Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 December 1939 — Page 10
PAGE 10
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
MONDAY, DEC. 25, 1939
TVA DELIVERING Sheik of Araby’s Three Desert Wives Make Clothes
POWER DESPITE DEARTH OF RAIN
Meets Contracts: Hoarded Water Keeps Tennessee Open to Ships.
By JOHN T. MOUTOUX Times Special Writer
KNOXVILLE Dec. worst drought in the Mississippi Valley since 1925 is giving the Ten- | nessee Valley Authority a real | workout-—its first real test since, TVA was established in 1933. | The question is: Can TVA regulate its reservoirs in such a manner as to maintain a navigable depth in| the Tennessee River and at the same time assure a steady supply of power to meet all its contract re-| quirements? Thus far in this drought the an- | swer is that it can, and TVA in-| sists that no matter how long the dry period continues it will be able | to supply as much power to its cus. | tomers as it has agreed to sell them. |
Sell 10 Private Firms |
The drought has also served to) refute the statement of private power interests that TVA is creating a surplus of power in the Tennessee | Valley, In fact, private power companies operating in the Valley are) now buying power from the Author | ny The TVA Act requires the Authority to build a system of dams that will give the Tennessee River nine-foot channel from its source to its mouth. The Authority has worked out a 10-dam system to do that job, and it has completed five dams Even in this half-completed con- | dition, the system is giving a good account of itself. Water released | from TVA reservoirs is maintaining | a navigable depth from Chatta-| nooga to the mouth of the Tennessce and is proving of much value to the Ohio and the Mississippi. Critics of TVA have ridiculed the claim that regulation of the Tennessee would help the Mississippi in flood control and navigation. They pointed out that the Tennessee is only one of many tributaries the Father of Waters ana said however well-intentioned this! one stream might be it couldn't) possibly have much effect on the] great Mississippi. But Critics Are Wrong
But this drought and the operation of the half-completed TVA Dam system are showing that the critics are wrong. The water that] TVA reservoirs are furnishing the Ohio amounts to almost one-fourth the flow of the Ohio below the] mouth of the Tennessee and one- | tenth the total present flow of the! Mississippi below the mouth of the, Ohio | One-tenth might sound inconse-| juential, and it would be under normal conditions. But, just at flood | time reducing the flood crest even| an inch or two might mean the difference between safety and disaster for a levee-protected city, so in time of drought the addition of a few inches to the depth of the stream might mean the difference between] being able to operate the boats and tying them up on the river bank.| Critizers said: | 1. By entering into long-term con-| tracts with industrial plants, TVA, will not have enough power left for| municipalities in the valley that] may want the cheap current. i 2. TVA hydro power will supplant) steam power, thus reducing the! market for coal and throwing| miners out of work. TVA will not| operate steam plants it is acquiring| from private companies. | Change Their Story
Now, with the drought on, the critics are saying: | 1. TVA has a power shortage and is reneging on its contracts. 2. Its hydro plants are going back| on it and the Authority has had to resort to steam plants to meet its demands. The fact is, the drought is proving} that the TVA power program is not | producing & surplus of electric ener- | gy in the valley. No water is pouring | down spillways of TVA dams; all of] it is being run through turbines to| generate hydro power, or through] locks for navigation. The Authority is making good on] all of its contracts. Under the act,| it is required to give preference to| states, counties, municipalities and rural co-operatives. Any pcwer that] is 1eft may be sold to industries and to power companies. That is what the Authority is doing. Private Contracts Met
Some 95 municipalities and rural co-oneratives are buying TVA power. In addition, the authority has contracts with several large | industrial plants. These contracts call for at least two kinds of power: | Primary, which is constant, and | secondary, which is interruptible. TVA is delivering to those plants | all the primary power called for | in the contracts. It has curtailed secondary power to the Monsanto company, which its contract permits. In addition, TVA is selling power | to Commonwealth & Southern, Ala- | bama Power Co, Kentucky-Ten- | nessee Light & Power Co, Tennes- | see Light & Power Co, and half a| dozen smaller private power firms. | TVA hydro power is not sup=| planting steam power in the valley, as charged before the House Military Affairs Committee this] year. Nor is the TVA program | throwing coal miners out of work. | The Authority is operating the} plants it acquired from Tennessee Electric Power Co, just as J. A} Krug, TVA’s chief power planning | engineer, told the House Committee | would be the case if the authority | bought out the TEP system. | Nor, as is now being charged, are the TVA hydro plants going back on the authority. On the contrary, |
ol
that nat
i {
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TVA says the production of hydro N
power at existing TVA dams is
95. — T he screens are useful, too, when wines »
|
[blow across the desert sands.
| the low point of 1933, but were 15.1
| Officers Investment Seminar to bel
Twin Sisters, Who Write of Life in Near East, Learn About Social Life in Bedouin Village; Find ‘Palace’ Without Sides.
NEW YORK, Dec. (NEA) —It's an airy life for the three wives of Sheik Agil El Yawar, a top man among the Bedouins. So those Hoffman twins found out last summer when they lived in the Sheik’s harem for several months. He keeps the wives in a big black goat's-hair tent 100 feet long
without any sides. When they want privacy, they put up screens. The 2 2
| The Sheik only comes to his ha-|
rem once every two months, Ruth] and Helen Hoffman, the beautiful] St. Paul twins who won fame here last year with their bock, “We Mar-| § ried an Englishman,” explained. He| lives in a palace—“"funniest palace we ever saw,” said the girls—six| hours away, by motor, in a place] called Sher Gat, |
More Informal Now
The Hoffman girls met the Sheik —they call it “Shake”— through “their” husband who, when Ruth Hoffman first married him several years ago was known through their conversation with friends as “Mr. Brooks,” or “the Englishman,” or the Husband.” Mr. Brooks has reached a more informal status now. This year the twins are calling him Douglas. The Shake, one of the wealthiest men in Irak, is the head of the Shammer tribe of 50,000 Bedouins. He stands 6 feet 8 inches tall, weighs 75 pounds, and is very handsome, with black eyes, black hair and a black beard. Ages are seldom accurately remembered among the Bedouins, but the people living there, apart from the Shake thinks he must be some- Fatima’s three children and others where around 50 years old. |belonging to Kowkub and Zenobia, Last summer the twins told the there are several sons and daughters Shake they would like to live in of Shake Agil. The rest are serv. his harem for a while. They want- ants, shepherds and farmers. ed to meet his three wives, they eX~| apmang the children is the favorite plained. . daughter, who is 20, and is so modGrows Ol at 20! ern that she has refused to marry. So they started out to the harem, |Of course now she's distinctly passe. which is beyond the northern Irak Nobody in Irak would marry an old city of Mosus, (woman of 20, it seems. Besides the big central tent where| “Jealousy?” said Helen Hoffman. Fatima, Zenobia and Kowkub (the “It doesn’t exist there, as far as we wives) live, there are about 40 other could find out. It's pretty dangersmaller tents clustered round about.jous to be jealous. .\ jealous wife Its a big community, and among would get divorced.”
aR
The “Shake” , “very
«+ 6 feet 6 and handsome.”
|
at left, and her sister Helen,
.
‘The Talk of the Harem, American Visitors Discover
The Sheik’s goat-hair tent forms a backdrop for the smiling faces of the Hoffman twins of St. Paul, Minn. Arab costumes are the former Ruth Hoffman (Mrs. Douglas Brooks)
Pictured in colorful
| “It took us about two days to
'win the friendship of Zenobia, Fatima and Kowkub,” said one of the ‘twins. “Then it was just like visiting with three girl friends, except of course, we were in the middle of a big plain and living in tents. got to be very good friends.” The wives just sit around all day, | doing what the French call “talk-| ing chiffons.” Talk about that pret- | {ty dress, that nice way to wear the] hair, how pretty you look today with | that ear-ring on, and so on. But lots about children, too. - Those wives weren't fat, despite’
the traditional idea that Moslems like fat ladies, the twins said. Fatima was the youngest, maybe 26. The others were about 30. They look much older than that, said the twins. It's all too true about how quickly Arab women age. It's the children, apparently. But noth-
We ing is more important to a Bedouin |
woman than children, If they don't have them, they don't stay wives. The Hoffman twins are in New York finishing their second book. It's a continuation of' their first, which somebody described as being “as if a couple of gay Vassar girls had sat up all night re-writing Lawrence of Arabia.”
LIVING COSTS DROP | Miississippi’s FOR WAGE EARNER
NEW YORK, Dec. 25 (U. P)— The American wage earner’s living costs declined .1 per cent between TUES Soeeil Writer October and November, principally JACKSON, Miss. Dec. 25~Govbecause of a small drop in food | TH Hugh W ve us , : : “businessman” executive, sits in his prices, ‘according to the National| © te Caohol and vious Industrial Conference Board. Reporting on the findings of a | SOKe pouring from busy facregular monthly survey conducted | Ores in a program that pg by its division of industrial econom- | Agriculture with industry — his
ics, the conference board stated that "BAWL ’
: : A far as the Governor is conliving costs in November equaled t 857 per cent of the 1923 average, cerned, after noting the results of
\ {thr rears of BAWI operations, compared with 858 in October. [three years of B pe November costs. the board said {the program has no defects, November costs, the board SalG,| «jt pas exceeded our expectawere .1 per cent higher than in the |. cs pa avs. “I can't see any 1938 month and 19.5 per cent above | ao ws in the act. and if I were [just starting a new term I'd say {re-enact it for another four years
By VIRGIL FULLING
per cent smaller than in November, 1929. [just as it stands.” The purchasing value of the dollar|” he Governor does see as a seriin November, it added, was 1167 /,,c threat to the BAWI the Fedcents compared with 1166 in Octo- ara) Wage Hour Act with its abber, 1168 in November of last year, cence of wage differentials. 99 cents in the 1929 month and 100] «But” he emphasizes, “if freight cents in 1923. rates are adjusted equitably between the North and South, we
don't need a wage differential in SAUVAIN 10 DIRECT the Wage Hour Act. We're ready North and East on an equal wage INSURANCE SEMINAR bests if the unfair and discriminatory freight rates are straight-
and willing to compete with the ened out.” As evidence of the success of the BAWI program, Governor White calls attention to the recent report of the Mississippi Industrial Commission, which administers it. According to the report, 4000 new jobs and an annual payroll of $4held here for two weeks in July. [000,000 have been brought to
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind, Dec. 25.— Dr. H. C. Sauvain, director of Indi-| ana University's Investment Research Bureau, has been named chief executive officer for the Life
Col. C. B. Robins, general man-|Mississippi under the program. Adager of the American Life Conven- ministrative expense to the state tion, will be associate director. The seminar is hald for advanced study of the investment phase of life in- KEEPS GUITAR WHEN surance company operation. It is sponsored by the American Life HE GOES T0 CELL Convention and the university's -_- business school. LAPORTE, Ind. Dec. 25.—Robert One of the three basic lecture| geekell, 25. of LaPorte is entercourses in the curriculum will be de-| taining City Jail prisoners today. voted to study of the banking and| Arrested for breaking windows in credit system in the U. S, particu-| three automobiles, Seekill, who larly factors affecting trends in in-| plays guitar in a night club near terest rates. Another course will] Michigan City, was fined $5 and study problems of lending on real costs and given 30 days in jail fo: estate mortgage. The third will deal| malicious trespass. He was allowed with contemporary economic topics.!to keep his guitar.
Hoosier at Puerto Rico Home
greater than had been estimated | NA
for a dry season.
RCA PROMOTES TREASURER
NEW YORK, Dec. 25 (U. P)— George S. De Sousa, treasurer of the Radio Corp. of America, has been
elected vice president and treas-
urer of RCA. David Sarnoff, pres-| ident, announced today. Mr. De Sousa has been treasurer of RCA since its; formation in 1919,
Maj. John W. Weir, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Weir, 2428 Broadway, and newly appointed judge advocate of the U. 8S. Army ivision at Puerto Rico, looks over his new home in San Juan. The te overlooks the historic EI Morro Fortress and the Atlantic Ocean.
to be held Thursday.
Governor
Says Program a Success
during the period was only $62 483, | the commission says. It estimates that on a basis of 5000 to 5500 jobs | to be provided as production in-| creases, the cost to the state will be | $12 a job, Governor White says the concert- | ed state-wide program of BAWTI is designed to prevent some of the) errors that result when individual communities raise funds by sub-| scription to bring in Jndustries. “The BAWI program has given notice to the outside world of the| receptive attitude of Mississippi toward industry,” says Governor White. “Fully 30 new industries] have located in Mississippi since inauguration of the BAWI Act and half of them did not come in under | the BAWI plan. They came be-| cause they knew we welcomed them. | “In giving concessions to manufacturers, through {ree buildings and tax exemptions, we are doing nothing that Northern and Eastern states haven't done long ago to attract industry.” Labor troubles; according to the Governor, have been practically non-existent under the BAWI program. “There are no sweatshops in Mississippi under the BAWI program,” says S. A. Klein, one of the commissioners administering the act. “We are careful what kind of manufacturers we permit to come into our state, and have kept out hundreds who did not appear to be desirable. “Of course, we don't want to make the program permanent. We feel that four more years will enough.”
NOVEMBER PERMITS FOR BUILDING GAIN
WASHINGTON, Dec. 25 (U. P.) —| Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins reported that November permit] valuations for residential buildings | were 14 per cent above October and | 43 per cent greater than November, 1938. “Total permit valuations for all types of construction,” Miss Perkins said, “were 1 per cent higher in November than in October and 17 per cent higher during the current month than during the corresponding month of last year.” The value of new non-residential construction, Miss Perkins explained, declined 11 per cent from October and showed a decrease of 14 per cent compared with November, 1938. Expenditures for additions, alterations and repairs were 21 per cent below October, but were practically unchanged from a year ago. The November figures bring the total value of permits issued during the first 11 months of 1939 to $1,.922,635,000, an increase of 22 per cent over the corresponding period for 1938. The value of new residential construction gained 33 per cent during the period, non-residential construction gained 11 per cent and ad-
ditions and repairs gained 8 per cent.
be |
MARTIN TO BE GUEST NEW YORK, Dec. 25 (U. P).— William Martin Jr, president of the New York Stock Exchange will be the guest speaker at the first 1940 meeting of the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York,
HOOSIER FALL PIG CROP ABOVE 1938
WASHINGTON, Dec. 25 —The Agriculture Department reported today that the 1939 fall pig crop of 31985000 head was the largest in the 17 years for which records are available, The number of pigs saved between June 1 and Dec. 1, was 4,334,000, or 16 per cent more than in the fall of 1938 and 25 per cent more than the 1928-37 average. The Department reported small pig production in Indiana at 2,891,000 compared with 2,369,000 in the fall of 1938. The record fall pig production followed an increase of 20 per cent last spring to give the nation a combined 1939 total of 84302000 head. The total is 13,201,000 more than last year. The Department said that the rapid upswing in hog production that started last spring apparently has been checked now and indications are that the pig crop of 1940 will be smaller, Hog production increased in all
(sections this vear, but the percentage
of increase was largest in the south.
CASH INCOME FOR FARMERS INCREASES
WASHINGTON, Dec. 25 (U. P) — Farmers’ cash income from marketings and Government payments for the first 11 months of 1939 was $7,075,000,000 compared with $6,900,« 000.000 for the same period of a
|year ago, the Agriculture Depart-
ment reported today. The total for November was $740, - 000,000 compared with $707,000,000 in November 1938, and $716,000,000 for November, 1937. This year farm marketings totaled $663,000,000, slightly more than the $659,000,000 for November 1938, but well below the $713,000,000 for November 1937. Government payments of $75,000,000 last month were much larger than the $48,000,000 in November, 1938 and the $3,000,000 for November 1937.
GROSS TAX DIVISION MAILS 700,000 FORMS
The State Gross Income Tax Division said today it is mailing 700,000 returns to employers, State and Federal Government and their subdivisions for reporting payments of $1000 or more to employees. Gilbert K. Kewit, division director, said employees should return the report forms being sent them as soon as possible and “insure themselves against the annoyance of investigation by the division of any discrepancies between the amounts reported on their returns and the amounts reported by their employers as having been paid to them.”
STOCKS ONCE AT $104 TO SELL AT 75 CENTS
NEW YORK, Dec. 25 (U. P.).— A block of 150,000 shares of Missouri pacific Railroad preferred stock that cost Alleghany Corp. $104 a share will go on the auction block tomorrow at 75 cents a share. The stock will be withdrawn from collateral pledged behind the corporation’s 1944, 1949 and 1950 bonds, in exchange for $112,390 in cash. Completion of the sale, according to an appraisal by the trustees for the bond issues, will result in a net loss to Alleghany Corp. of about $20,000,000. It is understood the loss will be written off the corpora-
tion's 1939 statement.
Sale MEN'S SUI TOPCOATS & OVERCOATS
Over 500 to Select From
See the thev're all unredeemed, thorough. 1 steriliz a r 4 cleaned-—Al im eS w= 11 sizes.
All colors—A ©
$ 950
... The CHICA
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TS
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J. PI
NEW YORK, Dec. 25-—Attention has already been called to the controversy which has broken out between the Agriculture Department and the Treasury about digging up money for the farmers. This may get to Congress and it is just as well that we know what it is all about now. For some years the Government has been paying large money benefits to farmers of wheat, cotton, tobacco, corn, rice. This is the subsidy solution of economic problems. It is sure-fire, There is no small corner grocer or filling-station owner or lunch|counter proprietory, nd matter how laincompetent and no matter how {poor his location may be, who can{not be kept in business by paying (him a Government subsidy. It takes no statesmanship. It requires no study or examination of the problems of his business. All the Government has to do is to give him money and he is safe. That is what the Government has been doing for the farmers. yu 8
BUT THERE is a problem of getting money to hand out like this. (It requires high taxes and heavy borrowing. And after a while this problem gets out of hand. That is about what is happening now. The standard way of paying Government subsidies is for the Government to impose a tax on the people and then pay the money to the farmers or others. In fact that is the standred way of col(lecting Government funds and paying them out. But if you do this, all the money the Government collects appears in the Treasury statement and all that it spends appears in the budget. So now Agriculture Securetary Henry A. Wallace has found a way to give this money to the farmers but not have it appear among the Government taxes or in the budget, Every farmer will be given a certificate by the Government for the amount of money that is coming to him on a bushel of wheat or a bale of cotton and so on. If the market price of wheat is $1 and the proposed subsidy is 256 cents, then the certificate will be for 25 cents. ” ” on
money and will collect none, The farmer may then present this certificate to a buyer of wheat when he sells it, and the buyer-—-who is usually the processor—will have to pay the farmer the market price of | wheat plus the 25 cents for the certificate, He must buy the certificate from the farmer. Thus the farmer will collect his own subsidy from the taxpayer. Thus it will not appear on the Government books, Every farmer will be his own tax collector, It is purely and simply a scheme to conceal a Government subsidy, a plan to continue paying $225,000,000 a year to the farmers but get the transaction out of the Government's accounts so that it wouldn't annoy the taxpayers. The taxpayers would continue to pay the $225,000,000, but they wouldn't see it and the Government could contend that it had cut down its expenditures. It is a bad system, open to any number of objections.
DEPARTMENT STORE SALES INCREASE
WASHINGTON, Dec. 25 (U.P,) — Department store retail sales in the week ended Dec. 16 were 6 per cent above the corresponding 1938 week and in the four-week period ended Dec. 16 were 3 per cent above a year ago, the Federal Reserve Board announced today. Sales in the week ended Dec. § were 4 per cent higher than a year | ago. In the latest week gains ranged |from 3 per cent in San Francisco {to 10 per cent in Cleveland. For the four-week period Kansas City and San Francisco had 1 per cent losses while elsewhere gains ranged from 5 per cent in Chicago to 9 in Cleveland. In the New York and Brooklyn district sales the week ended Dec. 16 rose 3.3 per cent over a year ago, making the best Christmas trade showing of the month to date. For the four-week period volume was 1.2 per cent below 1938.
$1,482,060 SAVINGS MADE BY HOOSIERS
Times Special WASHINGTON, Dec. 25.—~The Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corp. today reported Indiana persons placed $1,482,060 in new savings during November. The amount incteased to $93,555,000 the total savings in the 128 insured savings and loan associations in the State. Loans on homes totaling 1284 and amounting to $1,977,670 were made by the associations in November,
CHRISTMAS
ORGAN PROGRAMME
" DESSA BYRD Radio Station WIRE
5:00 to 6:00 P. M.
TODAY
Presented By
‘tonight, CBS-WFBM, will present
THE GOVERNMENT will not give |
ON THE RADIO
TONIGHT 7:00—Andre Kostelanets, WFBM. 7:00—~Tommy Riggs, WIRE. 8:00—Radio Theater, WFBM. 8:30—Alec Templeton, WIRE.
broadcasting company. . . . Eamon de Valera, known familiarly as Dev and officially as prime minis ter of Eire, will broadcast Christ mas greetings ‘from Dublin at 2:33 p. m,, CBS-WFBM. . . . Garry Mor=fit, emcee for Club Matinee, was determined he would not have a Christmas program this year. Pube lic opinion has forced him to change : & plans and he will present Edward Disney's gverett Horton on the Club Mat= |inee’s regular program entitled “Just What I Wanted for Christmas.”
With all the more popular radio shows bowing to the spirit of Christ | mas, the Radio Theater, 8 o'clock
dramatization of “Pinocchio.” A special musical score has been prepared for the hour-long show, All the children’s favorites, Pinocchio, 8 = Suminy Cricket: Sir J. Worthington| Fred Waring and the choir sings ulfellow, Gideon, Monstro, Lamp-| Christmas carols ) - wick, Stromboli, the Coachman andy Wi TAS ears a 6 o'clock.-te the Blue Fairy will be there. night, “WIRE. Among the favorites will be “Silent Night”
8. nn =u ’ (“Jesu Bambino” and “Cantique ae The radio during all of Christmas| Noel.” . .. A group of writers noted
day will offer a continuous program for their children’s books will gather of holiday specialties, starting with | ‘round the tree on Mutual's Kate Smith at 11 a. m. She will| “Author! Author!” program at 7 describe an old-fashion Southern| Alec Templeton’s special Christ= Christmas. . . . At 2 p.m. a special mas gift will be the playing of an Radio Guild production of “The original fantasy for chorus and Passing of the Third Floor Back,” | piano. He will so improvise on popcan be heard, NBC-WCFL. This ular Christmas carols. . . . Andre Jerome K. Jerome story has been Kostelanetz' orchestra will play a dramatized’ by NBC almost every medley from “Snow White” at Te Christmas since the founding of the|CBS-WFBM. ¥ a =» »
Walt
o LJ
THIS EVENING
(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccuracies in program announces ments caused by station changes after press time.)
INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 WIRE 1400 (CBS Net.) (NBC-MBS)
Kathleen Norris Girl Alone Golden Store Midstream Hollywood Dick Reed Scattergood Xmas Melodies Dessa Byrd
Billy & Betty Hedd H. V. Kaltenborn 3 European News ”»
CHICAGO WLS-WENR 780 (NBC Net.)
Cadets Serenade Unannounced Dinning sisters
CINCINNATI} WLW 700 (NBC-MBS) Kitty Keene Midstream
Jack Armstrong Silhouettes
Fred Kirby Baker and Denton Paul Duane Lowell Thomas Fred Waring
News Four Stars Inside Sports
Variety ,Show Richard Crooks ”» »
Dr, L Q, Aleg Templeton
2353
Vincent Gomez Children Stories Bud Barton Tom Mix
”» ”
Ray Kinney Science on March One of Finest
News Pl Ti Lum and Abner vstery = Good Will
Rex Maupin Dick Reed
Tommy Riggs Richard Crooks
Tune-Up Time Minstrels
Sherlock Holmes
True or False
Radio Theater »n »n
Dr. IL Q, Aleg Templeton ’ "n
Concert Ted Weems
" Unannounced " "
Lombardo’s Or Blondie
Contented Hour Hollywood Contented Hour
Sensations, Swing Forum Sensations, Swing ”n ” » ”n ”»
”»
Peter Grant Paul Kennedy Xmas Salute
10 ,0'Clock Final » ”»
Amos and Andy News News Rollini’'s Or, S. Kaye's or, Low, Bretze "
Paul Sullivan Armstrong's Or, Valk's Or.
”"
Recrodings ”»
Joe Sanders
TUESDAY PROGRAMS INDIANAPOLIS INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400 . WIBO 1050 (NBC-MRBS)
Dawn Patrol Markets
Dawn Patrol ”» "»
Kagsel’s ,, or. Orrin Tucker
S853| 5353) 5533 | 53532353 5353 5353
Ts fh hs wh [py | mm S223 | DLTD | BRBXB| Herta ABD] FRID| asbs
Fitzgerald's or. Moon River
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (NBC Net.) Early Birds
CINCINNAT} WLW 700 (NBC-MBS)
Mornin’ ”n ”»
Devotional Ranch Gang
Breakfast Jam ” ”»
News
Fred Miller Concert or.
Miss Julia
Kitty Kelly Mvrt and Marge Hillton Stepmother
”» ”» »
Time to Shine
ews Gospel Singer Kirby & White
Caravan ”n ”
”» »
» News
City Today . Kitchen
”» »
rd
Coffee Cups Hits of Day Fashion Footlights Beautiful Life News
Editor's Daughter Devotional
Man I Married Other Wife Plain Bil Woman in White
Reflections Man I Married Dr. Swing Charm House
erde Grofe Happiness
Linda's Love Road of Life Organ Reveries Guiding Light
Woman Speaks O'Neills Farm Hour ”n ”»
David Harum Road of Life Against Storm Guiding Light
Marv Taylor Brenda Curtis Big Sister Jenny's Stories
Kate Smith Girl Marries Farm Circle " "
Farm Bureau w
News Kitty Keene Noon Tunes
Friendly House
rgan Castletime
Rhythms Blues Chasers Rythmakers Boy and Girl
enw ams | asm | a= | aos -s S232 83T2 5253 | 5352 [5353 5353| 52
Singin’ Sa Dr. Malone Headlines Linda's Love
”» ”» Fllen Randolph
Editor's Daughter Litite White House
Betty Bob Grimm Daughter Valiant Lady Church Hymns
Mary Marlin Ma Perkins Pepper Young Vic and Sade
Backstage Wife Stella Dallas Against Storm Miss Julia
Kitty Keene Midstream Jack Armsirong Invitation
Home Folks Good Earth Rill Jones Tommy Sutton
Rand Box Shut-Ins Number Please
arm flour farkets, Weather Renorter Federated Women Betty and Bob
’
1 ot tt tp en Sand] BRB | WINING | rebate | 13151000 | mmm | DSDOT | POTD [EVER | cteiaa | Ba
Dr, Chris My
= >
and nsan 's tian Science
Son and 1 Church Hymns
Mary Marlin Ma Perkins Pepner Young Vie and Sade
Backstage Wife Stella Dallas Lorenzo Jones Widder Brown
Girl Alone Midstream Hollywood Dick Reed Scattergood Dessa Byrd
KEY NETWORK STATIONS (Subject to change): UBS—=WABC, 860; WJR, 750; WHAS, 820; KMQX, 1090; WBBM, 770. NBC-BLUE -WJZ2, 760; WOWO, 1160; WLS-WENR, 870; KWK, 1350. NBC-RED--WEAF, 660; WTAM, 1070; WWJ, 920; WMAQ, 670. MUTUAL=WOR, 710; WHK, 1390: WHKC, 640; CKLW, 1030; WSM, 850,
Pianorama Want a Job? Number Please
Jovee Jordan
] Jonathan Richard Maxwell
Cleveland Musio Men, Books Smilin’ Ed
Kathleen Norris Golden Store
Uncle
Musio Thomas Thomas Old Refrains Bandstand Jamboree ”n »
Silent
5353 S353) 5303 552
Merchandise GEO. J. EGENOLF
MACHINIST 181/, W. South LI-6212
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ELINED EPAIRED | ~< , EFITTED | "omens
L E 0 8 TAILORING CO.
235 MASS. AVE. VIRO RSH EN | eS CLOTHING COMPANY
131 W. Washington St. Directly Opposite Indiana Theater
Men’s And
"AUTO AND DIAMOND |
LOANS
20 Months to Pay
| WOLF SUSSMAN, Inc. Pp 239 W. WASHINGTON 8ST.
Established 38 Years Opposite Staiehouse LI-2749 $ ne ne 2 , 20
Winter
COATs '§-~
MILLER-WOHL CO. 45 E. Wash. St. RI 2230
OUTFITTERS TO MEN, WOMEN and CHILDREN
Livingston’
THE MODERN CREDIT STORE
129 W Wash. Indiana Theater .
Is Opposite Us Trumpet
Instruction 1
115 E. Ohio St. LL. 4088
make LOANS
ON ANYTHING
SACKS BROS.
306-10 INDIANA AVE.
WHILE THE REST OF
THE TOWN SLEEPS HAAG’'S ALL-NIGHT DRUG STORE 22nd and Meridian
IS OPEN
Per Lesson
Make Woodworking Your Hobby—Use
DELTA MOTOR DRIVEN TOOLS Exclusively at
VONNEGUT'’S
120 E. Washington St.
Ladies’ Full
Fashioned HOSIERY . .. 3%
KINNEY’S
138 E. WASHINGTON ST.
YUL al:
137 E. Washington Bldg
10¢c CANVAS Cr LY KNIT WRIST 8 2C
GLOVES NG IIT
7 L127
STATE a
LEARN TO PLAY IN 60 DAYS
WITHOU ye
St.
Guaranteed course of lessons given away with every new piano.
<= Easy terms. |
I WILKING MUSIC CO.
. 120 ERST OHIO ST.
Arcade
LOANS INDIANA TRUST co.
llied With . The Merchants National Ban
