Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 December 1937 — Page 43

“With Major Hoople

=

Il-Girl .Cast to Present Tonight's ~ Varsity Show Broadcast Over NBG; Cuban President to Be Interviewed

®

All-Girl %

EGAD, STANDFORD!, BUT FOR A BROKEN ARCH, THAT 1 SUSTAINED WHILE BREAKING THE WORLDS SKI JUMP 1 RECORD IN SWITZERLAND, \ T WOULD cGLADLY PO IT, BUT T AM UNABLE TO STAND, LONG AT A TIME,

SAY, MATOR, MR. BLANTON OFFERED ME A JOB AS SANTA CLAUS DOWN AT HIS DEPARTMENT STORE, AND. ASKED ME | TO COLLAR ANOTHER = | SANTA T/'STAND OUT = WW FRONT TO SLANG

3 Scientists Will Discuss

\.

A GONG! HOW ABOUT

YOU AND ME RIDIN TANDEM ON THAT JOB, BEHIND A CAMOUFLAGE OF FUR AND WHISKERS 2

| STAND FOR HOURS ON A STREET CORNER=

: ONS

OOTS AND HER BUDDIES

IN. ONE PLACE ~~ LIM-M w~

: £{7Wo SANTA cLausES { WANTED iN ONE STORE / LAMY WORD! THAT GIVES ME: AN IDEAS) | HAW! WHAT sAY You TO pro

8 RAN

N

VERN ne

7

! LAUNCHING 'A BUSINESS VENTURE STANDFORD?Z.

{| SALES 7 also SelovE 12. EYL. TRACT

“I told Kopak what would happen if he tried to dig a base-

ment for his

new tgloo.” —=By Martin

EELIT SEEMS FONNY «

WELL == COME ON, B0oTS * AED BETIER

>

WHERE ?

MAWKING ¢ 1

THOLVGHT = ; 2

THAR YOU D\SCHARGED ME) SR T QUITE SO «WONLY, HAFTER SERWNG YOu 90 LONG ,W\T WOLLD BE QUE W\MPOSS\R\E TO LEAVE YOU NOW WE WT OO REALLY, SR ~~H1 DON'T RNOW WHAT WOOLD SECOME WOF EVIHER WOF

0s,

. 8. PAT. OF

—By Brinkerhoff

“0

THREE DAYS OTY MISS ZWMITH

- MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE

~~>ou GoT

LX ANT \ THE ROMANCE BETWEEN | AND EASY BLOSSOMS.

"AW. I KNOW. | 1 ( TAAT s EROM MR WOODS -- HURRY UP. ANOTHER -_—

oH. I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO --HE KEEPS PRESSING ME FOR AN ANSWER

“WILL YOU

>

WELL, ANYWAY~ ASE READ hr 02 | LETTER You GoTF

3

YISIT HER L

of WHY T's Eom AUNT MAB! —sHE WANTS You To

AND LEAVE 7 7 SNOOKER / I WON'T I. WON'T.

BARNEY HILL | |WELLIWELL)

OF ALL PEOPLE /.

WELL! JF

8

A

LA 2 NNN ROY)

: REG. i= Por —By Thompson and Coll

SAY. HE CAN'T BE FAR OFF I'LL SEND IN AN EMERGENCY CALL -YOU WAIT HERE, MYRA=

SHOT WE HEARD FROM

MISS NORTH! MR. LANE! ANOTHER OF MY PATIENTS HAS DISAPPEARED... JOHN,

DONT FIRE | THAT CANNONI|

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND—By Dr. Albert Edward Wiggam

-

“Ea. DOESNT KNOW, YOUR

&T PEOPLE HAVE ANY DEFINITE | 0 ZPEND THEIR MONEY FORD © HEREWITH TT

ANY READER ONE DOLLAR THAT HE,

$ Shh

SHOULD E

2 ; TAUGHT HOW To

VERY BODY BE

{ PROF. EDWARD L. THORNDIKE, psychologist, has shown

- that no one has the slightest idea

what he spends his money for. You sa; you pay so inuch for clothing, rent, insurance, ¢tc., but what part of your rent is paid to avoid une pleasant smells, to live in a congenial neighborhood, to avold physica! distress, to secure health, ete.? What part of your money for clothing goes for physical comfort, for pleasing colors, to impress : other people, etc.? By securing the judgment of eight psychologists, five women (including experts in home - economics) three economists and a group - of miscellaneous people, Thorndike concluded that people on the average sperit their income as follows: 25 per cent for subsistence and perpetuation (sex); 2 to avoid

\ pain; 7 for security; 8 for the wel

fare of others; 30 for entertainment; 10 for ‘companionship and affection

* nance-of others; other wants.

nd affection; | Chiang Kai ] -10 for approval of othérs; 4 for in-sieTERS-RuLE tellectual activity;’2 for the domi-

CERTAINLY. The New York Telephone Co. has been making a desperate effort-to knock out the old habit of both parties saying “Hello.” The speaker should say “Is s0-and so there?” and the interviewers should reply “Speaking” if he is on the line or else say if the party can be called. This is just one example of developing greater effitiency. = 2 8 »

"NO.® Such women here would have their pictures on the front pages of the newspapers. These three women are the three daughters of the famous Soong family. One is the widow of former President Sun Yat Sen, one is Madame Kung, wife of the Minister of Finance, and the third is the wife of 1g Kai-shek, ‘ President of

| Best Short ; Waves

FRIDAY : 5 wi m.—“Katchen von " Heilbronn,” mantic play. DJD, 11.77 meg. v x ’ ’ 8C ADY—5: 30 m.—Spanish Home Program. 2XAD, P533 meg.; WIXAF. 58s meg. LONDON-—6:05 ». m.—“Sprites and Goblins.” GSD, 11.75 meg.; GSC, -

9.58 meg.; ca , 9.51 meg ROME—6:85 p. m.—News in English. Concert. Amy Bernardy. IRS, 9.63 meg. NDON-—8:25 . m.—‘God’s Adpire * Robert Biake, General-at-ea. . GSD, 11.76 meg.; GSC, 9.58 meg.; GSB, 9.51 meg. ' PITTSBURGH—10:30.' p. m.—DX Club. WSXK, 6.14 meg. TOKYO—11:45 p. m.—Orchestral Music. JZK, 15.16 meg.

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA—12:15 a. m. EINE. A aL VK2ME, "9.50 meg. ; :

COMMON ERRORS Never pronounce interested— in-ter-est’-ed; say, in’-ter-est-ed.-If we are compelled to choose between economic power = concen-

| trated in the hands of a few indi-

Siduals snl seonomie powers Son centre . the Government, we

ment.—Alfred M. Landon.

a - ed Bob fuk pet ft Hie OS09 | BOBO | RNP | artursl | ARDG | RUNG | Ginn

: the recommendation of Arturo Tos-

‘|eram -will be on WOR-Mutual at

world to its fortunate possessor.

and -vocal numbers. appear

mann and Eleanor Sylvester.

INDIANAPOLIS DIANAPO (CBS Net.) ‘Foll M PTA Prog. Fon Tunes ™ 3 ntstvicws Toylan Hilltop House Yes or Ne Santa Claus Butler Forum . Four Stars NYA Speaker Phenomenon

Bohemians News

frat ma

"Mysteries Uncte Ezra Sports Slants Chatlie a Musjo Hall WPA Concert

Kemp's Or. Stabile’s ” ”» 9,

Cugat’s O Walts Time

or. Te

Hollywood Hotel

Firgt Nighter J. er D. Fi hompson Amods-Andy Martin's Or.

Song Bhop

Arden’s Or. Poetic Melodies ews Melody Caval.

oo

‘Himber’s Or. Fio_Rita’s Or.

EIGHT ON CHILDREN'S PROGRAM

E (NBO Net.) Weber's Or. 8 Little Words

Master Singers-

Human Relations

Variety Show : Lombarde’s Or. » ” Whiteman’ or.

The - Junior Section of the Indianapolis Matiriee Musicale is to présent the entire program on the Children’s Hour broadcast tomorrow at 10:30 a. m. over WFBM. Mrs. Albert Reep, chairman of the Junior Section, has arranged a program of musical selections featuring a harp ensemble and an instrumental trio as well as several piano The. above members of the Junior Section will on the broadcast. They are: First row (left to right), Patricia Rice, Rosemary MecInturf and Sonja Grigo. Second row (left to right), Mildred Alice Boyle, Betty Burckes, Betty Starr, Jean Busch-

/

RADIO THIS EVENING

(The Indianapolis Times 18 not responsible for inaccuracies in program ame nouncements e¢sused by station changes after press time.)

8 CINCINNA : WGN 720 (NBC-Mutual) (Mutual Net.) inst Nurse Coron os Ozark Mins rels

i: . ”» ”» Eine Soho y » »

b: Jolly Joe Tae o Buday-Gineer Bob Newhall harlie Chan Lowell Thornas Orphan Annie

Amos-Andy Concert®Or. ames’ Or. mannounced

; fom: bner oncert Or. rthur Godfrey Weber’s Or. Tonis Time Arthur Godfrey mer gs fHith [alley

Stokes Revue eath Lone Ranger Varsity Show Cafes

: Kyser’s or. % G Or. a.» Tomorrow's Trib. First Nighter i Fiddler . Thompson Pau) Sullivan of y Inanne nced Weems’ Or, uban Pres. Week’s Or. Hauck’s Or. Co Bestor's Or. ”» ” Meroft’s Or.

King’s Or. Curtain Time ”» »

Olsen’s or. Whiteman’s Or. » ”»

Stabile’s Or.

indiana Root Silent eg i a” Kyger’s or.

BES subs! suns she | Bins | nip | £202 | pete | subs

| BREE | EEE

- - INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS' Net.)

Chuck Wagon On| Mall

. Devotions Musical Clock Varieties, il

Eatly Birds

oc 90

Stabile’s, Or. Kyser’s Or.

Stabile’s Or. Moon River ”» ”»

SATURDAY PROGRAMS HE

Net.)

CHICAGO WGN 720 (Mutual Net.) Silent

CINCINNATI 700 (NBG Mutual)

Revelers Mail Bag exans Sunshine Time ete ” ”»

Cotnbread-Caviar Music Box

. Musica) Dessa

+ Troubadors

Clock . Maxwell a Fiddler's Fancy . Fred Feibel Let's Pretend Sergnads,

© Chili's Hour ’ . ”

RBythm_ Or.Army Band

Bre Tem

kk fd pt

” ”» ” » arm Circle arm Bureau

Meditation Pacif. Paradise Buffalo Presents

— sie

Farm Hour Reporter Stabile’s Or.

Jimmy Shields Ann Leaf ” ”» a ” Tours in Tone iyo” ” News id Children’s Symph. » World’s Waltzes | » Dictators I » ”» ”» |” ”

Jordan Cons. « ell Flanner House ” 2 Scholarship

\

| rs ”» ‘Kaye's Or. Kindergarten

:80 - :45 i 45 100 :15 :30 45 :00 :15 :30 145 :00 :15 :30 45 i 45 :00 :15 :30 :45 :00 :15 :30 45 00 15 30 :45 00 15 30 45 :00 :15 :30 :45

Weis | 020308es | 20202000 | pai SRE

must have been a relief from seeing buxom and aging ladies shedding years to sing the consumptive, broken “Lady of the Camellias.” ‘AS in the case of Bidu Sayao, last Saturday's Manon, Miss Bovy came to the New York opera house with

canini, who had signed her to sing at La Scala.: Mr. Toscanini’s approval is likely to swing - open the doors of any opera house in the

Tomorrow's Alfredo will be the lithe and handsome Nino Martini of radio and moviée fame. And John Charles Thomas will be heard as the elder Germont. Ettore Panizzi will be the conductor, 8 2 8 Sascha Jacobsen, whom you probably have heard here as first violinist of the Musical Art Quartet, will be solist this evening on the Bamberger Symphony program. He is the second soloist on the new winter series. | The 27-piece. orchestra again ts to be conducted by on zin, who will lead the players through Mendelssohn’s “Fingal’s Cave” overure and in accompaniment to Mr.

the Bruch The pro-

first two movements of Concerto in G Minor.

9:30 p. m. aod » = 8 Christmas will be ushe in, unofficially, tomorrow on the Cincinnati Conservatory pr “when Hubert Kockritz, baritone, offers a 5 gs by the

Air Sweethearts Hymn Singer Federated Music Martha and Hall

-Mptropol, Opera

Jacobsen, who is scheduled for the |

Breakfast Club - ”» ”» » »

Air Synagogue Ladies Day Manhatters

Good Morning V. Lindlahr ” ” Crane-Joyce ” »” Get Thin Mail Box ‘News _ June Baker My Health Melody Time Radio School Army Band Royal Or rene Or, arm Hour ”» ”»

Margery, ro kam

Hue urner uin Ryan Melodies

Bob Elsop Elinor Sherry Club Matinee i

Services ” ”»

Metropol. Opera oncert: Or. a he hree Graces

”» » ”» ”

oncert Trio Concert Or. Varieties ” ” ” ”

” ”

Quartet Top, Hatters Kingoragrten

Int’nat’l House F’berg’s Rhythms

Ozark Minstrels

Where to find other stations: Chicago, WBBM 770; WENR 870, WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS $20; Detroit, WJR 150; Gary, WIND 560.

Good Radio Music By JAMES THRASHER

«Lg Traviata” is on the Metropolitan’s matinee bill for tomorrow, with Vina Bovy, another Met sophomore, as the Violetta. WIRE and WLW will both carry the NBC broadcast which begins, of course, at 1 p. m. Miss Bovy is a Belgian soprano who, incidentally, made her operatic debut at 15 singing this same role. The role might seem a. bit too much

a

at that tender age, but at least it7

will play the Corelli Concerto Grosso No. 3, and Gliere’s Sextet in B Minor. CBS stations will carry the broadcast at 10 a. m. ——————————————

Transmit Sound Movies by Wire

moving pictures by wire from New York to Philadelphia was the gubject of discussion among radio and electrical technicians here today. Pioneers in the fleld of television and officials of telephone and radio companies gathered in the laboratories of the Bell Telephone System to watch a tiny glass screen upon which appeared moving pictures that were transmitted from New York over the new “coaxial cable”--

bined picture-sound transmission. ‘The significance of coaxial transmission was explained by Dr. Frank B. Jewett, Bell Laboratories president. Me said that hitherto television had been restricted to distances of about 25 miles because of the nature of television “waves,” which cannot be received at stations far from the point of transmission. ; ph The new cable, however, he said, will enable television to be rebroadcast from certain key points, thus

Trunk His accompanist will be Miriam py wo

Otto. Both are faculty members.

allowing it to be sent over a wide

ae

PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 10 (U. P). ~—Successful transmission of sound

a far-reaching development in com- |

Solar Bodies’ Effects On Radio Signals.

TONIGHT

| %:00—~Hammerstein Music Hall,

CBS-8:00-=-Varsity Show, NBC- WLW.

5100--Hollywvod Hotel CBS-

WFB 9:00—First Nighter, NBC-WIRE. 9:30—Bamberger Symphony, MBSWOR. (See James Thrash- ' er's” Good Radio Music”

column.) 10:30—Interview with President Laredo Bru of Havana, Cuba, MBS-WLW. 11:30—Paul Whiteman’s [Irchestra, MBS-WIRE. 12:00—D i c k Stabile’s Orchestra, .. MBS-WIRE.

gram began an all-feminine cast is to present tonight's Varsity Show broadcast over NBC-WLW at 8 o'clock. The show is to originate on thé campus of Smith College : for girls. | f | Likewise tonight’s performance will mark the first time Smith students have broadcast a radio rasvue over a coast-to-coast network. A feature of tonight's show is to be tae singing of three Yale songs by a student oc« tet. 3 Two special Varsity Show broads casts are to be heard during the Christmas holidays, with outstande ing undergraduate talent ‘rom every section of the country heing fea= tured. Students receiving the highe est number of votes in a poll being conducted by the show’s sponsor are to be invited to participate in the special broadcasts. Students of Western universities are to broadcast from Chicago on Christmas Eve, while Eastern collegians are to broadcast from New York, New Year's Eve. t According -to the show’s sponsors, five Indiana University students and one Purdue undergraduate very likely will appear on the Christmas Eve broadcast. The five I. U. students are Dick Haskett, Bloomington, who is io appear as an an= nouncer; Hal Lieber, Michigan City, vocalist, and Misses Marion Smith, East Chicago, Marilou Thomas, Lo= gansport, and Jeannette Dice, Converse, who comprise a vocal trio. Mary Johnson, singer, probably: will represent Purdue University... |

o 2 a J 2 In a radio address to the United States, through WLW’s| short wave facilities, President Laredo Bru of the Republic of Cuba is to discuss “The State of the Nation” for MBS-WLW listeners tonight at 10:30 o’clock. The Cuban President, speaking directly from Havana, is to be interviewed by Joseph Ries, WLW educational director, who is now traveling in’ Cuba. : President Bru’s address Is the third of four broadcasis to originate in Cuba in conjunction with the meeting of the International Radio Club in Havana from Dec. 8° to 12. A program of Caban dance music is be heard tomorrow at 10:15 p. m. over MBS-WLW.

8 8 » “Radio and Magnetic Effects of ‘Solar Eruptions—Solution of a

'| Problem in Terrestrial Magnetism”

will be the topic of a round table discussion by three noted scientists over CBS at 2 p. tomorrow, Speakers are to be Dr. A. C. Mc= Nish, of the Department of Terrese trial Magnetism of Carnegie Instie tute; Dr. O. W. Torreson, Huane cayo Observatory, and Dr. S. B, Wilson, Mt. The scientists are to discuss the effects of certain bodies in the solar system on radio station signals, The broadcast is being made in connection with the Annual Exhibition of the Carnegie Institute in ‘Washington, Dec. 11-13.

2 4 ” { Charles Phelps Taft, sori of the late President William Howard - Taft, is to be heard at 11:15 a. m. tomorrow over CBS. He is to discuss “Farm Problems and Foreign Policy” with Walter H. C. Laves, League of Nations Midwest office - director, and political science lecturer at the University of Chicago. : : Mr. Taft recently served as labor arbiter for Secretary of Labor Perkins and now is a National Labor lations Board member. The broadcast is to originate in Chicago.

2 » & / Flanner House, local Negro civie organization, will inaugurate its fourth year of winter broadcasts over WFBM at 3:45 p. m. tomorrow, C. A. Blackburn, organization die: rector, is to explain the purposes and acccmplishments of the Flanner House in a series of short talks to be heard each week. A. Negro choir is to provide music for the broadcasts. 2

” 2 o fh The last in the present series of P.-T. A. safety programs is to be heard over WIRE this after noon at 4 p. m,, according to Mrs. Fred Shideler, safety committee chairman, Mrs. Francis G. Moder, Washington High School safety director, in an interview with Mrs, _ Shideler, is to relat: her experiences with young careless attomobile drivers ;

celebrating the Crimson’s gridiron victory over their traditional foe, ‘Yale, is to be heard cover MBS from 8 to 8.30 p. m. today. Speakers are to be E. A. Taft, Harvard Club president; Toastmaster Robert S. Herrick and C. Russell Allen, 1937 football captain. The musical pore tion of the program is to be fure nished by the Harvard Band. The broadcast will originate ih the Hare -vard Club, Boston, through the facilities of MBS’s Eoston affiliate,

presents

— r————— I 1

TONIGHT,

; dll

) 4

i

Y/ WFBM 6:00P. N.

For the first time since the pro- J

Wilson Observatory, SF

2 8 » : The Harvard Victory Dinner,

.