will preside over the performance. COMMON ERRORS As for the “return to normaley,

it will be accomplished with the de-

»

“La Boheme” is scheduled for performance in a condensed version. | The entire story will be told, and the most important music sung by | Susanne Fisher, Lucy Monroe, Ar-¢ rn -

| Philadelphia Orchestra series. If, | he told the sponsors, a major syms= | phony orchestra was to be engaged, | there was no point in using it for

| light music. Th sponsors agreed, and the mu-

sic-loving listener is the winner.

New York Journal-American fashion authority, and Mrs. Carmel Snow, Harper's Bazaar editor, will be the commentators on the MBS broadcast at 9:45 p. m. o ” o Babe Ruth, Linton Wells, foreign correspondent and radio commentator, and Ted Peckham, who makes his living by running

Never pronounce forwatdesiop: |

erd; say for'-werd. an agency which provides male

escorts for lonesome New York women, will headline tonight's “For Men Only” program on WLW at 7:30 p. m. Babe will describe his golf match with the much publicized John Montague as well as his recent hunting trip to Nova Scotia,

ARTISTS USUALLY PAINT THE MOON LARGER THAN IT SHOULD BE/ WHEN DRAWN TRUE SIZE, IT APPEARS INSIGNIFICANTLY SMALL, AS SHOWN HERE / ™IS PICTURE, IF VIEWED AT ARMS THY, PORTRAVS THE MOON IN ITs APPROXIMATE APPARENT SIZE.

1 | two weeks as guest conductor. Mr.

It's the brightest day I ever saw. | Stokowski's trip East was enlivened I'd sure like to be out with the fel- | not only by his now-famous “Essay : | : lows today, playing baseball.—|on Taxi Service,” but by his intro- | amples of Sans Church yoisic oe Jimmy Sullivan, 18, of Brooklyn, en | duction of late ideas in broadcasting | Sooo D Ae er (OBS-WFBM “at route to Sing Sing for 78 years for | technique. 130 oa here Will De CSRMDICH SA. For his movie, “100 Men and a |g Gresorian chant, ecclesiastical | Girl,” he had nine microphones | nodes, and compositions of such | : | placed above various sections of the Ay sters as scobaldi, Vite diplomacy has become almost sy- | orinh orchestra. For his broad- Sally A a iy honymeus with deceit.—The Rev.| casts, he used five “mikes.” each | norales. ! Or. R. W. Sockman, New York City. | controlled separately. Usually the At the same hour, on NBC-Blue, | | radio orchestra is seated as for a| there will be more modal music, but | Leaders come and RO, but the i concert, with one microphone, like of a modern vintage. It is the | people remain. —Josef Stalin, Soviet | the listener's ears, catching all the Quartet in the Dorian Mode for |

Herbert Marshall DUE TO EXPECTING dictator. music from out in front. | piano and strings, by William Wal- | TOO MUCH OR EXPECTING | 2 = =»

TOO LITTL | ton. This work was heard in Amer- | Margaret Sullavan

YOUR ANSWER ae During rehearsals, Mr. Stokowski | ST the fist time last June, Yin | EDUARDO CIANNELLI

WwW | Tomorrow's performers will : Best Short aves | sat with the engineer in the control “ie \ . 1 THERE oo fat mote truth than | However, New York University as NDAY | room, while Saul Caston conducted. | be the Courtland Nano Quartet. DONALD MEEK (LL poetry in this definition for just surveyed its 48 graduates of the HONDY . . || Bach microphone was set at the | eo» ow IN two reasons, first because during a School of Commerce of the class of LONDON 3.0 By Mhiennobncgoo® || proper volume level at that time,| Beginning at 10 o'clock tonight | | [1811 d find \ feature program by Bey n_ Potter. ) : | i ED temperamental tantrum a person is an nds only one unemployed Sh Si neck GSD, 11.78 meg; | and there was no necessity for |on the NBC-Blue, the third and | THE D almost entirely dominated by his— and he average income of the vther STON. £30 bm. Modern Rais || Fe@djustment at broadcast time. Not fourth acts of Bellini’s “Norma” will | " lor her—emotions and the imtelli- a Jo & $11,440. My own belief is ‘meg. [a bad idea. be broadcast from the Chicag> FOREST gence is well-nigh put out of busi- WEY Crete does not pay a good | Everyone has fun at the Phila- Civic Opera House, : ness. Second. H. L. Hollingworth, | 00 © a £0, does pay a good many | | delphia Orchestra programs except| Gina Cigna, for whom the opera Robt. E. SIN ois play psychologist, has shown that people ng Would pay many who do not get was revived at the Metropolitan | DIRECTED BY Cecil B. deMille LOUIS SILVERS, Musical Director 8 P. M.

a oh | the studio audience. The orchestra who are temperamental and neu- 8 chance to ED . | 'is rearranged so that the studio |last season, will sing the name part. INDIANAPOLIS TIME

| rotic are on the average persons of | | listeners hear a preponderance of |The much admired Italian soprano | THAT shrewd philosopher, the Coost-te-Coast Columbia Metwerk

parture of Leopold Stokowski afer | nla

An orchestra under Bernard HerrI mann’s direction will illustrate ex-

a rossCOUESE

REALLY PAY? VEG ORNO

LUX RADIO THEATRE

TONIGHT

So prevalent is propaganda that METROPOLITAN oPERA CO.

SPENDS AS MUCH AS VZ000 A VEAR. IN RENT ANIMALS

|

BOSTON-—6:30 » Course. WIXAL 80% meg PRAGUE, CZECHOSLOVAKIA 7:55 p.m. Scenes from Foerster's operas. OLR4A. 25.3¢ m., 1134 mex LONDON—8:15 bv mm. Chow,” a musical tale of the GSD, 11.96 meg... GSC, 958 GSB, 9.51 meg.

BRIS oo Pp. Mm. “Shock-head-ed ter,” a fairy play. DJD, 11.77 meg.

PARIS 9 pm. Musical recordings. TPAY, 1.72 meg. A ovie

TOKYO 11:46 pp mm. BW by 0 Takemoto. JZK, . eg.

pes Shims row Bl ney. , 9.50 mer

“Chu Chin East

COPR, 1937 BY NEA SERVICE. INC meg:

[rather Jow intelligence. ere are 3 | second violins and drums. But the |starred in the same opera on the | ‘exceptions, but this is the rule. late James Harvey Robinson, | remote listener is the better for the | closing night of the San Francisco |

t & ¢ said to me, “Wiggam, you'll never be | arrangement and, after all, he's the | Opera season last week. happy until you have done two (one that all the fuss is about. | Others in the cast tonight will be A RECENT BOOK by John R.| things—settle the sex question and Another thing about Mr. Stokow- | Giovanni Martinelli, Ezio Pinza and Tunis—a study of Harvard quit expecting anything” I thor- ski, before we leave him. He issaii|Coe Glade. NBC's Bob Brown will gradpates out of college 25 years— [oughly agree with him. Few le to be responsible for the high stand- | give you a short story of the Druid Fave a rather depressing picture of jcan ever get to the point not ard of programs this year, in de-|princess and the Roman soldier value of & college education. expecting anything’ but “Great BEx- cided contrest to the last year's during pauses in the music.

ALTHOUGH the moon seems almost enormous to us when it is full, ft. nevertheless, fills a very small space in the sky. When drawn true size, for a picture that is to be viewed at arm's length, the diameter |

should be about one-fifth of an inch. * » *

NEXT-—How many stars are there in the galactic system in which we live? *