Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 December 1937 — Page 29
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PAGE 20 ® Clive Levis 7 mvke to Be Honored at Banquet on || Silver Anniversary as lllinois Coach;
Town Meeting to Debate Crop Control LOOKING FOR A QUESTION
THURSDAY, DEC. 2, 1937
HI-HO, LADS, TAKE A LESSON IN THRIFT IF YOU WANT TO REEK WITH HAPPINESS! | 1 HAVE THIS DAY PAID THE LOCAL COUNTING HOUSE THE LAST INSTALLMENT ON WY CHRISTMAS SAVINGS FUNDw~ HAWS IN TWO WEEKS IL SHALL F COLLECT A TIDY SUMMA NEW FUR FOR THE MADAM'S STOCKING, AND APPROPRIATE GIFTS FOR OTHER GUESTS IN THIS RAILIWIKCK J EGAD, HOOPLE MANOR, WILL RESOUND WITH YULE TIDE creEERS
BREEZE IS BLOWING ABOUT WHAT HES GOING “0 GWE SO HELL GET A BIGGER WINDFALL FROM ST. NICK “~WELL, HERES ONE SANTA CLAUS THAT WON'T BITE ON TH' BAIT “THAT BIG CHEESE PUTS IN TH RAP’
THAT! THERES BEEN A STRING OF HOLDUPS LATELY THAT THEY CAN'T ne ON ANYONE! GOSH TH! ONLY THING 1 SAVED THIS YEAR |S A COLLECTION OF OLD RAZOR BLADES!
‘Burns and. Crosby Hope | Announcer Will Ring Chimes Tonight.
TONIGHT 7:00—Rudy Vallee, NBC-WIRE. 7:00—~Kate Smith, CBS-WFBM. 8:00-—~Major Bowes, CBS-WFBM. 8:00—~Good News of 1938, NBCWLW. 9:00—Bing Crosby, NBC-WIRE. 9:15—~Coach Zuppke's Silver Tubilee Banquet, MBS-WGN. 9:30—Essays in Music, CBSWFBM. 11:00—Benny Goodman's Orchestra, MBS-WIRE. 12:00—Griff Williams’ MBS-WIRE.
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Athletic leaders and prominent figures from every section of the country will be heard in a coast-fo-coast broadcast tonight from Chicago where the University of Illinois coach, Robert C. Zuppke, will be the guest of honor at a testimonial banquet, The occasion is the celebration of Coach Zuppke's 25th anniversary as head football coach at Illinois. The broadcast, at 9:15 p. m. over MBSWGN, will originate in the Palmer House grand ballroom, where the jubilee banquet is to be held.
Included among speakers who are to be heard on the broadcast are Governor Horner of Illinois; Major John L. Grifith, Western Conference athletic commissioner; Frank W. Thomas, University of Alabama coach, who will speak for (he coaches of the country; Joe E. | Brown, film comedian; Branch Rickey, St. Louis Cardinals vice president; Arthur Cutts Willard, University of Illinois president; Harold E. “Red” Grange, Illinois’ famous “galloping ghost,” and Coach Bob Zuppke.
5 ” on
Arguments for and against the Administration’s ever-normal granary bill and the general ques« tion of crop control will be pre« sented on “America’s Town Meeting of the Air” broadcast tonight at 8:30 o'clock on NBC-Blue. Edward A. O'Neal, Ameritan Farm Bureau Federation president, will uphold the Administration’s bill as an advocate of crop control Opposing this viewpoint will be Frank E. Gannett, newspaper publisher, Rochester, N, Y.
The topic is “Should There Be Government Control of Agrieultural Products?” At the conclusion of the addresses, the audience in New York's Town Hall, where the Concert Or. broadcasts originate, will question Smith's Or. the speakers, Arden’s Or. # # #
King’s Or. ys Edward Arnold, celebrated Hollywood character actor, will headline the list of guest stars who are to appear with Bing Crosby and Bob | Burns on the Music Hall program | tonight at 9 o'clock on NBC-WIRE. { Mr. Arnold, best known for his screen portrayals of industrial magnates, will step out of charactér to night to exchange banter with the costars In addition to Mr. Arnold, Bing will introduce Barbara Weeks, screen ingenue, and Joseph Knitzer, brilliant young violinist. Mr. Knitzer, formerly a member of the New York Hoagland's Or. Philharmonic orchestra, is now in a , Hollywood to make his first motion picture. ; Messrs. Crosby and Burns, with a good sense for comedy, every week have Been poking fun at the ringing of the chimes by Announcer Ken Carpenter. They have built ingenious little dramas around the sounding of the three notes preliminary to station identifications. Last week they climaxed these skits with a novel twist which brought as many laughs as any gag on the program. After one of the guest stars had described the enjoyment he derived from hearing the chimes, Mr. Carpenter refused to strike the notes, explaining “I just don't feel like it tonight. I'm not in the mood.” Br Tara, yw a Indiana radio stations will e¢ooperate this winter in presenting bulletins concerning extreme weather conditions, station WIRE announced today. The State Departments of Safety and Public Instruction are to prepare émergency bulletins. This information is to be routed through WIRE to the other stations.
£ 3 ~ "= “ff i < pA 42.2 ' COPR 1937 BY NEASERVICE, INC. T.M. REG. U.'S. PAT
Gi
CHRISTMAS
“I lost my hatpin, so I'm wearing their Oskaloosa repreSOCK=
sentative!”
-—— \ -— DNR 12 COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. _T.M. REG. U. SP
J1> AND HER BUDDIES
' (WORERES | 1 DON'T NOW! POOR. DEAR, | ROOTS || I'M TERRIBLY WORKED ? Wg | ABOUT NER |. SHE WAS A PREMONITION THAT SOMETHING o> WRONG WITH RER BROTHER. ny
—By Martin
SURE! 1 TUNED TWP MYSELF
(OR NOTHING: T JUST WONDERED, THATS ALL
SWELL | WHY ?
JUST BEFORE SHE LEFTY, | wou Don't SHE TRIED TO GET WM, (| SAY || MY LONG O\STANCE , AND | WORD, TRAT LEARNED THAT The PRONE HAD BEEN O\S CONNECTED
HILO, WILLE | BAN 15 MY PLANE IN PRETTY &000 SHAPE ©
N The candid camera has caught George V. Denny Jr. founder and director of “America’s Town Meeting of the Air,” in a typical pose, After the formal addresses have been made, members of the “Town *t SR / Meeting” studio audience participate in a lively question-and-answer J x AK 7, period which is heard over the air. During the discussion, Mr. Denny, SS f ; as shown above, indicates who will be recognized next. The program is \ COPR. 1937 BY NEA heard tonight and every Thursday at 8:30 p. m. over NBC-Blue. |
U.S. PAT. OFF. _
—By Brinkerhoff
NOW, THIS ISN'T Your SUPPER - BUT MAYBE IT WON'T HURT TO &NE YOU TOMORROW MORNINGS BREAKFAST.
RADIO THIS EVENING
(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in program anpouncements caused by station changes after press time.)
INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI WFBM 1230 WIRE 1100 WLW 700 (CBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual) Y.M.C.A, Prog. Interviews Toyland Do You Know
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POOR SNOOKER - “THATS PRETTY TOUGH -sTAYINE IN BED---I BET HES HUNGRY ON EVERYTHING .
~AND You Have To sTAY IN BED
IDEA You MUST WITAOUT ANY
NOT CALL. AUNT EMMA “FATTY '< / SUPPER — FOR “TRAT’S VERY VEING SO = NAUGHTY ~
CHICAGO WGN 720 (Mutual Net.)
Nurse Corps Jack Armstrong Singing Lady Singing School
Follow Moon T
Ozark Minstrels ea Tunes H )
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Hilltop House Santa Claus Weber's Or. Chr. Science 8 Little Words Sports Orphan Annie Song Time Tom Mix Phenomenon Easy Aces Sports Vocal Varieties Casa Loma Or. Sport Slants News C
Kate Smith Rudy Vallee
Jolly Joe Harold Turner Charlie Chan Orphan Annie
Angelo Serenade Bob Newhall Lowell Thomas
Amos-Andy Vocal Varieties Savitt Serenade Pleasant Valley
Rudy Vallee
Hawaiian Or. Bob Elson Concert Trio
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arlie Chan
”» ” »” ” ” ”» ”» ”
Arden’'s Or.
Maj. Bowes » x Looking Jn
Good News Kyser's Or.
” ”
Al Wynkoop n n
Comedy Stars Tomorrow's Trib
WHY, TD PLANNED TO GIVE {| YOU A HALF INTEREST IN THE L COMPANY, I'D PLANNED TO A MAKE YOU MANAGERS, ID PLANNED —
) (THANKS, BREEZE, BUT— | GYPSY FEET. WE 1 (OH, YOU KNOW HOW ITS, / BIN SWAT TIN MOSQUITOES DOWN IN THIS OLD JUNGLE $0 LONG THAT WE WERE KINDA
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WELL, KID, WE'LL BE SAYING GOOD BME, AN GOOD LUCK.
Forum
Bing Crosby ? ” Zuppke Banquet
Buddy Clark Concert . Or.
Bing Crosby
” ” ” ”» ”» ”» ”» »
WHAT IS THIS —A RUN OUT?
ANY MORE. YOU'VE SOLD YOUR LOGS; YOU'RE SITTING, PRETTY.
OWE EVERY-
THING TO YOU, YOU OLD BOTTLEWASH
DOeD | WH0W | Tarr? 2253 | APN
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Weber's Revue
Amos-Andy aul Sullivan News heatre Digest NBC Concert » " Variety Show
10:00 10:15 10:30 10:45
Poetio Melodies Screenscoops
News L. Noble's Or.
Dance Or. Weems’ Or. Cummin’s Or. " sv Blaine’s Or.
Meroff's Or.
Goodman's Or. King's Or
11:00 Deutsch’s Or. Goodman's Or. TRY nachs man, 11:30 Himber's Or. Reflections 11:45 » " y
12:00 Silent : 5 ”» » ”» »
Williams’ Or.
Owen's Or. Hoagland's
“pugAous ApipATous | oppo (CBS Net.) (NBC (NBC-Mutual)
Chuck Wagon n Mall Sing, Neighbor " " evotions Merrymakers
William's Or.
Moon River
Williams’ Or.
Or.
VaCAGO WGN 720 (Mutual Net.)
Silent Silent
- - on
MYRA NORTH. SPECIAL NURSE
AVRA READS TO THE CRAZED MAN IN A Ia LOW, SOOTHING TONE , AND SOON WILLIE STEEN 1S COMPLETELY RELAXED
Net.)
6:30 6:45
Sunshine Time Music Box
VERY WELL, WILLIE - SINCE YOU'RE BEHAVING SO _NICELY- HOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO HEAR ABOUT KING MIDAS
OH - SO YOUVE HEARD HOW EVERYTHING HE TOUCHED TURNED TO GOLD! CAN YOU MAKE MONEY
NOT A THING WILLIE = NOW PLEASE BE QUIET IF YOU WANT ME TO READ
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NORD | OWS
uartet eter Grant Arthur Chandler Gospel Singer
Early Birds » ”n ” » ” »
Mugical , Clock Varieties
Merrymakers Good Morning
AND 50 THEY LIVED HAPPILY
Betty Crocker Hope Alden ady Be Good idder Jones
Musical Clock Dessa Byrd
Rose Room Mrs, Wiges
Metro. Parade . Maxwell Value Varieties Apron Strings feel Kelly
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Crane-Jovee di W
Get Thin Mail Box
Linda's Love yrt-Marge rs, Farrell " » Children
David ackstage harming Party Line
Harum
Twin Pianos Wife
Magazine Bi Sister Life
Stories Mary M. McBride Edwin C. Hill Farm Circle Farm Bureau
2D Looe WRRW afetaloy
News Road of Life Buckaroos Goldbergs
Girl Alone Texans Farm Hpur
Store Woman Melodies uin Ryan 'e Are Four
Home Town Singin’ Sam Linda’s_ Love Farm Hour
2353 | 28953 | 5352
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RUT WILLIES GOOD HUMOR HAS 0) PASSED, AND AS MYRA CONS oP Sas ans HE NERVOUSLY Feature , Time Gov't. Market STARTS FUMBLING WITH A PENCIL : " WIRE ‘Reporter
" Police Court —By Walt Scott Don’t Look Now HEN, HEM, MEH / NOW TILL HAVE MY )
REVENGE /
1 kh pd ed Ik Pl pt bk Ed
: : Bob Elson o Buckaroos Voice of Exon. Services Kitty Keene n 4
— v9 oes 93
ALLY SAILOR AND MEANY MO [SO YOU THINK MEANY MO 1S GOING
| TO SPOIL EVERYBODY'S CHRISTMAS ? OH, HE JUST TALKS A LOT. I REMEMBER
| HIM WELL, HERE'S HIS NAME IN MY e—— BOOK. | 00 /
L LOPR. 1937 8Y NEA SERVICE INC. YT. M. REC. VU. 8. PAT. OFF.
Woman's Eyes Music Appree. Hope Alden ;
School of Alr
Concert Or. w
Spartan 4 "
Broad Ripple H. S. Varieties
OH, HE'S ALL RIGHT! T SENT WA | TO A TOV SHOP FOUR WEARS AGO. HE WAS A GOOD DOLL. NOU
BELIEVE A THING ABOUT MEANY MO, WEILL JUST HAVE
Romances n 4] ” Yood Beatin An unusual broadcast is sched arold Turner uled tonight over MBS when an oldfashioned melodrama is to be heard directly from the stage of the Mississippi’s largest show boat, “Golden Rod.” The boat, built in 1908, now is anchored at the foot of Locust St. in St. Louis. A highlight of the | broadeast will be the interview with [the cast and crew of the boat by , Allen ¢. Anthony and John Cetirad of MBS’s st. Louis affiliate, KWK.
Good Radio Music Radio oes: Al Willan, editor
By JAMES THRASHER of the Country Weekly heard every Y
Thursday night over WIRE at 0:45 o'clock, will broadcast tonight's edi It may not interest you to know that NBC has changed from its Blue | tion from the Ulen Country Club in to the Red network for tonight's braadcast from the Chicago Civic Opera | Lebanon as a special featyre of a House. But for the “Faust” lovers, it should be good news that an hour | stag banquet being held there, . . of this octogenarian opera will be on the air, beginning at 10:15 o'clock. | Lowell, Mass, will be saluted by With a touch of understandable prejudice, NBC has announced only | Maj. Bowes on his broadcast toone member of the cast. That is Vivian Della Chiesa, one of the younger night. . . . “The Theater Digest of operatic generation whose training® —== | the Air” will present a radio version THURSDAY took place largely in NBC Studios. | of Rostand’s famous play “L’AigLONDON—§
LONI p. m—“God's Ad- ||She will sing the part of Marguerite. lon tonight. . . . Phil Spitalny celemiral. oS, Pil mer.: GSD, 11.75 " 9 “ brated the third anniversary of the
CARACAS—6:30 p. m.—~Concert Or- organization of his all-girl orches- €
CE A" 3 Tle Tomorrow, one scarcely needs re- | «ys,qi0n) Essay,” by Victor Bay and | tra by seeing Claire Booth's Broad-BOSTON-1 m. Fundamental way stage play, “The Women.” .
WitiL S50: minding, brings the second of the iis Ores Economics 04 meg . . Jack Benny was voted radio's out-
| Indianapolis Symphony concerts, TE. CZECHOSLOVAKIA—T: : PAG enna RTARTA 0 | and its second broadcast by WIRE The program will include a move- | standing comedian in a recent poll
News Pepper Young Ma Perkins Shem Vie and Sade O'Neill's
Pr. Friendly Mary Mary Hatterfields
ans enny Peabody our Clubmen
Four Stars Lady of Millions Accordiana String Sextette
renzo Jones
da Boke Tab Matinee
~~ oast 7 Questions
me) BUT HE HAS GUNS, NY AN' KNIVES AND /
CANNONS ANDY AND Pa.
ollow Moon ea, Tunes
Hilltop House
Where to find other stations: Chicago, WBBM 770; WENR 870, WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND 560.
urse Sor Ozark Minstrels ack Armstrong " ig Fairviand Lady 3 " Singing School
aa | OW | WIN pS | MDD | ae S553 | 5853 | £853
IT REALLY LOOKS AS IF MEANY MO 1S UP TO NO SOO0D.”
COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE. INC.
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND—By Dr. Albert Edward Wiggam
Best Short Waves
Italy through the eyes of com- | posers of five different nationalities | will be the subject of this evening's |
NOT AT ALL; it's because ey | NOT if he means some special think they look “sporty” in | outside cause that interferes them—and some of them do. Some | With the ordinary laws of chance. don't—often the ones that wear The Bws ey are, ih He wie them most. Of course the sports| ynow of. They are the ee of a styles in women's clothes have come
You ASKED FOR IT!
BECAUSE THEY ARE INTERESTED IN SPORTS? VES OR NO cer
MEN'S DISCUSSION CLUB ASKS: "SINCE WOMEN DEMAND EQUAL RIGHTS WITH MEN SHOULD THEY NOT TAKE EQUAL CHANCES IN SEA DISASTERS AND WARP"WES OR NO cm
from the general increase in outdoor life, athletics and the emancipation of women. But the interest of women in sports clothes is in the way they look. = ® =
NO. In demanding equal rights with men, women have only asked to be considered as human beings of equal worth with men. They merely want the legal, political and social freedom to express to the full their natural abilities, functions and desires. This does not mean that they shall lose their essential femininity—they only want the freedom to express it fully. And of course one essential of femininity is motherhood, which is the ultimate basis of man’s chivalry toward woman and his desire to shield her in
‘time of war and, disaster,
pre a A
great many “variables” that is, numerous forces acting, some in harmony and some against one another. For this very reason the one thing we know is that they will run unevenly over short periods but never over long periods.
Next: Are women in love more calculating and critical than men?
COMMON ERRORS
Never pronounce coupon — kew's pon; say koo'-pon.
SO THEY SAY
We are living in an age of pressure groups, some of which get their results by legislative terrorism rather than by logic.—~Louis K. Comstock.
Sixty-fi hour vx making 75.Gener Keys, §ait Lake
fi 84 meg. LONDON—8 p. m.— Dog.” GSD, 11.7 m mez : GSB. 9.51 meg. PARIS—10:30 P: m.—News in English. TPA4, 11.72 meg. TOKYQ-—-11:45 p. dustry. JZK, 15.16 SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA--3:30 a, m. (Friday) himes from G. P. O. Sydney. WK2ME, 9.59 meg.
“At the Black g.; GSC, 958
m.—Talk on Inmeg.
City, Utah, when charged with driving 65 miles per hour.
Hollywood's got me, but I love it. After living 35 years in a trunk, this is the first time I've ever had a real home.—Sophie Tucker,
I do not feel that my life is finished, I hope to find something useful to do in prison and I hope eventually to free myself of these charges.—Joseph J. Bruno, just bee fore being locked up for life.
| to the Mutual network. But alas for the patient radio listener. Com- Mendelssohn, ‘a German: “Tmpres- | Newspaper.
mercial commitments will not permit WIRE to carry the 45-minute broadcast itself. WGN and WOR, the other two big Mutual stations, likewise are tied up.
The best bet, if you are intent |. rojian origin b y Edvard Grieg | upon listening and have a good Set, |, victor Herbert. Margaret Daum, |
will be to tune in on one of the Don Lee stations of MBS. These are out in the Rocky Mountain vicinity. The broadcast is to begin at 4:15 p. m,, and will include the Franck Symphony in D Minor. ” ” ” Jose Iturbi again is to do double duty as pianist-conductor this evening when he directs and plays the solo part of Beethoven's “Emperor” Concerto, No. 5, with his Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra. NBC-Blue is to carry the broadcast beginning at 8 o'clock. w
{ment of the “Italian” Symphony by
| sions of Italy,” by the Frenchman, | Charpentier; the “Italian Caprice,” Jee result of the Russian Tschaikowsky’s Italian sojourn, and songs
soprano, is to be the assisting soloist. WFBM will carry the CBS broadcast at 9:30 o'clock.
‘WOR PRESIDENT NAMED ON 'JURY'
Times Special NEW YORK, Dec. 2-=Alfred J. McCosker, president of WOR and chairman of the board of Mutual,
has been appointed by the Amerioan Hebrew's “Jury
[ conducted by a Santa Barbara, Oal., .“r James Ameche, | brother of Don Ameche, has been {held over for a third successive week on the “Grand Hotel” program. . . . Raymond Paige's orchestra, Louella Parsons and Frances Langford may be the only original features retained when the "Hollywood Hotel” show is changed in February. . . . David Warfield, 70- | year-old actor, turned down a radio offer because of “mike fright.”
fill the vacancy created by the death of Felix M. Warburg. The “Jury of Award” annually confers a medal for the “promotion of better understanding between Christian and Jew in Amerjea.” The Jury comprises distinguished members of the three great faiths. MecCosker is a Oath-
of Award” to | olie,
