Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 January 1941 — Page 10
ah hain lbp
Model Plane—
BAS MODEL UNIT
while Mr, Brown will run the tréas< urer’s department.
"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ON THE RADIO
JHIS EVENING
not responsible ig inaccuracies in program ane
=F IDAY, JAN. 31, 1941 ail Canadian Selantis
26, Wins MERIT SYSTEM
TONIGHT
7:00—Kate Smith, WFBM. e Indianapolis Times
“ the nutriment
* $1000 Eli Lilly Annual Prize
EBacause he learned better than gnyone else how to feed and keep alive certain bacteria which are
potentially harmful to man, Dr. Dilworth Wayne Woolley, 26-year-old Canadian-born scientist, captured the $1000 prize awarded yearIy by Eli Lilly & Co. The prize, and a bronze medal are awarded to the man or woman under 31 years of age who has made outstanding contributions to the world’s knowledge of bacteriology or immunology in a non-commercial research or educational institution in the {nited States or Canada.
Since 1939 he has been a fellow at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York. Dr. Woolley’s investigations have been concerned primarily with. the chemical structure and food requirements of micro-organisms. "Through these studies he has contributed greatly to the knowledge of requirements of hemolytic streptococci, some species of which are notorious as the cause of scarlet fever, blood poisoning or septicemia, meningitis and other diseases against which medical men long have been fighting,
He invhstizgated pantothenic acid, one of the compounds of the hitherto | mysterious vitamin | group which is indispensable in the rutrition and growth of many | bicteria lof industrial and medical importance, as well as of human bemgs, plants and livestock. His work with this acid in 1939 produced | the partial artificial synthesis of this substance and obtained a [crystalline form of one of the| two portions of the paniothenic @cid molecule. Research men, applying what Ir. Woolley Has learned, are befter able to grow end keep alive the microorganisms w. cause some of the most persistently plaguing diseases known to| man, and to study them more effectively. Dr. Woblley, the award committee said,| combined imagination, originality and an unusual maturity of judgment, with technical skill and | versatility of a high order in his fork. ! ;
JUDICIARY BUILDING LOOTED MONTGOMERY, Ala. (U, P.)~— Burglars looted Alabama's new judiciagy building, taking minor ar-
ticlgs of furnishing.
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BILL IS BACKED
Association Says It Has Many Features of Sound Legislation.
The Indiana Merit System Association, composed of 12 civic organizations, today announced that it has indorsed the merit systern bill introduced in, the State Senate yesterday un der G. O. P. sponsorship. The bill would set up| the system for hundreds of employees of the State’s 20 institutions! and four other state departmenis—Welfare, Unemployment Compensation, Health and Library Bure¢au. The Association’s indorsement stated: “The bill has many [features of sound public personnel, legislation. It provides for a single personnel director with qualificatipns for the job. Calls for Study “It directs that a thorough study of the employment problem of the institutions be made jo establish classification and! pay plans for employees. “Examinations procediires are set up, and employees are fo be selected from lists of those who have proven themselves qualified. It provides for the mansgement of employees so selected to insure adequate performance on {the job. In short it makes possiblz a service agency to help the boards and superintendents of the institutions to solve their employinent prob-
‘lems.
“Since honest anc competent administration is necessary to make any legislation work well, the Association will take a continuing interest in the institutional personnel problem if the bill passes. The Association wishes to emphasize the need to appoint the personnel board created in the bill, citizens of high caliber and known probity.”
Members Listed
Members of the Asspciation include: Indiana Federation of Women’s Clubs, Indiana Junior Chamber of Commerce, , Indiana District of Kiwanis International, Indiana League of omen Voters, Indiana Congress of Farents and Teachers, Indiana Academy of Social Sciences, Indiana Mental Hygiene Association, Indiena Federation of Social Work Clubs, American Association of | University Women, Indiana State Conference on Social Work, Indians Council on Crime and Delinquency and Civil Service Reform League,
4-H, ROTARY CLUBS TO WORK TOGETHER
Three joint 4-H and Rotary Club conferences will be hell in February throughout the State to provide leadership training for volunteer, unpaid adult 4-H Club leaders. The central Incliana conference will be held Feb. 17-19 here. Final feature will be a discussion of “Our Imperishable Possessions,” by Dr. Z. M. Smith, state 4-H |eader from Purdue University. The meeting will be | educational and discussions will center around leaclership problems, project problems, 4-H recreation and demonstrations. Other conferences will be held at Warsaw Feb. 13-15 and at Bedford Feb. 19-21. Expenses for the conferences will be handled by Rotary Clubs in counties where such or-
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7:00—Cities Service Concert, WIRE. 7:30—Information Please, WIRE. 8:00—Johnny Presents, WFBM. 8:30—Everyman’s Theater, WIRE. 8:30—Playhouse, WFBM. 9:00—Louis-Burman fight, WENR. 9:30—A1 Pearce, WFBM. 9:30—Alec Templeton, WIRE,
Tonight’s heavyweight championship battle between Joe Louis and Red Burman will be heard over WENR starting at 9 o'clock. Sam Traub will give the blow-by-blow account with Bill Stern speaking between rounds. Orrin Tucker, band leader in the new Hidden Stars program, who will appear Sunday with his orchestra and Bonnie Baker on the Fitch Bandwagon program, WIRE]! at 6:30 p. m., started out to be a doctor. It was, in“fact, while he was preparing for such a career that Gus Edwards, the old. talent scout, discovered him and whisked him away from the North Central College campus at Naperville, Ill. Gus was emphatic in his belief that Orrin could wield a baton with more dexterity than he could a scalpel. Orrin was born in St. Louis. His first name is Robert, but his mother started calling him by his middle name because there were so many other Bobs and Roberts in his school. While still a youngster he moved with his family to Wheaton, Jll., where he attended grammar and -high school. Later he enrolled at Northwestern University. He led an orchestra both in high school and college. His music helped him continue studies at Northwestern with enough left over to give him a start in his pre-medical course at North Central. But he still needed money and in his spare time at day he sold house insulation and at night he conducted an orchestra. That is where Gus Edwards stepped in. Orrin toured the country with a newly formed orchestra and in one of his early engagements was marooned for 13 days by the great Ohio Valley flood in 1937. Meanwhile Bonnie Baker, a Texas girl, had joined the organization. Then came the now famous “O, Johnny” recording, featuring Bonnie, which sold more than 1,000,000 copies of sheet music and more than 500,000 records. Since then Orrin, Bonnie and the orchestra have been pretty much in demand. Incidentally both Orrin and Bonnie insist they are not engaged, nor secretly married, “We're just good friends,” they insist, and Bonnie is pretty emphatic about it because she claims all this talk keeps her from having dates.
A 15-minute broadcast of #8t. Paul's Winter Carnival is to be carried over WFBM tomorrow starting at 2:45 p. m.
" H H
Marlene Dietrich, recently naturalized, plays the role of a refugee noblewoman trying to escape from Europe in “Madame Affamee,” Arch Oboler’s original drama offering on the Everyman's Theater program tonight, WIRE, 8:30. The Playhouse production at the
Orrin Tucker
same time over WFBM will ‘be a|RS magazine |]
dramatization of the story, “Mrs. Fane Comes of Age,” starring Mary Astor and William Gargan. ” u ”
Benny Goodman will be heard over WFBM tonight in a program scheduled for 11:30 p. m.
HOSTESS IN ST. LOUIS AIR CRASH TO MARRY
PITTSBURGH, Jan. 31 (U. P.).— Mary T. Eschbach, airline hostess injured in the crash of a Trans-|» continental & Western Airlines plane at St. Louis Jan. 23, will be married at New York on Feb. 5, it was revealed here today. Miss Eshbach is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clement B. Marshall | w of St. Marys, Kas. The bridegroom-to-be, John D. Benedito, son of a Pittsburgh hotel manager, is an oil resvarch engineer. The ceremony will take place at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, Jackson Heights, N. Y.
SENTENCED ON 10TH
CRUELTY CONVICTION |g
NEW YORK, Jan. .31 (U. P.).— John Pisano, 57, who kept a three weeks old puppy cringing with cold on the sidewalk in below freezing weather while he tried to sell it to passers-by, started serving 30 days in the work house yesterday. If he doesn’t pay a fine of $50 he must
| serve ‘another 30 days.
It was Pisano’s 10th conviction for cruelty to animals, usually dogs which he was peddling.
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INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.) ymphonettes
Butler U. Gypsy Tran Scatterg
INDIANAPOLIS
Dick Reed Beautiful Lite Dessa Byrd {onan Annie Easy Aces
Fred Waring Shannounced . Dick Inside Sports
Walts a ‘18 Hedda Hopper §:30 Svncopators 5:45 Gilbert Forbes
6:00 Amos and Andy :15 Lanny Ross 6:30 Short Story 6:45 Mo Musto
AEN | bi
Valtz Time Valtz Tim
00 Public Affairs Wings of I 3 Unapnounced al Pearce A) Pearce
08 Gilbert Forbes 15 Basketball Scores 0 World Todav Tommy Dorsey
0:3 0:45 3 %” Vaughn Monroe 1:3 1:4
Alec Templeton A Templeton
Dic ed Brkt all Scores Vagabond’s Trail Vagabond’'s Trail
Music You Want Music You Want Music You Want Eddie Duchin
21
5 Vaughn Monroe odman
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1 1 1 1 1 1 1
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 5900 (NBC-MBS)
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INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.) Early Bird 25 Early Birds
Early Birds News arly irda Gene and Glenn {rds in Time
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45 :00 :18 140
Basonology Breakfast Club Breakfast Olub Breakfast Club
Lincoln Highway Lifton Highway
Hymn Harry Kogan
a Tunes Timel Tunes Hon be Honest Abe
Singing Bee
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‘45 Dirt bber
00 Cin. Conservatory 10: 15 Cin, Conservatory 10:30 Cin. Conservatory 10:45 Cin. Conservatory
11:00 Country Journal 1:15 Country Journal 39 Health Highways |C Men and Books Juvenile Aid
Drama of Food Market Reports Gilbert Forbes Farm Hour Farm Circle Reporter Farm Circle Dick Reed Music for All
A. YF. of L. Brush Creek Music for Al Bull Session Golden Melodies _ odies
Bull Session Golden Mel
Gordon Jenkins Gordon Jenkins Sat. Soiree Sat. Soiree
Campus Capers
D. A. R Dessa Byrd Children’s Hour Children’s Hour Children’s jou n’'
1 11: 11:4 12:0 12: 12: 12:
St. Paul Carnival
Dancing Party Dancing Party Dancing Party Dancing Party
Amer. News Story Presents resents
Dick Reed
High High § High §
alo
MABEL MOHR TOPS ROLL AT WASHINGTO
School. Tied for second place with 1412 honor points each were Helen McShane and Antonia Sparenblek. Others who made the high honor
roll were:
Mary Shockency, Norma Jackson, Nore ma Poffenberger, Harold Taylor, Laura B. Haun, Jean Shelburne, Betty Unser. Robert Vinard, Jeanne Winters, Suzanne VanTalge. Marian Giddeon. Evelyn Goepper, Dorothy Kersey. Helen Negley. Elizabeth Nelson, Marian Williams, YBronko Yerich. Maralyn Yount. Sadie Kretheotis, Eleanor Lornston, Robert Drees.
Marian Ellaby, _ Alan
Bl oo a ara Lucas,
Robert
Pauline Fischer
Clarkson, Kretheotis, Nancy - Meloy, calf, Ann Mueller, tty Overdeer. Juanita Wise, Barbara McPadde r= bara Yount, Phyliss Webb, Alice carter,
mas Davis, Richard Jordan. Rosaa Phegley. n
"Plowman, . Pauline Blake, Busard Sylvia Cliburn, Doro othy Jean Fulk, June Garrett, Helen Katterhenry, Nadyne Ludlow. Eulah Nelson. Mildred Nelson, Nelson Overdeer.
Leon Pacala, Ruth Pacala, Roy Phil- . Betty Swick, Virginia Wright. Edward Lamperski, Anna Gerbec Anna Jolly, Regina Nichols, Bettijane Schenck, Laverne Warner, Delores Dial, Pauline Broderick. .
Betty Cooke, Betty Fletemeyer,
Foreman, Betty Gaddis, Alma Gates, ra J. Hamilton, Wilhelmina Lewis, Rol-
Anna
e ;veryman’s Theatre vervman's Theatre| B
Destiny Wings of Destiny
i (NBC Net.)
Norman Ross Ross
Charles. Dant ries Over © King Arthur Jr.
Bud Barton Tom Mix
Radio Fanfare Concert Miniature News Westerners
Chicago Sings Best Pansy Death Valley
Gang Busters Gans Busters rthday dav s-Burman uis-Burman
uis-Burman s-Burman
oC. oc . oC
Bias} inal
Slos s Trotter Marathon Melodies Marathon Melodies Jack Denny
SATURDAY PROGRAMS
IN: APOLIS C 1050
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News Roundup n With Music Band on Devot:
Saturday Serenade Out of the West ster Huff ster Huff
Friend House Friendly House Sundav_8choo! Tropical foods
Noonday Rhythms Noonday Rhythms Master Singers Boy Greets irl
Midday News elody farm Sunstine Meloates Melodies
Request e est me yest Time uest Time Concert Hour Concert Jour
Fonert an American
pk Theater
y Rhythm
NETWORK STATIONS (Subject to Chauge): OR, 710; WHK, 1390; WHEKGC, 640; CKLW, 1030; WSM, 850 NBC-BLUE—WJZ, 760; WOWO, 1160 WLS-WENR, 870; KWK, 1350. NBC-RED-—-WEAPF, 660; WTAM, 1070; WWJ. 920; WMAQ, 670. OBS—WABC, 860; WJR. 750; WHAS. 820; KMOZX, 1090; WBBM, 7170.
FAST ARMATURE WINDING
FRESNO, Cal. (U. P.).—After six experimenting, Abrams, Fresno automobile service
years of
plant operator,
patent on a machine for’ winding Mabel Mohr, with a total of 16% a of automobile generators. honor points, topped the semester|{Mr high honor roll at Washington High [Speeds each job about 500 per cent.
Abrams said his
CINCINNATI WLW_ 700 (NBC-MBES)
Small Town ne Journey Jack Armstrong News
ADDS OFFICERS
Frank Ball Ill Becomes President; Stofer, Neese, Brown Elected.
The Indiana Gas Model Association met last week to choose new officers and directors for 1941 and created two new offices because of! the greatly increased interest in| local model aviation.
Frank Ball III was named presi- | dent, replacing William Keough, while Harold Stofer was elected vice: president, one of the newly created! Jobs. The position of secretarytreasurer, which last year was held by Vic Brown, was split into two offices since it was too much for one man fo handle. Ray Neese is the
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