Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 March 1938 — Page 15

a = soe

A SOS PURI: 5 Ss Paes

Sy I SE

Wi

th Major Hoople |

KAFE F WTI. UMP % WELL, LADS, AT LAST

- DOUBT 1 SHALL HAVE

DISTRICT TO SAY, THE, DUTIES OF MY OFFICE WILL BE CONDUCTED WITH THE USUAL . HOOPLE grFiciency!

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

GOSH, 1 D\WINO

STMERE “HE GOES .SMOPPIN FOR WER pend Ben

TROVSST AQ «+ALL BY HERSELF ,Poor wi\O! X pi ote ny 60 THROVGH WITH ~~ BU SW \ ; HEART | AW) WWW

MY TALENTS HAVE BEEN RECOGNIZED / AS A DEPUTY INSPECTOR 1 WILL INVEST- =~ GATE FRAUDULENT CLAIMS ON INCOME RETURNS ~~ NO

JURISDICTION OVER MY HOME ‘RUPNEEDLESS

ROMISE NOY ¥ BILL. OR TW GANG SACK WOME | TN JUST ABOUT BREAKS MY ME AN’

AFTER SCRAPING TH’ CIGARET TAX * OFF MY INCOME TH' NUGGET WAS SO SMALL 1 PLUGGED A ACLAR, WITH

&

I

=

Nive GOT EM GUESSING,

MAJOR= 3-2

pay & NE

HOLD EVERYTH ING

SNE CALSE L OO ALL T : COVLO T'THROW WER AN THAT YOONG BRAY TEETHER , AX FIRST »-

TO TRWKR ,MEBSE Te ALL MY FAOLX wee

oMN- ITS FUN - -AND THE TEACHER

SAYS You are HEBPING UP

a LE) ENE OF You *To Bells Home Ji ™E 8c ook LBSSONS [ -So L CAN Keep QP \ Wii™} He crass -

WASHIN STON TUBBS II

r dave every LESSON ALL SAVED IN MY RooM over THE STORE

MAYRE Rey LL WIN THE scHoLARSHIP FOR You - WELL, GOOD NIGHT -

sad iH gy 7

Me sy

LOOK, MARY - THERE 18 & RED Low 14 48 «I'M GOING

SY LOOKS AIKE BA FIRE OR

| To SEE WHAT IT 1S~

X SONOS T00 Goo) ( 1° BEG YOUR PA 0 BE TRE, SiR, DDI VU 5 ER, TLL THAR fT OVE

) OF THE CENTURY, MISTER.

' MYRA N RTH, “SPECIAL NURSE

NDERSTAND CAN gx LeraRe vom JA 1! ONLY $1,000 A MONTH

ROO,

YEA AND JACK HAVE BROUGHT THE i THE MEANTIME, MYRA INJUF =D BOY TO THE EMERGENCY TENT, ANC NOW JACK GOES OFF THRU

GEES IN THE CAMP...

ANXIOUS INQUIRIES OF THE REFU-

MAKES SOME

“THE FLOO™ TO FIND SHE. CHILD'S

MOTHER .. iF HAVE You SEEN ANY THING

IM AFRAID] WON'T

| THIS cu RIQUS WORLD By William Ferguson EER EE

ANEW MOON HAS JUST AS MUCH EFFECT ON THE

of thé moon. os the Suxiacs of the saith depends «5g SEES But the results : ’ or not the moon is working in co-operation : Bi t it. A full moon and a new moon have the

§:the quarter phases the. moon must coun isract the | the

{ OF JUDGE JACKSON OZ HIS WIFE ) HIS HOUSE NCE THE |

.|reach the same conclusion,

NO MISS...

WAS RIGHT INS THE PATH.

THAT MUST BE THE WIDOW'S PLACE = BUT HOW! AM 1 TO GET A SICK WOMAN OUT WITH = OUT A BOAT?

JACK PONDERS THE ‘PROBLEM, A

S A SMALL BOAT SUDDEMLY EMERGES FROM IN BA OF Je HOUSE -

JANE = "MOTHER, YoU AND DOT AND es sor

AND DICK ARE HOW 1S THAT?" ATER ie

FATHERS

: ar oVINION

BECALSE eRe, MORE LE THEIR MN HERS AND BOYS LIKE THEIR

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND

By ft DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

CAN YOU JUDOE: A MANS SALARY SY HIS ER soto

BATH BLUE -EYED

- 3

A STUDY of 300,000 school children by Hansen, biologist, showed ' considerably more brown. eyed girls than boys. Other Siatiss wointed out by Ruggles Gates, British biologist, in his “Heredity in

= | Man,” where the father has brown

eyes and the mother blue, half the sons have blue eyes and half brown,

] but many more than half of the

aa have brown; but if the r has brown eyes and the fapre blue, the majority of both boys

APDY P JouR OPINION «_ Studying heredity is a. fascinating

game and any one can play it.

2 I HAVE lectured to hundreds of .groups of both big and little executives and I. but notice the big salaried fellows

{are much quieter in both manner

and dress. than the minor: executives. ‘When I see a minor. sxectl

and girls have blue eyes. How this

Bappens al Jute oom Soipicated but in more women

depressed moods and found when we are blue our minds tend much more to go back to cur childhood. Probably this is because those days now seem to have been all sunshine and happiness. That is the way mine always look now to me and they were. !

ASK THE TIMES fnclose a 3-cent stamp for - reply when any question of fact or information te The Indistiapelis Times Times Washington ce 1013 13th St., N. Wa Washing. ton, D. C. Legal and medical advice cannot be given, nor can extended research be undertaken. 3 et LHL

@Q-—Where was the motion picture, “Lost Horizon,” produced? A—In California. The :Tibeton village in the Valley of the Blue Moon was erected at Sherwood Forest, 40 I 40 miles from Hollywood; omadic

.settlement of ‘the |

Chinese tribesmen was built on the floor of a vast desert dry lake 150 miles away, and the more conventional sets, such as the interior

of the 8; 8 Manehuiia, the Jjving 7 uarters of. Shangri etail

-la

q of the of Tibet and. por- | tions Zouniteins « were recreated’ ¢

within the studio.

Which :is th allot. aa} oS HR RE

By Clyde Lewis {

| Richard Crooks to Sing

ert Casadesus as soloist. This time

‘| which it is taken; Dvorak’s Slavonic

| “Marche Slave.”

rfact has been mentioned here be-

bok fuk © tt 1 ct nk I 3 : a ume | ©9292 | 0000 | NNR | aaa lan ER

azo ve sosoass | worsens Ra BENE 6853 EE see bats) e

7

Secretary Roper on Business Forum; Arliss and Wife in Radio Play Tonight Mozart and Ravel. Symphony Fare:

Tonight at 7:30 on ~~ NBC-Red.

“Good Music” by James Thrasher Once again’ we are to hear the| team of Mozart and Ravel featured on an orchestra broadcast, just as

it was yesterday by the New York Philharmenic-Symphony, with Rob-

it will be the Philadelphia Orchestra, and there will be a trio of soloists: Georges Barrere, flutist; Carlos Salzedo, harpist, and Horace Britt, cellist.

On the Philadelphians’ - regular NBC-Blue program at 8 o'clock this evening, we are to hear the Andantino from Mozart's Concerto for Flute and Harp. Then Mr. Britt and Mr. Salzefio will join forces in Ravel's “Piece .en Forme de Hab- | anera.” After that the trio will play two movements from the French composer’s Trio-Sonatina.

Eugene Ormandy’s selections for the orchestra—definitely of a “pop concert” variety—will include the Overture to Nicolai’s “Merry Wives of Windsor”: MacDonald's “Rumba,” which seems to have survived the symphony ' of the same title from

Dance No. 1, and Tschaikowsky’s

2 = » Richard Crooks, who is to appear at English’s three weeks from tonight on the Martens course, will be at his accustorhed post before the microphone at :7:30 p. m. tonight for his NBC-Red broadcast with Alfred Wallenstein, Once again Mr. Crooks is to sing “La Reve” from Massenet’s “Manon.” And who can blame him for singing is so often, since he does it sO nicely? : Also on Mr. Crooks’ list are Deppen’s “In a Monastery Garden,” and a song by Siecynski with a sadly appropriate title, “Vienna, City of Dreams.” Mr. Wallenstein will conduct his symphony orchestra in the Overture to Offenbach’s “Orpheus” and—yes, this is where you came 'in-—a Dvorak Slavonic Dance and Tschaikowsky’s “Marche Slave.”

8 » =

It’s a constant encouragement to see the programs of our current children’s concerts, even though the

fore. For instance, Eugene Goossens’ program with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra tomorrow includes the “Egmont” Overture of Beethoven and the third movement from Brahms’ Fourth Symphony. And I'll bet-the kids will “eat it up.” In addition there will be Haussermann’s “After Christmas” Suite:

: TONGHT : 7:00—Monday Show, WFBM. 7:00—Burns-Allen, WIRE. 8:00—Phila. Orch. NBC-Blue. 8:00—~Radio Theater, WFBM. 8:30-=Sec. Roper, WIRE. 9:00—Contented Hour, WIRE. 9: 30—Brave. New World, WFBM. 11:15—Golden Gloves, ‘WGN.

OWN SHOW

Lou "Holtz, Broadway comic, now appears on a program of his own entitled “The Monday Night Show,” broadcast each Monday evening at.7 o'clock over WFBM. He is heard with Ted Husing, Kay Thompson, Agnes Moorehead, “Cecilia, the Seal” and Richard Himber and his orchestra.

Sibelius’ “The Swan of Tuonela”; Granados’ Spanish Dance, and the first Rumanian Rhapsody of Enesco. To say nothing of “Drink to Me Only with: Thine Eeyes.” ° Programs like these are somewhat like the proverbial Christmas toy train. It’s hard to get the grown people aside and give the children a chance. ‘So the whole family had best tune in CBS-WFBM at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow.

® nn =»

The American School of the Air program, on CBS-WFBM at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow, will consider Italian opera~—and from its very beginning. Music will be taken from the works of Peri, Monteverde, Pe'golesl, Mozart and Bellini.

RADIO THIS EVENING

(The Indianapolis Times is not cesponsible for inaccuracies in vrozram ane fnouncements caused by station changes after press time.)

INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 _ (CBS Net.) -

Medal Hour

» .» ”» ”

(NBC-Mutual Markets ” ” R ter Repor ;

tk 19000

Women’s: News ews Scheol of Air noon :

Police Court Navy Band

-INDIANAPOLIS

CHICAGO (Mutual Net.) Bob Flgon

Buekar Midday ‘Service :

CINCINNAT1 ) (NBC-Mutual.) Farm-Home

Ma Perkins Kitty Keene ' Melodies . -

School of Air Nan ‘ Travelers n H. Turner Hits :

”. gl]

Spring - Rochester Or. ”» » Choir gt ” Homes : Matinee

Concert . Lorene Jusits . nanneune Church Women Huges Reel Dr. Dafoe Organ

Follow Moon Lenten Ser. stepmother Tea Tunes

1. ©. Intervi Maapin‘s *or. Memories

» » Terry-Pirates Talk Psycho) Dick Tracy B. Carter Orphan Annie Lum & Abner = Tom Mix e : Musical 2 0. A. Godfrey Uncle E: Musical oods Arden’s or. News : Charlie Chan Burns-Allen M. Speaks

Mon. Pick ”

Nite Show and Pat

2a | 000s | anos | sens wun | wise | Hmmm) BE

Hatterneids Young Romances Musical c~Sa de June Baker Guiding Light Good Health Dan Harding Mail Box Mary Sothern West-Matey Julia Blake ‘Melodies Road of Life - Books

Junjor Nurse Edna Sellers * Jack Armstrong 3 Graces Sin ing Lady Serenade top ‘House ” » Shon! Seats Daughter Dancing Strings Fra nkiyn Charlie Chan: Lowell Thomas Orphan Annie Amos-And J Maine’s or. S Carol. Weyman Sports Perk-Uppers ‘ Bolognin} ;

© Gould's Or. Lons Banger

. Westaway. erenade

Burns-Allen

Radio Theater ”» ”-

King’s Or.

Brave World :

Charm 3 Hour

» se os oo

Forward Indpls

. Spring Business ;

Contented Hour

Pearl's Or.

Bolognini Tomerrow’s Trib.

: True or False 8. Weber

Unannounced Charm

True or False

ny ”

Man's ‘Program

23 e8ES | 2853 | uns | subs | skb3 (E858 | 8853 | sats bods [eens

Sing-Swing News : Kaye's Or.

. Sulli HF M0 a a an Golden Gloves

”- ” :

Deany’s Or. : 2

. Norvo'’s Or. ”» ” : Kay Kyser

: Lee's or. Norvo’s Or.

bill © WE | meu | SOS | VOD | X0N a a ae ws >» .e . oe re

s863 [683888

Nocturne i. ” Si zn of : ”» ” » Hudson's or.

oh fd fd fod Bet fd id} ed

WV

”» ”»

Or, or. ”»

Review orvo’s Or. Kay Kyser

“» » Mose Riyer Keying’ s or.

TUESDAY PROGRAMS

INDIANAROLIS WFEM 1230 (CBS Net.)

INDIANAPOLIS (NBC-Mutual). -

CHICAGO WGN 720 (Mutual Net.)

CINCINNATI WLW 700 ({NBC-Mutnal.)

On Mall

‘Early Birds WO Devotions

Silent

Reveler Sets Good Morning

Merrymakers

583358

Varieties

oe

Music in Air News orn) Guat Desa Byrd g pron Strin Rose Room Mrs. Wits

Plain Bil Women

David Harum ackatag e_ Wife Party Forum

HH Ve

/ Way

Boy and Girl Singin’ Sam Linda's Love Hour

Govt. Market ”» ”»

Mary McBride C. Hil Fa Circle Fa Bureau

Medal Hour y: -

i: mm

Musical ,, Clock :

White Dr. Friendly

: Sunshine, Time Music Bos

Prayers Peter Grant spel Sing

& dder Jones

Linda's Leve Aunt Jemima Betty and Bob :

Crane Jovee Get Thin = Dr. Friendly Don Pedro Children

Painted Dreams : Stella Dallas

Harold Turner Organ

Mary Marlin News-River Hush Cross’ Goldbergs

3 Alone *Neills .

Farm Hour ews Way. Down East ” ” ” ”

‘Ma Perkins Kitty Keene

| get his spot. . ..

[syvia Sidney Is Guest

Star; Magazine. Editor To Speak. Secretary of Commerce Roper

heads a list of 10 business leaders who will discuss “The Spring Out

1 [look on Business” over WIRE ‘at’ 8:30 o'clock tonight. :

The speakers appearing with’ =~

| Secretary Roper are J. J. Pelley, i= =

Association of American Railroads £ president; ‘Paul 8. Willis, Associa 3 tion of Grocery Manufacturers of America president; Tom M. Girdler, - os American Iron and Steel Institute i: president; Alvin Macauley, Amer- = ican Automobile Manufacturers - = Association president; :

Association “president: A. J. Byles American Petroleum Institute pres- it - ident; Morris W. Hart, advisory: committee of the Nftional Cloak and Suit Recovery Board chairman; Edwin §. Friendly, American Newspaper Publishers Association io Bureau of Advertising chairman; .- and Dr. John F. Anderson, presi= © dent of the American Drug Manu- - facturers Association, 3 an

# 8 8

Givigs Arliss and his wife, the =: former Florence Montgomery, who . = are famous for their stage and . screen. characterizations together will be starred in tonight's production of . the DeMille Radio

“|. Theater, “The Man Who Played. °

God.” .

The story is one Mr. Arliss did for the motion pictures several ° Years ago. and it concerns a fa-, - mous pianist who "is suddenly struck deaf. His music lost to him,. he turns to lip reading to remain at least partly in touch with the. =~ outside world. You may hear the .:~ broadcast of the play at 8 o'clock tonight over WFBM.

2 =» ”

Another cinema and stage star, Sylvia Sidney, will'be heard on thé - air tonight. Miss Sidney will ap--pear ds the guest of the Man's Program, broadcast at 9:30 o'clock ° over WLW. - The other prominent = guest of the evening will be H. G. Leach, editor of The Forum maga« - zine. As usual, there will be a sport - quiz and music supplied by Foter Van Steeden’s orchestra.

#8 8 =

"International Affairs and America’s Part in Them” will be the subject of an address by Rep. McReynolds (D. Tenn.) during the National Radio Forum broadcast. tonight at 9:30 o'clock over NBCBlue. Rep. McReynolds is chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. . #8 8

The East-West Golden Gloves

| boxing. bouts, bringing together the

champions crowned ‘in the recent New York and Chicago tournaments, will be broadcast over WGN to--night at 10:15 o'clock from the ringside at Madison Square Garden, New York. Dave Driscoll will announce the blow-by-blow descrip=: tions while Al Helfer will handle - the : in-between-the-rounds assignment. : 2 EF Paul Whiteman is: scheduled to - pay ‘a visit to Mary Margaret Mc= " Bride during her broadcast tomor= =: row at 11 -a.'m. over WFBM. The = <

| subject: Tin Pan Alley. ;

s 8 =»

Paul Suilivan, ace commentator :: for Station WLW, was in Indianapolis = Saturday fo address. ° the Optomists’ Club luncheon. - The most striking thing about ':

1: Mr. Sullivan'is that he is much -

younger than he sounds—only 29. _: Born in St. Louis, he was graduated from Christian Brothers” ‘: College and later = attended the: Benton College of Law. He entered * radio simply to. make a little: pocket . money; and was So successfull that he cut his legal: - career short, taking over the St. - Louis Post-Dispatch daily broad: : casts. Mr. Sullivan has been in” * radio about six years. He's tall, * sandy-haired and affable,

td 8 8

. Here and There in the Studios—" Al Jolson has a by-line in recently = issued: first edition of Jack Demp= = sey’s magazine. Jolson’s yarn' is”

| about horses. and is entitled “From ‘| Nags to Gags.” | places Marty Gosch as production | man on the Paul Whiteman show, :

. Phil Cohan re-:-

the latter leaving to take over ths: reins of the new Lou Holtz series. Oliver Wakefield, the English co-: median, leaves the Whiteman air- - cast on March 25 and there is a= possibility that Col. Stoopnagle will - . A desert beggar--: prospector who roams the streets. of Palm Springs in a donkey cart ~ laden. with gold-panning implements, is capitalizing on Bob Burns’ popularity. On the wagon hood which frames his grizzled face are - the words: “Bob Burns’ Grandpa: Snazzy.” . .. If you're curious about. what makes the studio audience.

‘laugh when the Mad Russian makes ‘his entrance on Eddie Cantot’s pro- -

gram, it’s his ears, He tucks them - in beforehand: and when; he gives - that “Hod Do ou Do” greeting, they pop out. .'. . Marék Weber, who - speaks with a heavy accent, made a - solemn observation in English recently. Said he, “We have here, : what you say, a paradox—an Aus-.-trian directing a Russian singer ine an Italian song by a French composer >on 1 a St. Patrick’s Day pro-=; gram.” 3 2 i 3

2 | 5352 Bo Fama) Sh.

Pd oo

Poljes © Court Muse “Gia

a $y. Sehpot of Ate

ume

School of Alr ;

: Varieties

ccihio’s

Follow Moon 7 Gal Yes or No

mer

- Young Sade A 2 Sh

‘Lorenzo lomes Audition

ao Armetrons

ty

oo» ey Chr. Science

Ty Biesies Groban Kame.

B ke 's Or. Fa

ms JORK STATIONS (Subject

~WIZ, 760;

Best Short Waves i

MONDAY

5 Paki BOER gor 1: