Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 October 1942 — Page 30

:30 o'clock tonight, the young lady with the long flowing hair : will make an appearance at the “angel's table” on the “Stage Door Canteen” broadcast on WFBM. Shell sit with Rube Goldberg, Grantland: Rice and Frank Crowinshield while Edmund Gwenn, the Merry Macs and Comedian Pvt. Johnny Burke offer their talents

in the canteen.

Tomorrow at 7 p. m. on the same station, Miss Lake will be the guest of Kate Smith. Kate also will - play host to the King Sisters, vocal group from Alvino

Rey’s ochestra.

on WIRE.

eh Another guest will be Andrew Tombs, who for ‘many years has specialized in character parts in Western films and Who has been in the theater for 40 years. It will be his first radio

appearance. Bing has chosen a representative of Uncle Sam’s tank corps to make an appearance on the program in order to lend color to the Introduction of Hoagy Carmi_Chael’'s new tune, “A Yank in a Tank.” /

” 8 2 trs AN unusual array of talent that is scheduled to appear on the “March of Time” tonight. Parting from the more serious ivein of the program, Jack Benny ‘and his faithful Rochester will appear on the program which is | broadcast on WIRE at 9:30 o'clock. Jack recently parted with his Maxwell to aid the scrap drive, you will remember. : ory Other guests include John Herghey, with an eyewitness report on . Guadalcanal; Lessing Rosenwald, . _WPB conservation chairman; Rep. - John H. Tolan, chairman, special house committee on defense migration, and the Rev. Alexis Pelypenko, ~ anti-Nazi secret agent. : ; 2 =» =» HOW SOME slow old horses were responsible for making a prospector in Goldfield, Cal, rich . will be related on “Death Valley Days” tonight at 7:30 o'clock on - 'WFBM. ‘1. Hank Foster, the prospector, had a little money and decided to

/

invest it. His boss, Reilly, was |

taking out so m _ needed a horse wagon to haul it to an express office. So he asked Hank to get him one. Hank left and was gone three weeks before he returned with the horse and wagon. While he was away the stock he bought for a few cents a share rose to four dollars. Hank was grateful enough for the slow horses in de- . laying his return but he figured that if the horses had delayed him a week longer, he would have been richer by $40,000.

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gold that he

TONIGHT WIRE , 9:00 P. M.

CAMEL"

dance of the season will be staged

A Samp i BE SR AA NS

Wheh

i ,

: os & 8 : j EH JUDY CANOVA, the hillbilly songstress, will ap- | 1: pear on Bing Crosby's “Music Hall” broadcast tonight

2 #8 =

TONIGHT 7:30—Town Meeting, WISH, 8:00—Bing Crosby, WIRE. 8:30—Stage Door Canteen, WFBM. 9:00—Raymond Clapper, WIBC.

AFTER A 15,000-mile, 27weeks’ tour into every corner of the land, “America’s Town Meeting of the Air” will be back in its regular Town Hall tonight to discuss the question “Should the | Poll Tax Be Abolished?” As author of the bill now before the senate judiciary committee to abolish the poll tax in eight states where it is still in existence, Senator Claude Pepper, Florida Democrat, will make clear his views on legislation which is claimed to discriminate against the Negroes in those states where it is necessary to pay a tax in order to vote. , : . Opposing Senator Pepper will be Rep. Edward Cox of the second district in Georgia. Representative Negro groups will attend the broadcast which will be on -WISH at 7:30 o'clock.

THE FINAL outdoor “bond”

by WIBC in co-operation with the treasury department and broadcast over that radio station

Saturday night. Civilians are admitted to the dance, which will be held on the north steps of the war memorial, by donating broken or old, worn out phonograph records, which will be sold for their scrap value and the proceeds sent;to the USO for entertainment purposes for soldiers on leave. Music will be provided by phonographs and those wishing to buy bonds should telephone WIBC. They will be delivered by a soldier and his escort, riding in a jeep. : Names of buyers will be announced during the broadcasts which will be from 8 to 9 p. m. and 10:15 p. m. until conclusion.

# #8 #

" FEATURING MORE than 300 gobs and doughboys as spectators and contestants each week, “Army-Navy Game” will return to WISH and the Blue network next Thursday at 6 p. m. On the program, soldiers and sailors vie against each other in four types of contests, ranging from mass singing to tests of individual music knowledge and skill. Fred Uttal acts as master of ceremonies while Joe Rines

1 Times 1s not aouncements caused by changes

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(The Indianapolis

for in ! sespomible op Sccuractes, n. program an-

| 'WIBC 1070 (Mutual) Bits Spots Hoosier Request Hoosier Request Prayer—News Turf Bar Jack Armstrong Capt. Midnight Fulton Lewis Je. Felix Adi

os

sat8lsuss > 3 a P g

Ts

onietta Parade. It Pays It Pays

ickel . Serenade ict & Yi

‘| Chateau Hogan Chateau Hogan

9:00 First Line 9:15 First Line 9:30 Footlight Parade 9:45 Frazier Hunt

10:00 Gilbert Forbes Music Afier Ten 10:15 Peppe Landeros Don Roth 10:30 Sandman Boyd Raeburn 10:45 Sandman « | War Fund 11:00 ‘Strikes & Spares 11:15 Alvino Re 11:30 Nat .Brandwyne 11:45 Nat Brandwyne

Norman Cloutier Sunny m

ams : Hoosier Home Folks sier Home Folks

ond Clapper |Abbott & Costello

Ra; ‘Arontbal McLeish

[ FRIDAY PROGRAMS

gia dee Plain Bill : | Front Page Farrell |X Virginia Byrd Dial & Dance

Melodic Minutes

Fred Waring "World News Al eney

i a C Jictory |

Abbott. & Costello ar ° aps ch of Time Sports Round-Up John Thomas News & Music Music You Like Songs of Island Starlight Trail Life Progr: Starlight Trail - Music You Want’ Music You Want News Pictures News Pictures

Eddie Oliver

WFBM 12

WIBO 1070 (CBS) (Mutual)

WIRE 1430

WISH 1310 (NBC)Red) (Blue Network)

Reveille

ythm Keep It Private god Birds Tex Tyler

Sunshine Sunshine

Dawn Patrol Dawn Patrol

tain Trio Get Up & Go Bill Haley ‘| Utah Trailers

d News ical Clock ical Clock

ical Clock

Morning Mail Morning Mail Morning Mail News

:00 Time With Musie Mrs. Farrell

, Farre . 8:45 Hollywood News

News Roundup Get Up &

Go Band Wagon

{|Get Up & Go

0000 | e333 an

Musical Clock Morning News Shopping School Shopping School

Leary Pa Leary Family :30 Honeymoon Hill Friendly House :45 News—Melodies Friendly House

War Fund The O’Neills Helpmate

News jrymy Singer rvin ‘Dale Lone Journey String Time

Friendly House Harpe & Tiny Sunshine Special Everson Byways

fimely Tunes 3econd Husband 3right Horizon Aunt Jenny

eas |vens

ad

Road of Life Vie and Sade Against the Storm David Harum

Breakfast at Sardi’s Breakfast at Sardi’s Jack Baker . Jack Little

Ranch Hands Howard Carlson

Hi Sailor

Tex & Grandsons

Piano Twins Words & Music Headlines EATitortally

News Haymakers

Arthur Van Horn Old Time Jamboree

Livestock Farm and Home Wally Nehrling John Thomas

We Americans Charlie Cook Bond Parade

1:00 Dr. Malone 1:15 Joyce Jordan 1:30 Love and Learn 1:45 Ma Perkins

Looking thru Look

Vincent es Ted Yalons Navy Salute

Hearts in Harmony Earl Tanner

Editor's Daughter

Less Huff Gang Less Huff Gang Bailey Trailers Bailey Trailers

3:00 David Harum

2:30 School of the Air 2:45 School of the Air

Mary Marlin Prescott Holiday Ma Perkins - Prescott Holiday Pepper Youhg Daydreams Happiness - Broadway

Bill Haley Harpo & Tiny Leary Famil Leary Family

8:00 News 3:15 Civilian Defense 3:30 Raythm & Song 3:45 Rhythm & Song

Backstage Wife Club Matinee Stella Dallas Club Matinee Lorenzo Jones Club Matinee Widder Brown Club Matinee

Brite Spots Devotional Hoosier Request Hoosier Request

P. ME 4:00—Cirl Marries 4:15—Portia 4:30—Plain - Bill 4:45—Front Page Parrell 5:00—News Reporte: :15—Don Winslow : Lum ‘n’ Abner Lowell Thomas Fred Waring Carroll Alcott

WLW THURSDAY EVENING

6:30—Sundown Melodies H. V Kaltenborn

FRIDAY PROGRAMS

Girl Marries Sea Hound Portia ) Hop Harrigan Plain Bill

Merry-Go-Round Front Page Farrell | Merry-Go-Round

9:15==-Rudy Vallee 9:30—March of Time 9:45--March of Time

11:00—Gardner Benedict 11:15<<Gardner Benedict 11:30—Moon River

11:45—Moon River

A. M. 6:30—Reporter, News 6:45—Reveille Roundup 7:00—Time to Shine 7:15—Carroll D. Alcott 7:30—Dream Dealer 7:45—Consumers 8:00—Goldbergs 8:15=Linda’s Love 8:30—Beautiful Life 8:45—Aunt Jenny

9:30—Sweet River 9:45—Lone Journey

10:00—Road of Life 5=V : d Harum : 11:00—Editor's Daughter 11:1 Perkins Noon—Farm Hour 12:15—Parm Hour 12:30--Big Sister

12:45—Hearts in Harmony :00--Light of World

TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE

1:15=Lonely Women 1:30—-Gui Light 85 Bouy

1 rocker 2:00—Mary M

'3:30=L0renzo Jones 3:45-Widder Brown 4:00—Girl Marries 4:15—Portia 4:30—Plain Bill 4:45—Front Page Farrell

1—Name the author of the socalled “pay-as-you-go” individual income tax plan. 2—In his speech at West Point in May, 1942, General Marshall

provides the musical support.

7ACON You vy AGAIN

said that we would have an

you buy bacon—it’s flaVor you're

after] Real, genuine, appetite-whetting flavor! That’s what you get in Kingan’s Reliable Bacon—reliably good—dependably

* delicious—that’s ‘why it’s the bacon. you'll

buy again! For unfailing satisfaction—for a zeal treat in bacon, ask your dealer for

‘110—In which country was gun-

| 10—China.

“| form.”

‘| noun clause. “The cause of his

army of—how many men by the| end of 1942? 3—Name the chairman of the war production board. 4—What was the former name of the navy transport Wakefield, which recently burned while returning to the U. 8. from Eurqpe in a convoy? 5—What were Caesar’s dying words, referring to the part played by Brutus in the plot to betray him?

6—Chinchilla is the name of a frozen dessert, a fur, or- an alloy? 7—By what other names are the famous comedians of radio Pic Malone and Pat Padgett (Pic and Pat) known?

8—Robert Bellaire was United Press manager in which Far Eastern city?

9—What is the nickname of suits; (worn mostly by jitterbug dancers) that have a nearly knee-length coat and trousers with a high rise and full knees?

powder invented?

ANSWERS 1—Beardsley Ruml. 2—More than 4,500,000. 3—Donald M. Nelson. 4—Manhattan. §—Et tu, Brute. (Thou also, Brutus.) 6—Fur. T—Molasses and January. 8—Tokyo. 9—“Zoot suits.”

HOLDS MANY NOT IN UNIFORM ALSO SERVE

WASHINGTON, Ogt. 22 (U..P.).— Rep. Richard M. Kleberg (D. Tex.) told the house yesterday that those who unjustly “point the finger of scorn at those not in uniform” are injuring American agriculture. He said everyone ought to realize that those in essential jobs in the factories and on the farm “should be considered as in uni-

© “A -soldier,” he said, “can be ordered to peel potatoes. I don’t like the finger of scorn to be pointed at those who raise them.”

TODAY'S COMMON ERROR Complete the expression the cause was with a predicate noun or

failure was his impudence” (or

“that he was impudent”) not “on|

ln E04 aiid Pentoe Syndiunts, Sus

Nazis Come at

NEW YORK, Oct. 22 (U. P).— Konstantine Konstantinov, an 18-year-old. Russian marine whose chief aim in life is to “kill Germans,” told today how he singlehandedly stopped one of the German assaults on Leningrad a year ago and won the highest military decoration in the Red army. One of the youngest soldiers of the Order of the Red Banner, Konstantinov came here as a member of a ship’s gun crew. He was confined to a Newark, N. J., hospital for the removal of a shell fragment but ‘now has recovered. fis His story was translated by a attache of the Russian consul general’s office who credited Konstantinov with stopping “wave on wave of Nazis, spraying death among them until reinforcements arrived.” Then he quoted the youth: : “I was out with a scout patrol on this day of the battle of Leningrad and as night fell the Germans attacked, what they call ‘the psychological’ attack, You do not know these ‘psychological’ attack? It is horror. : “They come at you in a single line, their faces grinning, often cigarets in their mouth. And as fast as you shoot them down a fresh man steps over the dead body, and into the fallen one’s place, still grinning, still smoking. “Always they keep coming. Soon every man in my unit was killed except my machine gun mate. Then they got him and I was. alone. I was so mad I was frenzied. “My hand grasped the handle of the machine gun as if it was soldered to it. And I kept pumping the bullets into them as fast as they came. ! ; “Oh, but it was great to see them. I would start at one end of the line and adjust the gun at about chest level and then move it slowly

“It makes the customers sentimental and they beat it straight without wasting any gas or rubber!”

home

Russians in

Single Line=Grinning, Smoking

to the other end of the line. It was precision work. “I never thought about anything else..I had no fear because I had no mind to think. Of what can you think in such a situation? You think only of killing Germans. And

happy.”

mans. The youth added that one day the lines were so close a Nazi held up a big sign reading: “We will exchange our guns for your felt

boots.”

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account of his impudence.” !

here I was killing them and I was]

The attache said that Konstan-|-tinov had killed at least 74 Ger-

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HORIZONTAL

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14 Abrogated.

16 Drop. of eye fluid. 18 Symbol for tellurium. 19 Offer. 21 Cloth measure 23 Pig pen. 24 Behold! 25 Measure.

26 Body of water.

28 Ells English (abbr.). 29 Is able.

‘30 Old German

coin (pl.). 32 Wise men. 34 East Indian woody vine. 35 Girl’s name. 36 To rebind with tape. 39 Apportion. 40 Anger. 41 Further appearances. 45 Boundary

CROSSWORD PUZZLE Answer to Previous Puzzle

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cuckoo family. ‘53 Native metal. 55 Greek letter. 56 Spain (abbr: 57 Symbol for-.: ruthenium. 58 Steamship (abbr.). 60 Comparative suffix. .

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tation that everybody respects. Coca-Cola got its: reputation for quality, because it has always been made ©

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drink...a finished art in its making...a* blend of wholesome flavors that creates... for Coca-Cola a taste all its own. That's":

why Coca-Cola has the taste that charms

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Lai | There are many things for thirst but.* only one stands out for refreshment : sssice-cold Coca-Cola. The only thing *

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Wartime limits the supply of Coca-Cola. Those times when you cannot get it, re.

member: Coke, being first choice, sells out first.

Ask for it each time. No matter how short the

supply, the quality of Coca-Cola carries on.