Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 January 1938 — Page 33

FOYT RRR 2 NIRA 0 BA HTN din

FRIDAY, JAN. 14, 1088 OUR BOARDING HOUSE

COME, JASON, AROUSE YOURSELF’ IL WANT YOU “TO ACCOMPANY ME AS MY ASSISTANT ON AN IMPORTANT CASE INVOLVING MILLIONS OF DOLLARS! You ARE TO ACT

THE GOLD van EGADS WE WILL NEED WEAPONS! DO NOU KNOW WHERE WE CAN OBTAIN FIREARMS, JASON 2

7) LAWS, MISTAM MATAM ! 15 WE GOIN' TO FIGHT WIFE GANGSTERS? Ax DON' FEEL S80 @oor! NOsuH! AH GOT A MISERY IN DE HOLLER OB MAN STOMICK AN BESIDES DE ONLY GUN AW KNOWe OB 1S GRAN - DAPPY/S SQUIRREL

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Q GFR. 1938 BY NEA SERVICE. INC

7

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; N= 3 3 ~~. ) NT, 20x “THIS INE f] THE SQUIRREL HUNTING

OUGHT TO BE GOOD=

CASE

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

1 JUET CANT THANK NOU TNOVEHW FOR ALL NOL'VE OONE " FOR ME OR. 5066S. OF COURSE TL SOTRY ThA YOU GET ANOTHER. G\R\.

PAA TM SORRY TO HEAR NOL'RE QUITTING , BOOTS | OU'GE OONE SUCH A GRAND S08 HERE

LITTLE MARY MIXUP

ng 4 Thu Ev Me. DE sMYHe | cousin Tua: CALLS AGAIN ~~ \ You 'RE

HERE -

OH-HA/! dere comes JULIA — Now , Mr. DE SMYTHE WILL SEE Her IN | Er Mads (INIFOBM

VOTHRING OF THE SORT | NOL RON ALONG «AND LOOK AFTER THAT : BROTHER. OF YOURS. GOOO LLC

G'BYE ~ ANDO THANKS FOR

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES With Major Hoople! HOLD EVERYTHING

PAGE 38

By Clyde Lewis

a ———

Nan

COPR. 1938 BY WEA SERVICE he, rp LEIS.

Syne

“Lil pay that bill when I get ready, you big bully! You can't scare me!”

—By Martin

TLUERNTAWNG

HELLO! HEY, BNAY «OO YOu ) SELL ANNTRING WHWS

~

i WAS GONE ?

HE TUE PLACE

QUNW,

NOPE NO ONE WAG BEEN BAT HOME MOTHS !

SAND RONESTLY we. THERE'S ENOUGH STUFF HERES TO STOCK A FIRST CLASES § YARD

i AT LEARY, i IM GAO | YOU SAVY A FIRaT

EN EXAMINING THE

WE'RE PLAYING A GAME... I'M THE LADY AND WE'RE PRETEND ~ ING THAT JULIA IS THE MAID -«

—~ OH LOTS or FON?

a aN >

MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE

25.

AN

oil Mr. DE sMYTHE.. T HAVE

DINNER AND JULIA WiLL XEED ON PRETENDING SHE 15 THE | MAID AND SHE'LL SER US WON'T THAT BE FUN 2

DEA / You STAY FOR

y Be nicreieFf —

By Crane |

D7?) i) FOO THEYRE AFTER US!

2 PLEASE, WWRA WHAT'S QUIET, YOUNG { THIS ALL ABOUT? I'M SICK MAN! YOU'RE STILL A PATIENT, OU KNOW

DAGGONE 1, MYRA! [

PORT? 1 WANT TO TO OUTY-

REFUSE TO BE TREATED LIKE A BABY! WHY THE ARRETURN

CHEER UF, JACK. JUST THINK, IN A ‘FEW HOUR

OF INDIA, RESEMBLES A FLOWER SO MUCK IN| {coor . and SHAPE \ THAT OTHER INSECTS § ALIGHT ON IT AND ARE

RANKS FIRST IN SLANG

COPR. 1938 BY NEA SERVICE, TNC. |

THE spawn of a perch is one of the most beautiful objects in nature. The femals drapes the long lace-like ribbons over aquatic plants, much as lace is draped in show windows. More than 280,000 eggs have been taken from a half-pound perch. *

NEXT—Whai is the new type ot

TAA : a"

NEED A REST AND A REST (T SHALL BE! 15 fs

OLD SAYING: MEN Re BR Eo (6 WHO BLA

SERN ue

PERSONALLY, I'd take the brainy girl who made me laugh, hurt me a little at times— and flattered me a lot. All these girls are frequently wrapped up in one girl—so why not get all of them in one bundle of femininity? I did. As to the last two types, men who allow girls either to hurt or flatter them very greatly are emotional adolescents—still children—no mat- | ter how much brains they may have or how old they are. This old saying" is mostly bosh!

Ww ) THEY SEEM TO. According to AY

Ras. ORT THEM,"

» N os” as

DO PEOPLE HAVE OF TO A GREATER

OR . FISHING romans

YOUR OPINION woo

WAN aA A DOE® THE JURY eNvaTEM = TO THE BENEFIT OF o> 5 CRININAE: YESORNO,, sioner of Fisheries, fishermen spent $8,002,887.31 for anglers’ licenses in 1885-1936 in the United States, an increase of nearly a million dollars over the previous year. The number of people who indulged in the sport in ‘35-36 was 5,832 448—an all time high. Since 1932 tourist licenses have increased 35 per ceni, resident men’s licenses 14 per cent and wom-

en and children’s licenses 20 per |

cent. In the past five vears Kansas has doubled—while Mississippi has trebled its devotees of the rod. * % Ww I THINK it does

EA.

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

Health, we have over 10,000 murders every vear in the United States and only 170 executions. He thinks fhat the “sob-sister sentimentality,” ignorance of law and evidence, lack of experience in judging testimony, coupled with the many shyster or “eloquent” lawyers, is responsible for so few severe convictions of any kind. While personally I doubt the value of capital punishment, yet a bench of competent judges, assisted by physicians, social workers and psychologists would be vastly better than the jury system.

Next-—-Which sex bawls out the restaurant waiter louder and longer -women or men?

COMMON ERRORS

Never pronounce says—saz; say, Sez.

Best Short Waves

FRIDAY

PARIS, 5:15 P. M.—Concert Relayed from Radio-Paris. TPA4, 11.72 meg. LONDON, 5:20 P. M.—“Do We Understand English?” a talk by Lloyd James, Secretary of the BBC Advisory Committee on Spoken English. GSC, a meg.; GSB, 9.51 meg., GSL, 6.11 eg.

ROME, 6:35 P. M..-Guest Night; Amy Bernardy: “Rome's Midnight Voice.” 2RO, 9.63 meg. BOSTON, 6:45 P, M.— Pathways to Peace. WIXAL, 6.04 meg. LONDON, 7 P, M.—8ongs From the Light peras. GSC, 0.58 meg.; GSB, 9.51 meg.; GSL, 6.11 BOSTON, 7:15 P. City: Philadelphia, meg. ‘

meg

M. Behold the WIXAL, 6.0

CARACAS, sie. YVSRC

LONDON, 8:30 P. M.-~“ “The House in the a8. eR. . GSB,

ountry,” a skit. GSC BERLIN, 8:30 P. M.—Tartarin of

8:15 P. M.—Popular Mu- , 5.8 meg.

enormously.

" meg.; meg., GSL, 6.11 meg. Tarascon, DJD, 11.77 ‘meg. ~DX

RRO i Pr.

| | Wagner and bis The en

FRENCH PIANI

ST IS SOLOIST

with the Detroit Symphony Orches

desus i: a member of a famous Fre

| A A

RADIO THI

nouncements caused by station changes INDIANAPOLIS WEFBM_ 1230 (OBS Net.)

INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1100 (NBC Net.)

RT Ll 1.1 A

Bl fe 45 EL

Robert Casadesus, noted French pianist, will appear as guest soloist,

fra and Chorus, under the direction

of Fritz Reiner, Sunday night at 8 o'clock over CBS-WFBM., Mr. Casa-

neh musical family.

S EVENING =

(The Indianapolis Yimes is not responiible for inaccuracies in program ah.

after vress time.) CINCINNATI

LW 500 Fas 0 (NBO Mutua

320

(Mutual Net)

Follow Moon Tea Tunes

WPA Con.

Yes or No Weber's 3 Dick Traey Orphan Annie Tom Mix

Butler Forum No Xo. A Melodies

—————— i ———

Len Nalvo

Nurge Corps Serenade

Jack Armstrong Faireiand Lady Hilltop House Harold Turner

cn"

Jolly Joe Buddy-Ginger Charlie Chan Orohan Annie

Srssnm—

Front Page Nerenade A. Franklyn Lowelh [nomas

Unannounced Unctre Ezrn Sports Slants Charlie Chan

Bohemians Sports Musical Moods News Music Hal) Whiteman’s Or. 4

Concert " "

-2 == in| ass 232

J. Westaway Nerenade Weber's Or.

Amos-Andy Maine's Or. Lum~Abner Arthur Godfrey Arthur Godfrey Charioteers Lone Ranger

Scrapbook Momer Griffith eath Valley

00 Hollywood Hotel Waltz Time ‘3 » > True Stories

XRXER | adar.a

Play Games Kyser's Or. Gypsy Or, Tomortow’s

Operetta Unannounced Hi Trib,

!

First Nighter

J. Fidler D. Thompsen

Song Shop

D2 aa] we D=0= >

Arden’s Or.

[ 10:00 Poetic Melodies 10:13 News 10:30 Garrigan's Or. 10:45 » »

Amos-Andy News

Lee's Or, Variety Show

Lombardo's O

Fia Rfito’s Or. Kay's Or,

2:00 nd. Roo Week's Or.

- Kavser's Or,

First Nighter Fields’ Or. . Fiddler Curtain Time . Thombpso ’ ”

r—

Carlsen’s Or y “In Old Chi” Redman's Or. H o r. Lombardo’s Or, Kay's Or.

Deutch’s Or, Breeze's Or.

Ktabile's Or. Week's Or.

Moon River Kyser's Or,

SATURDAY PRO

(CBS Net.)

WIRE 1

INDIANAPOLIS 100 (NBC Net.)

PROGRAMS

CINCINNATI Rw M (NBO-Mutuah

WeAGH GN 720 (Mutual Net.)

On Mall

Chuck Wagon 4 " Devotions

00 Early Birds

Ray Eton Bovs Fiddler's , Fancy

Musical Dessa Byrd

Troubadours Fethel's Organ Blind Choir Let's Pretend

Ivmn Ninger Musicians T. Fletcher

Serenade Children’s Hour

Tall Corn

Army Band

Musical Cloek Clock

Air Sweethearts

Revelers

silent Mail Bag 4%

Pravers Peter tran

Sunshine Time + " h Cornbread -Cavisr

Mugfo Bons

Bigauiass OND Gopd Mprine

: Vv. Lindlahr Alr Synagoghne 1 Ladies Day Crane Joyce Manhatiers t in " id Mail Box 'nannbuneed River-Weather Radio School

June Baker Melody Time Army Band

RE ———

Home+ Town » » Hopone Farm Circle H h Farm Bureau Meditation John Sturgis Buffalo "

Farm Hour Music

‘Congress Met. Opera

News Melodies

WIRE Reporter

Margery Graham Melody Time Quin Ryan Melody Time Bob Elson bh Harold Turner Chandler Chats Nervice Matinee h "

Hi Boys Unannounéed Farm Hour

Concert Or, Three Graces Concert Trio Concert Or.

Mentro. Opera

Herbert Hosver

Waltzes

NSH

Ld ”» " ”»

”" " " " " " ”"

Varieties

\ Clubmen Jordan Con.

nl HENS

Flanner House “4:00 Scholarship 4:15 3 3} 4:30 4:15

” ”"

”»

Where to find other stations: WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820;

By JAMES

| Puccini opera and the first perfor

| two seasons.

Boheme,’ in which Miss Moore | made her Metropolitan debut 10 years ago. And supporting her, as Rodolfo ana Marcello, will be two [ singers lately arrived at the Metropolitan from La Scala in Milan, [by way of South America. They are Bruno Landi, tenor, and Carlo | Tagliabue, baritone.

The Musetta of tomorrow's cast |

will be Muriel Dickson, and Gen- | naro Papi is to conduct. You may [hear the NBC broadcast on WLW beginning at 1 p. m, n n

The second of the season's siX children’s concerts by the New York Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra will be heard on CBS stations at 10 a. m. tomorrow, with Rudolph Ganz conducting. Ernest Schelling, the regular children’s concerts conductor, is prevented from appearing this season because of illness. John Barbirolli conducted the first one on Dec, 18, and Mr, Ganz will preside at the remaining five. The entire program tomorrow will be given over to the woodwinds, all of whose soloists will be given a chance to “do their stuff.” Tn the first two selections, the Overture to Nicolai’s “Merry Wives of Windsor” and a Saint-Saens “Tarantella,” the orchestra's first flutist and clarinetist, John Amans antl Simeon Bellison, will be featured. | Bruno Labate, ‘oboeist, | heard next in the Pergolesi-Bar- | hirolli Concerto and Labate’s “Ha- | banera.” Then comes Benjamin

| Kohon to play the Rondo from | the Bach Toccata and Puaue in D | Bassoon. | Minor; “Dreams,” by the American the American

Concerto for

Nazzi, the

| Mozart's | Michel

The opera tomorrow will be “La:

" "

, " Internat, House i$ Organ Musfe Quartet Bookshelf w Kay's or.

Ton, Hatfers Truly American

Ohicago, WBBM 770; WENR 870, Detroit, WIR 150; Gary, WIND 560.

Good Radio Music

THRASHER

4 TOW obolitan Opera broadcast will bring you the first ee So 2 Moore in the Inst |

mance by Grace

Miss Moore was scheduled for several opera appearances last year, but found it necessary to cancel all of them.

&—

| have a chance to shine in the

Scherzo from Mendlessohns “‘Midsummer Night's Dream.” | ” » » | A chorus of 30 blind students, | singing, of course, without a direc- [ tor, will be heard on CBS-WFBM at (0:15 a. m. tomorrow. They are mem- | bers of the Senior Choir at the New

York Institute for of the Blind, and their director is Noel Kempton. | Usually Mr, Kempton gives verbal direction during the performance, but this will be abandoned for the broadcast. The singers, who are taught by rote, will perform music by Palestrina, Mozart and Schumann, as well as Scandinavian folk

songs. » n ”

Abram Chasins, the composer-pi-anist and veteran lecture-recivalist, will discuss and play Bach's Chromatic Fantasy and® Fugue in an NBC-Red nétwork broadcast at 10 a. m. tomorrow. ® x 0» Dale Young, Indianapolis’ youthful but veteran organist, will be heard on WFBM at 3:15 p. m. fomorrow during the Jordan Conservatory’s regular weekly program time. Mr. Young will play on the station's recently installed studio orHis selections ave to include

will be |

|

| gan,

English horn | composer, Hugh McAmis; “Will 0’ | editor,

Hoover's Address to G. O. P. Women Scheduled on CBS-WFBM Tomorrow;

Grace Moore to Sing in ‘Met's’ Opera

| Authors to Air Views on | Literary Freedom in Democracy.

TONIGHT

! 7:00-Lucille Manners, WIRE. Y:30—<Paml Whiteman, WFBM, 8:00—~Hollywood Hotel, WFBM., 9:00—First Nighter, WIRE. | 11:00-~Gity Lombardo, WIRE. Ex-President Hoover's address (o the annual luncheon of the Women's National Republican Club in New York tomorrow will be heard over CBS-WFBM at 2 p. m Mr. Hoover is to talk Mom the speakers’ table where many prominent party members will be seated. Mrs. William Henry Havs, first vice president of the club, is chairman of the lincheon, which is expected to attract 2000 women, Others scheduled to speak are Mrs. Ruth Hanna Simms, who as (Mrs. McCormick was a Representa- | ive from Illinois, and George BE. | Sokolsky, author, | Mr. Hoover has not announced the subject of his address

u 5 »

| A group of authors, each one of | Whom has a current work listed with the 10 best nonfiction books of 1637, will participate in a round table discussion of the question, “Could Bach or Any of These Books Be Written Under any Other Form of Government Besides Democraey?” during a special NBC-Blue broadcast tonight at 9:30 o'clock, The speakers will be Hendrik Willem Van Loon, whose latest book is “The Arts’; Morris L. Ernst, lawyer and author of “The Ultimate Power”; Maj. R, Ernest Dupuy and Maj. George Fielding Eliot, ¢oauthors of “HH War Oomes’; Burton J. Hendrick, author of *“Bulwark of the Republic,” and Eliot Paul, author of “Life and Death of a Spanish Town.” Carl Carmer, whose book, “Stars Fell on Alabama,” was a best seller of a few seasons ago, will act as moderator of the discussion, In addition to the round table talk, there will be a short dramatization taken from “Middletown in Transition” by Robert 8. and Helen Merrel Lynd, another best seller of this season which is a sociological, economic and political study of the town of Muncie, and which is a companion volume of the author's “Middletown” of a decade ago. Selections for the honor list for the program tonight were made by the Literary Advisory Board of “Current History” magazine members of which are Dorothy Thomson, John Dewey, Van Wyck Brooks, Henry Seidel Canby, John W. With= ers, Amy Loveman and M. E. Tracy, editor and publisher of “Current | History.” M

” ”n

According to a United Press | ispatch from Washington, the Federal Communications Commis- | sion has granted a construction permit to the Banks of Wabash Corp, for an experimental relay broadcast station serving Vigo County. The station will operate on 31,000 to 40,600 kilocycles, 35 watts power.

5 » »

| President Roosevelt kept Arturo | Toscanini listeners waiting Saturday | night when the Presidential speech ran longer than expected. Mr. Toscanini was nearly four minutes late, waiting for the President to finish. The delay was not serious with this concert, however, Unlike other NBC conductors, Mr. Toscanini is | not asked to finish at ahy scheduled time, The broadcast is over when he finishes, Intermission is indefinite, too, depending on how long the maestro wants to rest,

ro 9

“Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen” continues to rocket toward records as the most popular song since radio came along. In its second week on the networks, it landed on the “Hit Parade” Saturday night, unusual for a song s0 new. Such hits as “Music Goes 'Round” and “‘Merry-Go-Round Broke Down” had to wait six weeks before getting into the “Hit Parade” list. To keep the song from being played to a sudden death, its pub- | lishers are allowing only important orchestras and singers to use it. Even (with the restriction, it was heard 32 [times on major networks last week,

[more often than any other of the

| songs except “True Confession” and [ “You're a Sweetheart.”

| » » | Another motion picture debut

will be broadcast by Mutual from Hollywood when the premiere of the film “In Old Chicago” will be aired tonight at 10:30 o'clock with WGN as this area's outlet.

| Two special short-wave broad- | casts will highlight the first show-

the Education |

ing of the picture. One will be from a blimp with Andy Devine as the commentator and the other will come from the Three Ritz Brothers who will take part in the festivities atop a horse-drawn fire engine. Alice Faye, Alice Brady, Don Ameche and Tyrone Power will be heard oh the broadcast and Jack Haley and George Fischer will be the MC's on the 30-minute show. » ” James Myers, Committee on Industrial Relations secretary for the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America, has been added to the list of speakers on the People’s Lobby program tomorrow at 12 o'clock noon over NBC-Red. Mr. Myers will discuss “Adequate Relief for the Unemployed.” As previously scheduled, Dr. 8idney BE. Goldstein of the Central Conference of American Rabbis ‘will discuss “The Cost of Progress” and

the Rt. Rev. Msgr. John A. Ryan, National Catholic Welfare Council | ‘director, will talk on “The Ethical | Right to Work or Care.” » » Fishbein, Journal of

Medical Association speak on “Infantile

” Dr. Morris

will

player, will do Florent Schmitt's (the Wisp,” by Nevin, and a Tri- | Paralysis” during a special broad=-

“Chant du Soir,” and Pierne’s “Cydalise” will bring forth Ernest

‘entire

umphal March on “Nun danket alle Goft” by Karg-Elert, soloist teaches ‘organ and

The piano at the local muidc sehool.

[cast today at 6 p. m., over NBCWENR. The address will be made fh connection with the National ton for Paralysis,

iy 0s