Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 January 1938 — Page 17
2
TUESDAY, JAN. 25, 1988
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CONFOUND IT, JASON | sOME SANG OF INTERNATIONAL THIEVES SC CONCEIVED THIS TRICK OF HAVING Us GUARD A SACK OF BRICKS TO DISCREDIT ME AS A DETECTIVE «~SPUTr-T = SPUTTT EGAD, THEIR PLAN MIGHT BE TO CLAIM “THAT THEY ACTUALLY GAVE ME $50,000 =~ AND “THEN
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AH SOT MAM NOTION ‘BOUT PEM MEN DAT GIBB Us Dis SACK, OB BRICKS wa Dis AM DE MYSTERY AHS BEEN LOOKIN FO’ AND DE BRICKS 1S IMPORTANT
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES HOLD EVERYTHING
PAGE 17
By Clyde Lewis
“It's sort of depressing, ain't it?”
«By Martin HELLO! \&N'T wouR THEN «= You '1l CAME TO SEE BOT = WHY, TH THEN TS TIME WE ANDO WOO MAY DUST CALL ME BOOTS | MOTHER WITH You 1S THERE NOOD HALE LUNCH WTR DON'T EVEN § WERE GETTWNG WOUORS fi “uu BUERVYONE ELSE OOS THIS MORNWG ? KNOW Your ACQOAINTED | MY 2 U's WCE OF YOU To ASK ME NAME wee NAME 1& CECI) wee TO LUNCH, BUT wan .
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WASHINGTON TUBBS I
RIVE NAS 'N THe RATH ROOM WALL -
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LET ME GET THIS STRAIGHT, SISTER,
ARE YOU PROPOSING THAT WE GET
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Mian
MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE
WELL, WHY NOT? I'M NO SO BAD LOOKING, AM T ? R BESIDES, TM WILLING TO SNRIFICE My CAREER
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ON -H-H-H-H' LOOK AT THE WATER, LEAKING
Wha, T-Do 2
Stoopnagle and Budd Return as On Benny Goodman's Swing School; Melchior on ‘Operalogue’ Program
ON AIR WAVES TONIGHT
Presenting Eddy Duchin at his
lovers.
piano, the delight of dance music
Mr. Duchin plays for you in his inimitable style tonight and each Tuesday night at 9 o'clock over WLW and the Mutual System.
nouncements caused by station changes af
RADIO THIS EVENING
(The Indianapolis Times 1s not responsible for inaccuracies in program af
ter press time.)
MY LOOT. HIDDEN AWAY. 4 BE R
[ LISTEN, HONEY, IVE BEEN SMART, TVE SAVED TIVE GOT OVER A LION BUCRS
CH.
WHY, WE'LL
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TOWARD THE RAIL
HE CAR HITS THE DRAWRRIDGE TO ARNOLD 1st AND AT A FURIOUS PACE... DED ENLY IT LORCHES G->
Fe. +YERON FOLDS UP HIS NECK BETWEEN | HIS CHEST | | AND His BEAK.
“GOPR. 1938 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.
SETWEEN ANY TWO POINTS ON THE EARTHS SURFACE, IN A STRAIGHT LINE, IS APPROXIMATELY 2,500 MILES,
THEY DONE GOT OUR
The earth's greatest diameter is 7926.7 miles, ‘which gives it a ciroumference of approximately 25,000 miles. Therefore, in order to reach a point at the opposite end of the earth, we would need to travel only 12,500 miles.
pr
By William Fergusen
WE'RE. SAFE W
{ BO , OWE YOU FOLKS A A LOT FOR WHAT
YOU'VE DONE /
MEW! | SURE
A LOT-OF EXPLAN ATIONS TOO, . | ME. NOLAN =
7AND YOU OWE US T
“TM. REG, U. 5. PAT. OFF. d COPR. 1930°EY NEA SERVICE, INC. i
“ents NATION'® : IN oe OF Seca? VE© OR NO
——— . aren abe AONN DRED,
ACCORDING to David P. Sentner, of International News Service, until the world moves much nearer the millennium, spies are Just as much a part of a nation’s defense in peace times as is a standing army or battle ships. Each na-
tion must know what preparations for war are being made by every other nation, as a vital part of its national policy. According to Mr. Sentner a spy must be a perfect actor with iron nerves, even when facing death. He must also speak Several languages and know chem-
istry, Se and ay science. amazing, says,
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM--
WHICH 16 WORSE, = ®/ SUPERIOR INFERIORITY COMPLEX? YOUR OPINION ccs,”
—
DOES MAKING WRITTEN Liste OF WHAT YOU HAVE TO DO WEAKEN
- 2 YES OR NO occupations. A “double life” to the nth degree!
THEY ARE practically one and the same. A person who has a swelled head, who is always bragging about himself, and making himself out a superior person, is doing it because of an inferiority complex which he is trying to hide in this way. One person takes the egotistical, bragging method and another the shrinking-violet method of overcoming feelings of inferiority.
” ” » 3 TL DOs uk precisely wesen your memory but it is likely to get you in the habit of ut memory. A far
“habit is |
to write out what you wish to do, then memorize the list and throw it away.
Next: Is it necessary to suffer from stage fright?
COMMON ERROR
Never pronounce zealous--zeel'-us, say, zel'-us.
It is the task of men of good will to help both labor and capital to speak a common language of agreement.—Ferdinand Pecora, New York Supreme Court Justice.
Best Short Waves
TUESDAY BERLIN-5:00 . m="“Married Bliss Is Better Than Single Blessedness!” DJD, 11.77 meg.
SCHENECTADY-—5:35_p. m.—=8hortWave Mail Bag. W2XAD, 15.33 meg; W2XAF, 0.53 meg,
LONDON—5:55_p, m.—The Life of Walter Barnes, Fisherman, of Brixham, Devon. iC, 9.58 meg.; GSB, 9.51 meg.; GSL, 6.11 meg, M OW-—6:00 D> m. News and Program for English Listeners. RAN, 6 meg, ROME 035 i m. =-BEeonomic Sur. vey; Tuesday Symphonies, 2RO, 9.63
meg. TON—T7:00 p,m. —The Harvard University Series. WIXAL, 6.04 meg.
CARACAS--T:30 p. m Boy Scouts’ Hour. YVS5RC, 5.8 meg.
BERLIN-—8:15
p. Mm Laughing Homeland, Swabian humour,
JD,
11.77 meg LONDON — 8:30 2 Mm. = Robert Burns: A program from his works,
og in celebration of the 179th anniversary of his birth, GSD, 11.75 meg.: GSC, 9.58 meg., GSB, 9.51 meg. GSL, 6.11 meg.
LONDON-0:45 9. mm. ~"“Made in Great Rain oa: Whitstable is EG megs GSC, 958 GSB, 9.51 meg. ; L, 6.11 meg.
TOKYO--11'45 a, Mm ="New Japanese Music,” selections. J2J, 11.
meg HERE: ACTS
INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI CHICAGO WFBM 1230 WIRE 1400 WLW 700 WGN 720 (CBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual.) (Mutual Net.) 4:00 ‘Follow Moon Organ Nurse Corps Ralerno Organ 4:15 Bohemians News Flashes Jack Armstrong Harold Turner 4:30 Stepmother Kogen’s Or. Singing Lady Serenade 4:45 Tea Tunes Yes Or No Hilltop House 44 " 5:00 » dd Terry-Pirates Front Page Chair Melodies 5:15 Chr. Science Dick Tracy Serenade Len Salvo 5:30 Light Opera Orphan Annie A, Franklyn Charlie Chan : 5:45 Nan Wynn Tom Mix Lowell Thomas Orphan Annie i — —— INC. TM. REC p bs 6:00 R. E. Peters Fasy Aces Amos-Andy Serenade 6:15 Sports Review Vocal Varieties Yocal Varieties Concert Or. . 8:30 Piano Twins Sports-News ress Review py » ~By Brinkerhoff 6:45 News Charlie Chan Tonic Time Appleberry MOPPIN EC P . 7:00 Big Town Johnnie Johnnie Rologning oO ! JP DoESN'T 7:15 » 27 » 4 p 5 rden’s Or, 7:30 Al Jolson Wavne King Can Be Done Neighbors DO ANY GOOD. T's 7:45 hp vn al Bo EoD / GETTING DEEPER. WHAT 8:00 Al Pearce Vox Pop Heidt’'s Or. C. Utley 3 8:15 3 ¢ ie 3% IY id L. Noble's Or. 8:30 Oakie College Mardi Gras Mysteries Comedy Stars 8:45 BN id n 3s B » Tomorrow's Trib. 9:00 44 3 Duchin’s Or. Romance Hour 9:30 Polly Follies J. Fiddler J. Fiddler Northerners 9:45 ” » D. Carnegie PD. Carnegie D 1” 16:00 Melodies Amos-Andy Paul Sullivan Music 10:15 Screenscoops News Los Amigos Bologhini 10:30 News Busse’'s Or. Lee's Or. Abe Lyman 10:45 L. Noble's Or. Variety Show 4 » n o 11:00 B. Crosby's Or. Lombardo’s Or. Review Kaye's Or 11:15 3 ” 3 p Kaye's Or. 3 » 11:30 Tucker's Or. Reflections Fields’ Or. Isham Jones 11:45 h " » " oN 4 » » 12:00 Indiana Roof Johnson's Or, Pearl’s Or. Pearl's Or. fig hen wameyor Wm no 2:3 A 's r. on Ri 15:48 nD ey n 9 Keating's Or. HA HA! DON'T BE SILLY, v 2 NAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI CHICAGO SWEETHEART, YOU ARENT INERM O80 WIRE 1400 WLW 700 WGN 120 THAT Soh FOOL. MARRY (OBS Net.) (NBC Net.) (NBC-Mutual.) (Mutual Net.) ME AND YOU'LL LIVE LIKE A K - REFUSE , AND 6:30 Early Birds a Mall ne. ne avor Silent y n ” Merry . $00 MD VOUR FRIENDS oo. evo X Wik STARVE TO DEATH IN 7:00 ’ ’ Musical Clock Pravers Sunshine Time \ A CISTERN 1% " " Vv y ti Soap CEmeer Music Box \ Nd » 4 arieties s 8 . vite » J » did Experience " dd 8:00 et, Parade Musical Clock Hymns Good Morning 8:15 neemble Dessa Byrd 11 HT . .” :20 Apr Strings Bh 2 yr a , ds ye Better Health idder Jones 9:00 Kitty Kell Mrs. Wiggs Linda's Love COrane-Joyce 9:15 Myrt and Yvarge Other Wite Aunt Jemima 9:30 Mrs. Farrell Plain Bill Betty and Bob Get Thin 9:45 7” ” Women in White Houseboat Mail Box 0:00 th Carhart David Harum Mary Marlin Don Pedro \ 0:33 a Backstage Wife News Children 10:30 Bit Sister §harmins SAI On ] 3inteq Dreams R NN 4 rp 3 arty Line x0 RN h\ : 10:45 Life Stories y = S — 11:00 Mary McBride Home Town Girl one ore oman he 11:15 Edwin ©. Hill Singin’ Sam O'Neills Sor 1:30 'F Circle Linda's Love Farm Hour win Ryan By Th Mis oh and Col Hie Farm Bureau Grace & Eddy " id We Are Four 4 3 AM, VES. BUT YOU \ : 4 ’ ve t 1) ”» State St. Man J anALL HEAR THE STORY 12 Feature Time U. 8. Marke " . Buckaroos FROM MH. L. ARNOLD HMA" 12:30 ”» Reporter Unannounced Services SELF - PLEASE COME 12:45 » » Police Court Kitty Keene IN... — : 1:00 Woman's Eves Don’t Look School of Air op. Melodies 1:15 ews Jnanhothced " " ML Ra jae EOIN Ar ania ww B. Fairfax 4 . Unannounced epper Young Romances Bin bern Mat. Varieties En erkins Valiant Lady 2:30 Deep River do D Yic-Sade June Baker 2:45 Curtis Musie » " Harding's Wife Good Health : ”» » enzo Jones r. Friendly J. Kirkpat. 8:08 ” 4 Bonrdon’s r, rca, ' BA Or Hos 3: Program atterfields on FI Pram. en PTA Pmemm er fire Maer Granem I Follow WM Lockridge Nurse Corps Mark Love FR Bonemiam Roverviews ; Jack Armstrong Harold Turner 4:30 Stepmother Kogen’s Or. Singing Lady Serenade 4:45 Tea Tunes Memories Hilltep Houre
Where to find other stations:
Good Ra
By JAMES
Blue “Operalogue” program. lists’ broadcast.
qualified to interpret the music and inner meaning of this work, since he has 124 Tristans to his credit more performances of the role, says NBC, than any tenor in history. In addition, there will be some highlights of Mr. Melchior’s singing career brought up for discussion by Milton J. Cross, commentator on this series as well as the Metropolttan matinee broadcasts, ” ” =» One is inclined to paraphrase the famous schoolboy essay on the frog and exclaim “What a wonderful bird the radio are!” For that allembracing entertainment medium, which brings us string quartets, political speeches, singing mice, talking parrots and chirping crickets, tosay nothing of Amos 'n’ Andy, now is to present a complete performance of Bach's “The Art of the Fugue.” Not only that, but NBC will broadeast it for an hour and 15 minutes over its combined networks, beginning at 1:45 p. m. on Friday. I'm a couple days early, of course, in bringing this to your attention, but you might as well be getting ready for it now. “The Art of the Fugue” certainly is specialized musical entertainment, and its performance would have been unthinkable as radio entertainment until the past few seasons. Until recently, at least, few but the serious music student had ever heard this monumental work, which has been called the greatest work in occidental art="Bach's last testament, a summing up of all
15 siete WIRE o 9
Ohicago, WBBM 770; WENR 870;
WMAQ 679; Louisville, WHAS 820; Detroit 750; Gary, WIND 500.
dio Music
THRASHER
Laiiritz Melchior, much on the air of late in various capacities, will return to the microphone again tomorrow at 2:45 p. m. on the NBC-
Within the week Mr. Melchior was heard on Bob Ripley's “Believe It Or Not” program, and again discussing his stamp collection on a philateTomorrow he will discuss the Wagnerian love tragedy,
“Tristan and Isolde,” which is to be broadcast next Saturday. The Danish tenor should be well®
fugues and four canons on the same subject, was composed to teach the fugal art by example rather than precept. It ends with a fugue on three new subjects, which was left incomplete at Bach's death. The work sold about 30 copies after its publication in 1750. Bix years later one of Bach's sons sold the plates for sérap copper. Various composers, peginning with C. P, E. Bach, have arranged the work for concert use, since Bach left no instrumental indications for performance, On ¥Triday, we shall hear “The Art of the Fugue” played oh two pianos by Heinz and Robert Scholz, brothers and noted Austrian duo-
TONIGNT'S RADIO NIT! DALE CARNEGIE “How To Win Friends and Influence People”
Colgate="The Priendly Bhave” =presents Dale Catnegle. author > America's fastest-selling book! nthe alr with new #perets of how to win friends. And anEWers to problems every man must solve to get ahead and make more money!
Guests
Veteran Motel Manager To Appear With Dale Carnegie.
TONIGHT 7:00—Big Town, WFBM. 7:30—Al JYolson, WFBM. 8:00—All Pearce, WFBM. 8:30—Mardi Gras, WIRE, 9:45—Dale Carnegie, WIRE. 11:30—Shep Fields, WLW.
Very often guests make the party, and that’s as true in radio as it is in the the home. Today you hear the question, “Who was so-and-so's guest?” more often than “Did you listen to so-and-so?”
The most promising party tonight seems to be the Swing School of the Air. Benny Goodman, returning after his first vacation in more than two years, will extend his welcome to those two earnest idiots, Col. Lemuel P. Stoopnagle and Budd at 9 o'clock over OBS-WABOC. In the first half of the double bill, the Jack Oakie-Stuart Erwin show will have Adolphe Menjou ahd Veree Teasdale as visitors over OBSWFBM at 8:30 o'clock.
” ” >
Dale Carnegie will reveal one of the most important rules on “How to Win Friends and Influence People” when he presents John L. Horgan, veteran hotel manager, on his program tonight over NBC-WIRE at 9:45 o'clock. During his interview by Mr. Carnegie, Mr. Horgan ‘will tell how his memory has enabled him to recognize and call by their first names many members of his large clientele. Mr. Carnegie ‘also will explain various ways to temember names and incidents so that they may be used to advan. tage. o ” ”
Lou Holtz, the visiting comic, will appear on the Al Pearce program tonight at 8 o'clock over OBSWFBM. Al and his Gang will contribute to the merriment, with Tizzie Lish and Arlene (Human Chatterbox) Harris in their well-known monologs, and Elmer Blurt presenting another example of low pressure salesmanship.
2 ” ”
In what ic reputed to be a “By popular demand” assignment, ¥dward Everett Horton will return to the Al Jolson show tonight. Miss Martha Rave and that bold man of speech, Parkyakarkus, will assist in the festivities while Vieter Young and orchestra will provide
the musical accompaniment. The time: 7:30 p. m, over OBS-WFBM. ” n ”
A dramatization of a heroic rescue in a tunnel under the Milwaukee River which took place some 30 years ago will be pressnted on Johnny the Call Boy's hour at 7 tonight over NBC-WIRE. The hero was Deputy Fire Chief Lawrence Hanlon and, following the play, he will be presented to the audience. ¥ ®
The Mardi Gras Mummers, radio's most novel dramatic stock company, composed of a tenor, Lanny Ross; a comedian, Charles Butterworth, and a humorist, Walter O'Keefe, will offer another episode of their super detective melodrama, “The Awful Sleuth,” over NBCWIRE at 8:30 o'clock tonight. Mr. O'Keefe, who will play the role of Philo Pants, super criminologist, again will be assisted in his sleuthing by Sergeant Butterworth. Mr. Ross will present a new song, “Thanks for the Memories,” and “Music in the Evening,” the song which he wrote as a Mardi Gras signature. Raymond Paige's orchestra and the 72-voice choir will complete the bill,
o ” ”
“World Neighbors,” a ®éries of educational broadcasts dramatizing high points in the lives of famous scientists, historians and other benefactors of civilization is heard once again over the Mutual network every Tuesday at 7:30 D. mm. The programs are presented under the auspices of the University Broadcasting Council, though Mutual's Chicago affiliate, WGN.
2.WAY RADIO PLAN FOR CRUISERS NEAR
Construction of radio transmits ters, which will permit officers ih cruisers to talk to their headquarters while driving in their ears, 1s to start soon, Capt. Robert Batts, Indianapolis police radio head, announced today. The equipment, to be ass&mbled by police radio technicians at a cost of $200 per set, will permit rapid exchange of inférmation bee tween patrols and headquarters through the two-way system, Capt. Batts said.
pianists. Their playing of this cone trapuntal “treatise,” despite its ex treme length, has been one of the Salzburg Festival's outstanding ate tractions for several seasons, THe arrangement which they are play-
ing is by Eric SBchwebseh, Bach lec
turer at the Festival.
TONIGHT!
A volid hour of fun and musis
CAMEL CIGARETTE PRESENTS:
JACK OAKIE VEREE TEASDALE ADOLPHE MENJOU
STU ERWIN GEORGIE STOLL'S ORCHESTRA
ALSO BENNY GOODMAN
and the Swing School The one and only "King of Swing®
STOOPNAGLE & BUDD WFBM s30pme.s.T
