Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 November 1937 — Page 35

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PAGE 35

HOLD EVERYTHING wove iv Victor Bay's Musical Essay to Describe ~ Origin and History of Thanksgiving Day; Four Will Discuss Effects of Science SYMPHONY GOES THROUGH DRILL]!

THURSDAY, NOV. 25, 1937 OUR BOARDING HOUSE

727

With Major Hoople

UM-Mnmn SO MY SECRETARY DISPATCHED A LETTER TO THE MAGNATES WHO ARE BIDDING FOR MY REVOLVING POWER DOOR An KAFE «KAFE J LUNLESS THEY PAY ME MY PRICE TI SHALL ORGANIZE MY OWN COMPANY nnn HAW / WHEN THEY SEE ME INSTALL MY DOOR IN EVERY OFFICE

EXCUSE ME I= 3

Zl 1 APPEARTO 77) BE REACHING ZA WN FRONT OF | Z7\ You, MAJOR, 77 BUT TILL HAVE A SLICE OF T= BIRD I'M FED UP WITH ALL TH’ BALONEY YOUVE BEEN DISHING our’

Kate Smith to Introduce Heroic Mother Who Rescued Children.

COAST TO COAST, THEY'LL SHOWER THE IR

MILLIONS UPON ME

Sr

THATS A BOY, M ATOR AMA KE THEM PASS SOME OF TH GRAVY YOUR WAY, BUT BE CAREFUL { THEY DON'T STUFF 7s (\_ YOU FULL OF es ArpLEsaucE

TONIGHT

PM. 7:00Kate Smith, CBS-WFBM, 7:00-~Rudy Vallee, NBC-WIRE. 8:00-Major Bowes, CBS-WFBM, 8:00-Good News of 1938, NBCWLW. 9:00~Bing Crosby-Bob NBC-WIRE. 9:30-Essays in Music, CBS-WFBM, 11:00-Benny Goodman's Orchestra, MBS-WGN. 11:30=Wayne King's MBS-WGN. Victor Bay's Essays In Music program at 9:30 o'clock tonight on CBS-WFBM is to feature a dissertation in music on the origin and history of Thanksgiving Day. The Largo from Dvorak's New World Symphony will be used for the introduction and transitions to carry out the basic theme of the founding of the new world. Two MacDowell works, illustrating Ine dian life and the arrival of the Pil grims, will follow the introduction, Other selections will symbolize the conflict and eventual peace betweon the Puritans and the Indians and the proclamation of the first nations al Thanksgiving in 1863,

Burns,

Orchestra,

1)

HF

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“Hello, Petey! C'mon over, Mama's gone to one of those child training lectures again.”

ZN em AND HELL COLLECT MORE GREASE SPOTS ON HIS VEST= n-2s

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

ARE YOO STEPPING OCT THIS EVENING, BOQTS ~ 2222

—By Martin

WE ARE OMX Tt Wooo Bt MORE Ww KEEPING WITH THE WRRVEST SEASON F WE MACE EVERNONE PAY FOR A CHANGE

IN KEEPING WITH THS SEASON OF THE YEAR .1 THOR YOU AND BARE OLGHT TO HAND OUT A FREE TORKENY OIMNER AT THE TEA ROOM

NOW, STEPHEN - DONT | OR, OF COURSE!) BOTHER BOOTS! SHE {| OF COURSE !'BY AND THE BUNCH ARE | THE WAY,

GONG TO THE HARVEST | ew |

National politics and economics are to be cast aside on America's Town Meeting of the Air tonight. On this day, when people supposedly roflect on the measure of happiness life holds for them, the question, ‘Has Science Advanced Human Happiness?” is to be raised. Four noted personalities are to attempt an answer at 8:30 p. m. over the NBC-Blue. They are Dr, Kirtley Mather, Harvard University geology professor, who will speak as a scientist; Miss Char lotte Carr, new head of Chicago's Hull House and former Emergency Relief Bureau head in New York, who will discuss the question in it relation to home life; Alfred Edward Wiggam, writer, speaking as an interpreter of science, and Ralph Borsodi, director of the School of Living, Suffren, N. Y., an advocate of industry decentralization and the “back to nature” movement. His school teaches its students to produce life's necessities without the aid of modern science,

The topic is being presented as a result of many listeners’ requests,

DI Many hours of intense practice are required before each weekly NBC Symphony Orchestra concert is ready to be broadcast on Saturday night. In the four scenes above Concertmaster Mischa Mischakoff is shown drilling the string section of the orchestra in a private ree hearsal. Upper left: The strings caught in an informal moment before the rehearsal begins, with each musician studying the part before him. Upper right: Mr. Mischakoff explains what he wants to one of the first violins. Lower left: A cellist marks a phrasing in his score. Lower right: The rehearsal gets under way, with at least four musicians displaying intense concentration,

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RADIO THIS EVENING

(The Indianapolis Times fs not responsible for inaccuracies in program ane nouncements caused by station changes after press time.) INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATY WFBM TRE 14 [70

1230 WIKE 0 LW 00 (CBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual)

“M. REG. U.S, PAT, OFF.

—By Brinkerhoff

CHICAGO WGN 70 (Mutual Net) Ozark Minstrels | ”» | ”»

1s THE LADY

or THE House IN =

ITS THAT AGENT, AGAIN - Inn FIX

NOW, You CAN TELL SHIM THAT THE LADY OF THE #ouse 16 TAKING A BATH AND CAN NOT BE DISTURBED,’

Nurse Corps Jack Armstrong Singing Lady Singing Sehool

Melodies Interviews Toyland Do You Know

Weber's Or, Angelo Science 3 Little Words Serenade Orphan Annfe Bob Newhall Tom Mix Lowell Thomas

Follow Moon Tea Tunes

"

OH-I ALMOST FORGOT, — WE HAVE & MAID TO ANSWER THE DooR Now

”" »

Hilltop House Joe Harold Turner Charlie Chan Orphan Annie

. 3 Jolly % ye J Chr, & Snorts Song Time

Easy Aces Vocal Varieties Sport Slants Charlie Chan

Toveenter Bob Elson Concert Trio Appleberry

Amos-Andy Vocal Varieties Lum-Abner Pleasant Valley

Rudy Valice

" ”

Phenomenon Sports Casa Loma Or,

c— Smith's Or, Arden's Or, King's Or.

Rudy Vallee

Gond News ”» »

Kyser's Or.

Arden’'s Or, Looking Jn

Al Wynkoop

» »

» Comedy Stars Tomorrow's Trib, A young mother who risked her

aa —=- | life to rescue her children from Whiteman's Or. | their burning home is to be in Weber's Revue | troduced on Kate Smith's program tonight as the winner of the first monthly $1000 heroism award, She is Mrs. Peter Weber, 27, of Ann Arbor, Mich, the radio audience's choice of three candidates named hy the nominating committee.

Mrs. Lillian Wald and Miss Jessie Simpson, the others cited by the nominating committee, are to receive $250 awards. The program also is to include the dramatization of incidents in which three more candidates for “Command Ap~ pearance” distinction figured.

Some kind of a record for dramatic activity is being established these days by Gretchen Davidson, who is appearing daily in the Broadway play “Many Mansions” and five mornings weekly on (he CBS radio serial “Magazine of the Air.” Miss Davidson estimates that she participates in 19 performances in a single week. She leaves the theater nightly at 11:20 p. m. and arises at 7:30 a. m, in order to be at the studio for 9 o'clock rehearsals, The radio program is broadcast at 11:15 a. m. and again in the afternoon for Western listeners. In addition to the 10 broadcasts and eight regular performances of the play, Miss Davidson almost always oppears in at least one special matinee or as a Saturday morning radio guest artist, Miss Davidson has secured a special taxi driver to speed her between studio and theater several times daily. ” » | Tonight Rudy Vallee observ? (Thanksgiving for the ninth consec~utive year without a real holiday (ainner. For since the fail of 1529 [he has been on the air every Thurs» |day night and he never eats a heavy - . | meal peofore a broadcast. Chicago, WBBM 770; WENR 870, | For that matter Rudy probably {will pe busier than usual tonight. He is to leave Hollywood immediately after the broadcast for New York, where the program will originale for the next month. After January

g Crosby

Buddy Clark Bing Crosby

Concert Or.

”»

—By Crane " OR, HO! WHAT DID T TELL YOU! LQOK! HERE COMES KMYMOOGA WITH HIS INDIANS, WE'LL HAVE AN ARMY OF OUR ©

Martin's Or, Weems’ Or.

n est

Paul Sulliva Theatre Dic

Cummin’'s Or.

Amos-Andy

News Variety Show " "

Poetic Melodies Sereenscoops News Olsen's Or.

10:00 10:15 130

73

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MEANWHILE | KY THE PVEMIES ? MAYBE WE CAN \\ WEN ORWELL HANDLE BREEZE N AND HER BOY A\L'CK THEM J FRIENDS, BUT N TOO!

CK. NHAT IE THAT NA ARMY OF PYGMIES No AN NN

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Goodman's Or, King's Or, ” ”

Berry's Or, Goodman's Or. Reflections

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Tucker's Or, Hill's or,

Meroff's Or.

Norvo's Or. ”» LL

Willams’ Or. Hoagland's or.

NNN . . § . ee Silent Williams, Or. William's Or.

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Hoagland's Or.

FRIDAY PROGRAMS

INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI WFBM_ 1230 WIRE 1400 WLW 100 (CBS Net.) (NBC Net) (NBC-Mutual)

Wa on Mall Sing. Neighbor Devotions Merrymakers

Mugical Clock ©

Moon River tay " CHICAGO WGN 720

(Mutual Net) ”

FR iN NG 130 Chuck Wagon Silent 45 od " Silent

Sunshine Time Musie Box

Early Birds " " » ”»

uartet eter Grant Arthur Chandler Gospel Singer

wd Varieties ”» ” ” Merrymakers Good Morning

"”

Betty Crocker

"Metro. Parade Musical Clock R. Maxwell Dessa Byrd Rose Room

wm 1 30 45 00 15 30 4

THAT I COULD, TO KEEP WILLIE STEEN IN HAND = BUT YOU'LL FIND IT'S NO PINK

Value Varieties Apron Strings

PERHAPS YOU COULD USE ANOTHER ‘STRONG ARM" ORDERLY =

"BUT WHAT ABOUT THIS YOUNG MAN) SNOOPING AROUND?

77 NOU WON'T NEED TO WORRY | ABOUT US BEING ANY TROUBLE, DOCTOR. I'VE HAD SOME PSYCHIATRY EXPERIENCE AND WOULD BE GLAD TO HELP YOUR REGULAR NURSES

WHY, THAT'S PREPOSTEROUS! WILLIE IS ONE OF OUR. MOST VIOLENT AND HOPELESS CASES!

SL

NEVERTHE = LESS, IT'S OUR OUTY TO

CHECK UP ON HIM, AND WE'D

LIKE YOUR. Us =

SOU SEE, DR. WATKINS = THE COMMISSIONER hb TH INAS THAT YOUR PATIENT, WILLIE STEEN, MAY STILL BE CARRYING / ON HIS OLD ACTIVITIES

EVEN THOUGH HE HAS BEEN PRONOUNCED

ady Widder Jones

Crane-Jovee

Get Thin Mail Box

Mrs. Wiges Other Wife Plain Bill Children

David Harum Backstage Wife Charming Party Line

Linda's Love

Mvrt-Marge

9:15 Mrs, Farrell

9:30 9:45

2 H'boat Hannah

Don Pedro Children Painted Dreams Melodies

Magazine

Bie Life

10:00 10:15 | 10:30 | 10:45

News Road of Life Buckaroos Goldbergs

Sister Stories

Store Woman Harold Turner uin_ Ryan /e Are Four

Girl Alone Novelty Aces Fa rm Hour

Home Town Singin’ Sam Linda's Love Farm Hour

00 Mary M. McBride ! Edwin C. Hill Farm Circle ! Farm Bureau

”» Voice of Fxp. Kitty Keene

Bob Elson Buckaroos Seryices r

Gov't, Market

WIRE Reporter Police Court

Fenture Time ”» ”»

Concert Or, Wife vs, See. Lucky Girl B. Fairfax Romances June Baker Good Health Harold Turne» Four Stars | Lady of Millions Len Salvo String Sextefte

Woman's Eyes Rope A'den School of Alr

Schumann's Con, Schumann's Con, " 4, " "

fay Robson Tnannounced

B. Fairfax

Young

Pub. School Prog. Pepper "” " Ma Pe

News Fohemians Jenny Peabody Four Clubmen ES

Varieties " "w ”n

Lorenzo Jones Club Matinee

Bookends Gold Coast Senate Questions Dr. Dafoe . Follow Moon Tea, Tunes

Hilltop House

S

n = E=D | ARE NDAD | MIS

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

| say | 3 9

M Hatterfields

|

Nurse Corps Ozark Minstrels Jack Armstrong je “i Fairviand Lady

Singing School

Y. M. C. A, Prog. Interviews Toyland Yes or No

never occurs to them to center their | lives and affections on some one oe) ———“—_“ Where to find other stations:

dividual. Thev are usually very Bas EY sually VEY | coMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND 560.

happy people, but love is not essen- | Good Radio Music Rudy plans to return to Hollywood

tial to their happiness. Second, | those to whom love is a compensation for the ills and deprivations of their childhbod. A heartless or mis- By JAMES THRASHER J : understanding father or jealous ; - | vo begin work on a picture. mother or marble-hearted aunt who | At the last moment, NBC took pity on its Midwestern listeners who | reared them may have made them | have been waiting for months to hear the first performance of Schu- | | long so passionately for love and | mann's violin concerto. “ protection that they think of love Originally the broadcast

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| EASTERN AND | HEMISPHERES HH ARE NOT DEFINED OEFINITELY/

SOME MAPS USE THE MERIDIANS /5° w. AND /&S°E. AS THE DIVIDING LINES, WHILE OTHERS USE

I DON'T NEED MEN, WITH ACHINES LIKE THAT!

” » .

Although he has been identified with the “Bob White"tune for the

Var past month or so, Bing Crosby

DO LABOR-SAVING Tans

Ibe interviewed by Walter D. Hick- |

THE MERIDIANS 20°W. AND /8O°L. |

«<7 Az COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE, ING. ~ BIRDS

SOMETIMES BuiLD THEIR NESTS IN THE SKUNK CABLAGE PLANT, TRUSTING TO ITS FOL. OLOR TO KEEP AWAY INTRLDERS,

CC)

if Tm

CarvRI@wT I9BT

MAKE MORE JOBS THAN TAKE AWAY > ney

YES OR NO wee

ARE SOME PEOPLE WITH FINE MINDS AN

2 D 1 NATURES 4 INCAPABLE OF

j L RENE?

NES = Nun

S— on hin

WAL Onl -

only as the passion to receive and it never occurs to them that love is also giving. NEXT—Are we an athletic-

minded people? COMMON ERRORS

Never pronounce bouquet — bo- |

kay; say boo-kay’ or boo’'-kay.

Best Short Waves

THURSDAY

scheduled to be shortwaved from | Germany at 6:15 a. m. tomorrow. But a welcome correction arrived in the nick of time, changing the

scheduled for 40 minutes, and WIRE will carry the first half hour. You should be able to catch the remaining 10 minutes on some nearby Red network station. | The story of the “lost” concerto has been told too often of late to i need repeating. A brief account of | the circumstance surrounding its

Tuesday. It is enough to say that to Wilhelm Kulenkampfl goes the

. m. The program is | ’ a Je |ecdotes covering the last half-cen- |

“discovery” appeared in this column |

(man. “50 and More Hoosier Thanksgivings.” | Mr. McGibeny has a fund of an-

|[tury. He also has the recollection of pearly a hundred times 50 violin students who have come and gone |during his 40 years as a teacher here. Mr. McGibeny has taught such violinists as Eddy Brown, Thaddeus Rich, Benjamin Whitman and Otis Tgelman. Likewise he has a long land noteworthy career as a recital-

[ tras. Some of Mr. McGibeny’'s present

The interview's title will be |

ist and conductor of student orches- |

found out, to his embarrassment the other day, that he didn’t know all the words. He arrived at a “Music Hall” rehearsal with the words of several of his other numbers but not “Bob White.” And Johnny Scott Trotter's orchestrations didn’t have the words on them. Then Robin Burns remembered that he had heard Bing's phonograph recording of the number at a nearby restaurant en route to the studio. Bing quickly dispatched a stenographer—with several nickels—to the restaurant to copy the words from the record and the rehearsal got under way,

THIS may be the immediate |trial revolution have made thou- —4 p.m. German books. || honor of translating the printed | ~~ v

CoG,

cause, but according to the Freudian psychology the real cause

sands one.

of jobs where they took away |

BERLIN DJD, 11.77 meg BERLIN—6:30 p. Day.” special broadcast. meg.

m. “Thanksgiving DJD. 11.77%

| notes into sound for the first time | | in public. He will be accompanied

pupils will offer tomorrow's musical program. The broadcast time has been changed from 5 to 5:30 p. m.

Radio Notes: Elizabeth Patterson, {screen character actress, will be in-

by the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. NBC had the American broadcast | Tights sewed up almost as soon as the performance was proposed. The premiere originally was set for Oct. 20, with Yelli d’Aranyi as soloist with the BBC Symphony in London. Later German authorities decided | the initial performance should be in SUES Wallive 120M. | Times Specin Major Bowes honors Charlotte, N. C,, ® B= WASHINGTON, Nov. 25.—Appli- on his Amateur Hour tonight. » . On the Jordan Conservatory pro- cations for two mew broadcasting Emily Post, on her broadcast tos er ym v one of the most be- | stations, to be located, respectively night, somewhat belatedly will tell Th sr Soant figures in In- in Hawaii and South Célolina, have [you how to be courteous in refusing ; .. ‘by the second helping of turkey. :

may go much farther back. As an, The same is true of the sewing | anonymous psychologist points out ' machine, the steamship, automobile. | in the Literary Digest, the real cause | etc. The radio and airplane have of these lapses, such as brushing | taken away almost no jobs but creyour teeth with your shaving soap, ated thousands. handing the conductor a burning | society is brutally at fault in mot cigaret and tossing your dime into seeing that the old workers are prothe gutter, etc., may go back to chil- | vided with new jobs and retrained, hood repressions, frights, inferior- |bu., on the whole the machine | ities, thwarted wishes and the like. |creates more jobs than it destroys.

=” = = ” ® = THIS is one of the very largest CERTAINLY. There are two questions of our machine age. «J kinds of such people. First, is an emphatic : n other |

[ISWEC f b i hl 11, ISD vi) are S$ H

AS SEEN IN THE MOVIES, 1S PRODUCED BY SPRAYING A WATERED SOLUTION OF MINERAL OIL,

over WFBM. In December, the con- | terviewed on Mrs, Elza Schallert’s servatory hopes to present a series | movie review program tonight. of 30-minute programs on Saturday Sophie Tucker makes her debut as afternoons over the same station. la radio dramatic actress tonigit {when “Thoroughbreds Don't Cry” is presented on the “Good News of 1938" program. . As guest star

PERMITS ASKED _ FOR 2 STATIONS [on his “Muskeal Re evil "prosont

| Frank LaForge, famous pianist. .

BOSTON—T nD. m Fundamental Economics. T., 6.04 meg. LONDON—7:20 p. m

The Adven- | tures of Shorty and Conky :

in “A

Day's Fishing, . 15.31 meg.. GSD. 11.75 meg.: GSB. 9.51 meg. 39 p. m. The Waltz Hour. , 5.8 meg.

PRAGUE CZECHOSLOVAKIA—T:30 p. m. Ore (old Czech baroque masters). , 11.84 meg.

24 RON m. ‘Musings of a u" k. GSD, 11. ¥] "e. mel oh mek | PARIS 2 . m. News in English, 4, 11.72 meg. n B 0--11:45 y “Japan's chine anuTActuting Industry.” a ;, JZK, 15.16 meg.

Of course, ‘our CARACAS 17 YV5RC

THE prime meridian, and its continuation, the 180th meridian, are not used as divisions for the eastern and western hemispheres of the

earth, since this would divide the British Isles, LI

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