Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 January 1938 — Page 19

"TUESDAY, JAN. 18, 1088 OUR BOARDING HOUSE

\

YOUR AGENCY wAS HidHLY TOUTED

= YOU ARE ONE AS THIS PERSON SAID YOU WERE IL KNOW OUR

wikLL BE AS

T. M. REG,

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

CQPR. 1938 BY NEA SERVICE,

TO US, MR. HOOPLE wa

PERCENT AS GOOD

SACK OF VALUABLES

~ With Major Hoople

BULLION TO TH BANK /

YOUR MONEY, UNDER “THE WATCHFUL EYE OF MY OPERATORS, WiLL BE PERFECTLY SAFE vn KAEF GU KAFE wane SOME OF THE LARGEST TRANSFERS OF BULLION BY UNCLE SAM HAVE BEEN CARRIED OUT UNDER THE EAGLE EYES OF HOOPLE DETECTIVES!

AN "MEMBER GUARDIN' A SACK ONCE BF IN DE DARK A AH HELD ONE IN DE WOODS WAITIN', FO’ A FLOCK OB QUAIL DAT NEBBER SHOWED upr/

BAG {or TRICKS =

%

NOL OONT NEED To

WORNY !

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES HOLD EVERYTHING

PAGE 19

By Clyde Lewis

TY rvs.

span

COPR. 1938 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.

“I lost his baby pictures.”

SAV, THATS GRENT NOW, \F WE CAN

\ P THE REN Bn ha

HOW MOCK OW] on! wel YEEE wT | NOL GEY FOR

—By Martin

OION'T EXACTLY SE) \T 11 TRROEOD YT FOR l THE CUTEST \\TT\& ROOT -

ox! HELLO, MR. DE SMYTHE .) - WHAT 4 3 NICE .B\& CAR You HAVE

WASHINGTON TUBBS II

MERCY OF HELGA ZMITH'S PIRATE G \ NY GEE wiz! A woT'LL

7 YOU SEE, JACK, DR, JASON HAD TO FLY SOUTH TO TAKE

£ Ra 3 LT

CARED QUT OF HIS WITS, SAMMY SALS AWRY, LEAVING WASH, EASY AND BEVERLY AT THE

THIS CURIOUS WORLD

.

TAKE ME FOR A LW TTLE RIDE «WILL ; You =<

SORRY, M&S MARY -- RYT Have TO TAXE SOME FRIEANDS OUT IN MY car -

N——

MIND RIDING WITH Your

rane - aw.

( DON'T N

- TAKE ME FON A WTTULE RIDE

gp

Th J 3 ' ( iN Cone 1838 by Oni ature Syndicate 1 Tm Reg U8

ne Pat OF All Ahi reserved //

. — m—

QUICK, WE'LL STEAL

ANG

AN’ LEAVE ‘EM THE PIRATES BOAT! MAROONED OBQY! ATS A SWELL IDEAS

«By Crane |

DROP THEM GUNS, ) OR YOU'RE DEAD UNS! ~~]

—By Thompson and Coll

OPSIDE OOWN, A CAT CAN RIGHT

AT THE BEGINNING OF THE PRESENT

MSELF IN LESS THAN |

HIGH speed motion picture cameras show that a cat can right itself in the air in less than two feet of drop. First the front feet make the turn, and then the hind feet, with the tail acting as a balancing pole.

He VEDALIA LADY BEETLE IS RESPONSIBLE FOR MUCH OF THE SUCCESS OF CALIFORNIA'S CITRUS INDUSTRY IT FEEDS ON ALL OF THE AEST INSECTS.

.« % @

NEXT—Has the south magnetic pole of the earth ever been reached?

FAR BELOW, ON THE MORIZON, MYRA AND JACK, OLMPSE

THE FORMIDABLE ISLAND [REY ROE BUT CURIO

BY GEORGE ! IT LOOKS AS IF \ I'M A BIT TOO LATE ,,,, THE TROUBLE HAS STARTED ALREADY

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

Do ONE'S BEST

NINE TO TER NE ISORE

BOR OPINION >

aa’. MANY great discoveries in science and great inspirations and ideas of business men and statesmen have come to them while in the bath tub or listening toa play

or symphony or while playing golf or merely taking a quiet walk thinking of something else. Norman R. F. Maier, psychologist, reasons in the Psychological Review that this is because if we think about a problem a long time we are very likely to keep on trying the old lines of approach—but, while playing or thinking of something else, these old paths of thought get switched off and the mind unconsciously takes a new direction—and presto —at once “sees ” the prob-

»

lem. A good night's sleep is often

CAN

REALLY IM ON NATURE? YES OR

By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

&

VE

INTELLIGENCE TEST QUESTION: AFTER AGE NEN Soko: OUT LIFE, WOMEN OUTNUMBER MEN YET, AFTER AGE 70, MORE

N O( THAN MEN. WHY 2 TIME ALLOWED 30 SECONDS

Se AKE ITER]

THEY CAN’

yO

the best way to “think out” some hard problem that worries you.

SCIENCE can almost make nature over. Compare the ancient, wild, scrawny cow, scarcely giving enough milk for her calf, with the cow of today giving 30,000 pounds of milk in a year—50 times her own weight; or the tiny chrysanthemum of Japan and China, no bigger than a suspender button, with the ones of today that will cover a dinner plate. Scispce has improved flowers, . fruits a animals so the cave man would not know what they were. Science could produce beautiful, healthy and intelligent people if the public would co-operate and stand for it. They

Won't now, but soe day they will

BECAUSE there are more of them, They have to die sometime, although on the average they take three years longer to do it.

Next: Do women jurors improve the mental activity of the men?

COMMON ERRORS

Never pronounce industry—in-dus'-tri; say, in-'dus-tri.

Paren ts Say they f ind ET di ficult

to discover what their children want |

to do except that it shall be something that will not make their hands dirty. —Capt. W. V. J. Clarke of the Shipping Federation, Southampton, England.

It is a terrible price to pay for peace, but it is the only price and it is far less than the price of war. ~The Rev. Dr. Minot Simmons. London, discussing rearmament.

Best Short Waves

TUESDAY

SCHENECTADY, 5:35 P. M.--8Bhort« Wave Mail Bag. W2XAD, 15.33 meg.; W2XAF, 9.53 meg. BERLIN, 5:45 P. M. Use of X-Rays n_ Medicine and Industry. DJD,

1.77 meg. MOSCOW, 8 P. M.-News: and Proram for English Listeners. RAN, 6 meg ROME, 6:35 P. M “Around Italy with Music,” Tuesday Symphonies. 2RO, 9.63 meg.

OSTON, 7 P. M.—The Harvard University Series. WI1XAL, 6.04 meg. CARACAS, 7:30 P. M.-—-Boy Scout's Hour. YVBRC, 5.8 mes. BERLIN, 745 P. M —The Academy for Athletics. DJD, meg.

German 11.77

LONDON, 8:30 P. M.-Old Dance Music, the BBC Theatre Orchestra. Sea 11.75 meg.; GBC, 9.58 meg; 9.51 meg.; GBL, 6.11 meg. TOKYO, 11:45 A. M.—Vocal Selections. JZJ, 11.80 meg. Mo

SYDNEY, Australia, 12:15 A. ek on Australia. VKIME, 9.50

SWING AND S

WAY MASTERS

the world of modern music. say, “a very solid citizen on the

on his show.

Above are two new views of as many very popular gentlemen in Tommy Dorsey (left) is, as the swing fans

RADIO THIS EVENING

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

‘Alias Jimmy Valentine’ Drama Begins as Radio Serial Tonight; Goodman on ‘Oakie College’ Hour

L son Barrymore Appears

With Martha Raye on Jolson Program.

TONIGHT 7:00—~Ed G. Robinson, WFBM, 7:30-<Al Jolson, WFBM. 8:00-—Al Pearce, WFBM. 8:30—<Benny Goodman, WFBM. (See “Good Radio Music.) 11:30 Shep Fields, WLW.

“Alias Jimmy Valentine,” starring Bert Lytell in the drama that has thrilled millions of Americans on the stage and screen, will be heard every Tuesday at 8:30 p. m, over NBC-Blue beginning tonight. The new program will follow in serial form the fight of Lee Randall, alias Jimmy Valentine, to reestablish his name and honor after he is released from the penitentiary. You may remember the movie version of the story produced some years ago with William Haines and Ernest Torrence in the top roles. Bert Lytell, a native New Yorker,

slip horn,” and he is heard each

Saturday night at 11 o'clock over WIRE. Guy Lombardo (right) provides smooth rhythm for CBS listeners at various times throughout the week when the network officials have an opportunity to cut in

Keating's Or.

45 ” ”»

INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI HICAGO WFBM 1230 WIRE 1400 0 700 GN 720 (CBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual)) (Mutual Net) 4:00 Follow Moon Nellie Revell Nurse Corps Salerno Organ 4:15 Was A Time News Flashes Jack Armstrong Harold Turner 4:30 Stepmother Kogen’s Or, Singing Vadv Serenade 4:45 Tea Tunes Yes Or No Hilltop House " hn 5:00 » » Terry-Pirates Front Page Chair Melodies 5:15 Chr, Science Dick Tracy Serenade Len Salyo 5:30 Light Opera Orphan Annie A. Franklyn Charlie Chan 5:45 Nan Wynn Tom Mix Lowell Thomas Orvhan Annie 6:00 Bohemians Fasv Aces Amos-Andy Serenade 6:15 Sports Review Vocal Varieties Vocal Varieties Stokes’ Or. | 6:30 Piano Twins Snorts-News Press Review 3" 4 | 6:45 ews Charlie Chan Tonic Time Apnleberry . Big Town Johnnie Johnnie Bologhini 3:15 y i ” r Arden’s Or, 330 Al Jolson Wayne King Can Be Done hy thm Nvmphon WH h " " " 8:00 Al Pearce Vox, Pon Heidt's Or, C. Utley R:15 y y id " I. Noble's Or, 8:30 Oakfe College Mardi Gras Mysteries Comedy Stars 35 : " " Tomorrow's Trib, 4 " . > " Duchin’y Or, Romance Hour 9:30 Polly Follies J. Fiadler . Fiddler Northerners 9:45 id D. Carnegie . Carnegie ha 10:00 Melodies Amos-Andy Paul Sullivan Music 0:15 Noreeiscoows pa) o Deuteh's r Polognini 8 ews opez’ Or, Lee’ : oe 10:45 L. Noble's Or. Variety Show won; i Hin Deutsch’s Or. Weber's or. Kaye's or. Lombarde's or. 5 "” "” " ”" ’ " " LE Buddy Rogers Reflections Fields’ Or, Isham Jones RIE , 0) i " " " [12:00 Indiana Root Pearls’ Or, Pearl’ . ar’ : 12:15 Silent Tor [Tyr 12:30 3 » 12:42

Moon Rjver Keating's Or, h ’ " "

WEDNESDAY

PROGRAMS

INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI WEBM_ 1230 WIRE 1100 WELW 700 eA" (CBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual,) WGN 720 6:30 Chuck Wagon On Mall Ring, Neiehhor Silent 6:45 ’ ’ Devotions Merrymakers bid 7:00 Early Birds Musical Clock Prayers Sunshine Time 7:15 y y a hid ster Grant " gs 7:30 y n virieties Gospel Singer Musio Box 15 ’ Experience 8:00 As You Like It Musical Clock Hymn t X:15 Ensemble essa Byrd All ANAWer hs Myr R:30 Apron Strings : ’ Myrt & Marge » 4 8:15 h Better Health Widder Jones id 44 0:00 Kitty Kelly Mrs. Wie » Linda's Love © «J 9:15 Myrt and Marge ther Wife Aunt Jemima Tae Ties 0:30 ry; Farrell Iain Bi Betty and Bob Get Thin he omen in White Houseboat Mail Box 10:00 Ruth Carhart David Harum Mary Marlin Don Pedro 10:15 Magazine Backstage Wife News Children 1h:30 Big Sister Charming Carson Robison Painted Dreams 10:15 Life Stories Party Line Goldbergs elodies 11:00 Mary MeBride Home To Girl Alone Store Woman 11:15 Fdwin C. Ail Singin’ Bam O'Neills 41 Stars 11:30 Farm Circle Linda’s Love Fam four Ouin Ryan 11:45 Farm Burean Grace & Eddy wr 18 We Are Four 12:00 Feature Time U. 8. Market ho State ®t, Man 12:15 3 44 1s " id o Buckaroos

12:30 . " Renorter Unannounced Seryices 12:45 Police Court Kitty Keene 1:00 Woman's Eves Don't Look School of Alr Pop. Melodies 1:15 ews Unannounced 3 : Wife vs, Sec 1:30 School of Air May Robson yy id Lucky Girl 1:45 y o B. Fairfax 4d n B. Fairfax 2:00 Y. Stevens Cont. Varieties Pepper Young Romances 2:15 Dentist Mat. Varieties Ma Perkins Valiant Lady 2:20 Deep River oh 3 Vie-Sade June Baker 2:45 Curtis Musie » 4d Harding's Wife Good Health 3:00 ig » Lorenzo Jones Dr, Friendly J. Kirkpat. 3:15 " » Bourdon’s Or. Mary Nothern adv of Millions 3:90 Bohemians PTA Proeram Hatterfields Len Salv %:45 Dr. Oatoe 0 yh Road of Life Margery Graham 4:00 Follow Moon Ross Lockridge Nurse Corps Mark Love 4:15 Was A Time Interviews Jack Armstrong Harold Turner 4:30 Stepmother Kogen's Or. Singing adv Serenade 4:15 Tea Tunes Memories Hilltop House i »

Where to find other stations:

Chicago, WBBM 770; WENR 870,

WMAQ 670; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit, WIR 750; Gary, WIND 560.

Jimmie (Schnozzle) Durante, V Goodman and the Coolidge Quarte

Leaving Mr. Durante with Mr. 'Oakie for the moment, let us turn four attention to Mr. Goodman and {the Coolidge ensemble, to say noth|ing of the bright shade of the Salzburg genius, Mr. Goodman,, you eee, fs fresh from a Carnegie Hall recital where he combined a little | wing with a little Mozart. So his jam session” tonight will include a movement of the Mozart Clarinet (Quintet, with the Coolidgers matching “licks” with Maestro Goodman, What don't they think of next! n- Ww

Student, artists on the Curtis Institute broadcast tomorrow (CBSWFBM at 2:45 p. m.) will be Gabrielle Hint, soprano, and Isidore Gralniek, violinist. Miss Hunt will offer two songs from Schubert's “Winterreise” cycle, “Die Kraehe” and “Der Leiermann”; “Les Cloches” and “Mandoline” by Debussy; two arias from Thomas’ “Mignon,” and songs by Gretchaninov and Cui for her part of the program. Completing the 45 minutes, Mr. Gralnick will play “Le plus que lent” by Debussy; Paganini's Caprice No. 13, and Dohnanyi’s ‘“Ruralia Hungarica,” Opus 32. Vladimir Sokoloff is to be the accompanist,

” » ”

If vou would prefer brushing up on your operas to hearing the Curtis students, you may tune in the NBC-Blue network tomorrow at the same hour for a discussion of Rossini's “The Barber of Seville.” This is one of a series that NBC will offer in connection with its Saturday broadcasts from the Metropolitan stage. Milton J. Cross will interview musical authorities informally, supplying musical, historical and “human interest” information on the coming Saturday operas.

” o ” The New York Philharmonic= is searching for

Good Radio Music

By JAMES THRASHER

Jolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Benny t—there's a foursome for you. And

they'll all add their talents to the “Oakie College” broadcast which you may hear at 8:30 c¢'clock tonight on CBS-WFBM.

old photographs of conductors who have served in the 96 years’ existence of its combined orchestras. Specifically they need the likenesses of D. G. Etienne, who con=ducted from 1842 to 1844; William Alpers, 1842-44; A. Boucher, 184247; George Loder, 1842-52; Louis Weigers, 1844-45, and Theodore Eisfeld, 1848-65. The Philharmonic-Symphony people would appreciate it if you would keep them in mind the next time you clean the attic.

STARS FIGHT FIRE

Film Valleyites chased a fire | when a large hay fire near San Fernando lit up the sky and Spencer Tracy, Hdward Everett Horton, John Lee Mahin, Robert Hopkins and other Encino residents boarded autos and rushed over to help fight

the blaze, which consumed many tons of hay.

it

TONIGNT'S RADIO MIT! broadcast

“How To Win Friends and Influence People”

Colgate—""The Friendly Shave’ pre. sents Dale Carnegie, aathor of Ameriea’s fastest selling book | Hear ‘How to Ask fora Raise’ -''Waysa Woman Can Help Her Husband.” And answers to other problems every man must solve to get ahead!

WIRE .

| | | | | |

45

PM

is a veteran of the theater. He made his first professional appearance in a stock company as a child and when he was only 22 was tak[ing his own company on tour. Since | then he has played such stellar roles on Broadway as the dual star- | ring part of Robert Naughton and | Eddie Connelly in “Brothers,” Kenneth Bixby in “Goodbye Again,” and successful Rev, “The First Legion.” " Ww The famous profile of John Bar= rymore will come in for a bit of Be mouthed wonder by Martha

his particularly Mark Ahern in ”

Raye when the two screen stars make their appearance together on | the Al Jolson program tonight at 7:30 o'clock over CB3S-WFBM, Miss Raye, Mr, Barrymore and Mr. Jolson will appear in a short radio play and the remainder of the bill will be filled as usual by Parkeyvakarkus and the Victor Young ore chestra.

” » ” Harry B. Mitchell, Civil Service Commission president, will discuss

Civil Service Week for CBS-WABC listeners tonight at 9:45 o'clock. Mr. Mitchell is to be introduced by Col. Charles 1. Stengle, American Federation of Government Employees president, Civil Service Week is to be celebrated through Sunday.

n ” ” Raymond Paige has secured special permission from Wall Disney to present his own orchestral version of “Yo Ho,” the song of Snow White's seven dwarfs, in the Hollywood Mardi Gras broadcast over NBC-WIRE tonight at 8:30 o'clock. The weekly slow motion conversation between Charles Butterworth and Walter O'Keefe will center around two bored spectators at the Santa Anita race track. Mr. O’'Keefe's “Department of Education” will be devoted to the pressing problem, “How to Borrow Money,” and Lanny Ross, vocal star of the show, will sing the popular novelty “Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen.”

o ” ” Sanford Bates, Boys’ Club of | America president and former su- | perintendent of Federal Prisons, will speak from the annual dinner of the Jewish Council for Boys’ Clubs in the Covenant Club, Chicago, tonight at 9:30 o'clock over WENR. Silas Strawn, former American Bar Association president and former president of the U., 8. Chamber of Commerce, will introduce the speaker,

” ” ” The Rev. E. Arnold Clegg, Capitol Avenue Methodist Church pastor, is to have charge of the WIRE morning devotionals this week. Tomorrow’s topic is to be “The Royal Way.” Sponsored by the Church Federation of Indianapolis, the programs are broadcast at 6:45 a. m, daily except Sunday.

” ” ” Smallpox and diphtheria will be the subjects of a dramatization and a talk by Dr. W. W. Bauer during the broadcast on Your Health to=morrow at 1 p. m, over NBC-Red. The program will present the ida that these diseases are unnecessary and may be prevented by immunization of infants, This is one of a series under the general title, “Con=tagious Diseases.”

® B® “Let's Pretend,” dramatized regularly by children for children over OBS-WABC without interruption since 1930, will move from Saturday mornings to Tuesday evenings from 5 to 5:30 p. m, effectively immediately. The first evening performance of these dramatized fairy tales, adapted and produced by Nila Mack, CBS writer-directress, is to deal with the story of “King Thrushbeard,” conceived at the turn of the 19th 'century by the brothers Grimm,

TONIGHT!

a solid hour of fun, fandangles, and music

CAMEL CIGARETTE PRESENTS

JACK OAKIE

JIMMIE DURANTE

STU ERWIN

Georgie Stoll's Orchestra ALSO

Benny Goodman

and the Swing School The one and only “King of Swing’

Tonight 8:30-9:30 e. $s. T

WFBM

All brought to you by the makers of CAMEL CIGARETTES

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