Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 January 1943 — Page 19
Evenins at Hom
ic Swing
Fo News Knox News |Tee Casper—Sports
Sin Sam ecor a . Federal Ace Fed Ace
| Gabriel Heatter Rais Howard er Clinie
ths| Murd Murder Cline John B. Hughes Art Kassel Norman Cloutier Dick Kuhn
eRe aanl 3333] ance | Nace] sean
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Battle of Sexes Battle of Sexes Fibber McGee
ee G. Swing Ne on at War Nation at War Sports Round-Up
Bob Hope Bob Hope Red Skelton Red Skeiton
$853 8853 s8n8 sus suus| ssn
Musie iver Ten
Jack Farm reds
Star Parade
Sports Aces Jergen
: gia petiains
WEDNESDAY
55 "S 40 2 Pr] £5
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[mt BUCS E35 Op
7
John Morrow Music You Like
Starlight Tra! Starlight Trail usic You Want usic You Want Ray Shield Ray Shield
PROGRAMS
Bons 3 ek
Ray Heatherton ‘Ray Heatherton Yorid News ~ Dottein ng a Dream. Drifting & Dream.
WFBM 1260 (CBS)
:30 Early Birds :45 Early Birds
WIBC 1070 (Mutual)
Little Jimmy Little Jimmy
WIRE 1430 (NBC)
Dawn Patrol Dawn Patrol
WISH 1310 (Blue Network) Sunshine Sunshine
News Linda Lou Judy Perkins U Trailers
World News News Musical Clock Morning Mall Musical Clock Morning 11 Musical Clock
10:30 Bright 10:45 Aunt Bol
Breakfast Club Breakfast Club Breakfast Club Breakfast Club News
Baby Taeiote Gene & Glenn
Breakfast at Sardi’s Breakfast at Sardi’s
Jack Baker Little Jack Little
Musical Clock Shopping enol Shopping School M Melodies Hse Helpmate . Lone Journey - Road of Life Vic & Sade Snow Village David Harum
Ranch Hands Howard Carlson Little Jimmy
Hi Sailor!
u :00 Kate Smith 11:15 Big Sister 3: 30 Helen Trent 46 Our Gal Sunday oe Tune Revue News , 12:15 Gilbert Forbes Hoosier Farmer 2:30 Farm News Strictly Personal Farmer's Digest
Console Pictures Joan Brooks Farm & Home Farm & Home
Baukhage People’s Man
D: Program Dis Program
Headlines EATitorially Livestock Farm and H Wally "Nehring. John Morrow
Stars From the Blue Stars From the Blue} 4
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32 Not old. 33 Mend. 34 Egyptian
goddess. 35 Distant. 37 Mediterran. ean island.
$3 Symbol for rutheniugn. 54 Led. §6 Providing food. $9 Movements. © Jae 60 Intercdlates. 41 Editor (abbr) VESTICAL 42 Necessity. 1 Cause i Heart (Egypt) 2 Exclamition Electrical of pain.
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- {abbr.). ? Giant king 49 Consume. . of Bashan. $0 Dutch city. 8 Old Testa. 51 Dash (slang). ment (abbr.). 52 John (Gaelic). a Bip, > $5 Symbol for or. 11 Man’s name. 56 101" (Roman). 12 European $7 Railroad pike perch. (abbr.). 13 Defeat. That
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Farmer's Digest Pioneer Sons Pioneer Sons Bond Parade
Sunshine Special hi ial
2:46 2 Cirole Malon io :16 doves ‘Jordan :30 Love & Learn 1:45 Ma Perkins
Utah Trailers
Music Madiay Linda's Lov Hearts in Bditer's Daughter
Eebper. Young to Happiness] O.
U. 8. Marine Band Chet
y| Navy Hollywood ews
Three R’s Three R’s Ted Malone O. P. A.
Harpo & Tiny Harpo & Tiny Curley Baker Jimmy & al
Brite Spo Am, Folk Music Am. Folk Music Turf Bar Time
Buckatade Wife Stella llas Lorenzo Jones Widder Brown Girl Marries Portia
Plain Bill Front Page Farrell
Club Matinee Club Matinee Club Matinee Club Matinee
Sea Bound op Harrigan Spor.sman Club erry-Go-Round
WLW TUESDAY PROGRAMS
6:30—Dinah :00—~Girl Marries 5-Portia )—Plain Bill 5—Front Page Sarre :
7:30-—Horace 7: EL Fog
nahn
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well Thomas 6: 00—Pred Waring 6:15—Carroll Alcott
8:45—
WEDNESDAY
6:45—H. V. Kaltenborn 7:00~Johnny Presents 7:15~Johnny Presents
9: 00—Boh Hope
Shore 9:15—Bob Hope
Heidt Heidt
11:15—Gardner Benedict 11:30-Midnite Melodies 11:45—Moon River
PROGRAMS
0 News- Weather Revell Roundup 0 Shine
1a: 12:
8:45—Aunt Jenny 9:00—News 9:15—The O'Neills 9:30—Sweet River 9:45—Lone Journey # 8 8 TONIGHT
7:30—Duffy’s Tavern, WISH. 8:00—Burns and Allen, WFBM. 8:30—Murder Clinic, WIBC. 9:00—Bob Hope, WIRE.
1: 1
By VIRGINIA HATFIELD
“SINGIN’ SAM,” almost a oneman radio institution for the last 15 years, will start a new twiceweekly coast-to-coast series on the Mutual network tonight. WIBC in Indianapolis is the station from which the broadcasts will originate. The programs will be heard ach | Tuesday and Thursday| from 7 to 7:15%p. m. and will run for 52 weeks. - The bucolic | baritone signs his hecks Harry el. On Jan. 27 hell be 54 years old. Although a top money earner two decades, the sing- Harry Frankel er prefers to live modestly on his 160-acre dairy farm near Richmend, Ind. He braves the city only for his radio work. A Kenfuckian by birth, “Sam” moved ‘to Indiana when he was nine. At 16 he started singing professionally when a traveling esman sold him on the glamor stage work. His first broadcasts were made on station WLW. # He achieved nation-wide fame 10 year ago under the auspices of Barbasol, sponsor of his new series.
FEATURED FUNSTERS: Miss . Duffy is stage-struck since she
heard that Milton Berle, star of the|®
forthcoming Ziegfeld Follies, was ~ slated to be guest at the “Tavern” tonight. With an eye on the financial gain Yor himself as Miss Duffy's agent, Ed (Archie) Gardner is arranging an audition se that she may sing for Mr. Berle at 7:30 o'clock | tonight, WFBM. | To give-Miss Duffy the proper setting for her audition, Archie will draft Finnegan and Eddie Green for a chorus line and plug: some of Callahan’s - plumber’s - candles in oyster shells for a string ‘of improvised the way, it’s rumored that Shirley
Booth, who plays Miss Duffy, will be |E
leaving the tavern program soon.
Closing the year with a ceficit|3
of $285, the Beverly Hills Uplift society ‘on the “Burns and Allen” show will vote to present the play, “Dr, Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,” tonight. | Amidst a series of frightful auditions for the principal roles, Gracie will give a graphic demonstration ¥ Hyde's speech and mutterings on WEEM a5 8 o'clock. PF #8 ® TWO THRILLERS: What would . happen to the forces of law and order if a particular were $e oly. may on earth, who could ~move: ‘with the speed of light—
10:00—Road of Life 10:15—Vi: & Sade 10:30—Snow Village 19: :45—David Harum
12: 00—Farm Hour M.
15—~Farm Hour Big Sis ter 12:45—Hearts tn Harmony Light of World Lonely Women
footlights. By |.
1:30—=Guiding Light 1:45—Church A Hymns 2:00—. rlin
: :30—Plain Bill 4:45—Front Page Farrell
196,000 miles a second? For the answer to this $64 question, listen to “The Fast One” by Arch Oboler in the “Lights Out” series at 7 o'clock tonight on WFBM.
Mix up a poker game, a brawl,
man, a strip-tease dancer, a gunman and a debutante and what do you get? A “Famous Jury Trial” no doubt. The newspaper man, Larry Dale, will be the defendant on the program at 8 o'clock tonight on the same station. Your guess is as good as mine as to what surprise witness the defense lawyer will produce to save his client from the hangman’s noose.
. HERE AND THERE: Bert “The Mad Russian” Gordon, stooge for the banjo-eyed Eddie Cantor and who was ready for induction into the army, will continue with the Cantor show since he was declared ineligible under the 18 to 38 ruling. « « « William L. Shirer, CBS commentator, has almost completed rewriting a play he hopes to have § produced on Broadway. Eddie Green, employee of “Duffy’s” on WISH, is a restaurateur in" actual life. , . . He owns three sparerib kitchens in Miss Chiesa New York’s Harlem. , , . Jack Benny is making arrangements to entertain American troops overseas. . « While he is gone, various comedians will substitute on his program with Eddie Cantor as the first in line. } Blond Vivian Della Chiesa, lyric soprano who has appeared on many radio programs, is to be featured in 20 concerts this year. . . . Bill Stern, NEC sportscaster, has received three new film contracts.. He has béen signed for two more years with MGM's “News of the Day,” 12 sports - short subjects for Columbia Pictites and a feature, “They've Never Been Licked,” to be
blackmail and ‘the shoofing of a| big-time gambler with a newspaper}
rere goes “Joe and
his short cut againt”
:| tain some phosphate. They are not
| sential nitrogen. If this is needed :| (and it usually is) it must be ob-
‘Bob Burns’
Use Wood Ash
Your Victory Garden Grow
By Science Service NEW HAVEN, Conn. Jan. 5— Victory gardens next spring can benefit from the wood fire that is crackling in your living room now. Save all wood ‘ashes, keep them in a dry place until spring, and rake them into the soil when you are getting your seed bed ready, is the advice of H. G. M.. Jacobson, Connecticut experiment station agronomist.
Wood ashes are a good source of potash and lime, and they also con-
a complete fertilizer, however, because they are lacking in the es-
tained from some other source. Well-rotted manure is best, if available. Ashes of paper burned in the incinerator are not safe to use, Mr. Jacobson cautions. Although paper is made from wood, it is apt to contain acids and other substances added in the manufacturing process, and these may not be good for
produced by ‘Walter Wanger and released by Universal. 8 2 2
BIG NEWS of the week is the switching of two big shows to new time spots. Lionel Barrymore's “Mayor of the Town” series starting tomorrow ranoves up a half-hour .|into the 8 p. m. spot on WFBM, which was formerly occupied by ‘Arkansas Traveler” program, Burns’ show will shift to a Thursday spot on NBC at 8: 30 p. m
ens and
See these
SI Dost |
deemed clothing Values before you buy!
ae on I nn ors nt: iy © + ice from
with the savings
SU ITS Torionts
unre-
the suit you buy, yalues. how! fo
es and Watch
plants. Coal ashes, of course, are of no value as fertilizer and should ‘never be used. Even wood ashes should be used with judgment; there can easily be
too much of a good thing with fertilizers. Excess of potash causes ‘plants to have pale, undernourishedlooking tops. This difficulty is more apt to arise in alkaline than in
|Chemical Warfare Service
{enemy front. Under such cover at-
SHOKE IS NEW U. S. WEAPON
Provides Methods for Screening Troops.
EDGEWOOD ARSENAL, Md, Jan. 5 (U. P.) Employment of smoke in battle will be rendered increasingly useful by new weapons and projectiles being developed by. the army’s chemical warfare service. .One of the effective new smoke weapons is the 4.2 mortar, which hurls 25-pound shells containing either smoke gas, poison gas or high explosives. Battalions of those weapons, comprising 48 mortdrs, have been organized. Such a battalion is capable of hurling five tons of gas against an enemy position in two minutes. A mortar can fire 20 rounds a minute. Transported by Jeeps ‘The shell is dropped into the top of the barrel and the propulsion charge explodes when it hits the bottom. Moreover, the explosion expands a ring of brass which grips the riflings of the mortar, giving the weapon exceptional accuracy. Two jeeps are sufficient to transport a mortar, ammunition and gun crew. Col. Eugene Gempel, director of training at Edgewood, demonstrated how the shells would burst on water. Clouds of steam-like smoke spread out over a wide area, suggesting the practical use of such weapons in amphibious landings such as allied forces will likely employ: repeatedly before the axis is beaten. Have Incendiary Value One type of shell contains ordinary phosphorous, which hasan incendiary effect when it bursts, capable of inflicting serious casualties on the enemy, and in addition provides a highly effective smoke cover. Four mortars employing such shells could blanket 800 yards of
tacking troops could sweep on a blinded enemy effectively. Such a smoke -could be maintained by firing a shell every 15 seconds. Smokes may also be dropped in bombs from airplanes and sprayed from low moving planes to blind the enemy or cover friendly operations. CAROLE LANDIS TO WED LONDON, Jan. 5 (U. P.).—Blond film star Carole Landis, who has
camps in Britain, today will wed Capt. Thomas C. Wallace, Pasadena,
acid soils.
of any kind—Qui
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St. Louisar
ALLIED HEADQUARTIRS NORTH AFRICA, Jan. 3 (Delacd). —(U. P.)—Lieut. George Humbr ch, St. Louis, came back to leadquarters today, his weight up considerably, to report on the ‘hree Arabian nights—and days—he pent in the desert. Arab chieftains wined him ani dined him. They killed resin antelope for him, Ht ceremonial fires in his honor and, at a su:cession of banquets which left his « eye glazed, offered him everything i: cream puffs to the specially or ‘Ee pared eye of a goat. Humbrecht said he didn't ea: eye.
3 m
be
New York Is Password
One motor of Humbrecht’s jil=ne failed near Tunis. He flew for fe hours, seeking good weather anc a landing place, and made a forced landing near a desert village. Out came a party of Arabs. [ley were not certain whether the visio was ‘American or German. Iunbrecht and the Arabs stood lookir E at each other for a few morient and one of the ‘Arabs, inspi; asked: “New York?” “New York,” responded liu:
brecht and the Arabs were cic: lighted. They took him to the chiefiain’:} palace. | “It was almost fantastic,” he =: today.
CE
Glasses Kept Filled
stood right behind him, a bot le red wine in one hand, a botile «of white wine in the other. Every tine Humbrecht took a sip from ¢ith. of his two glasses the Arab vould lean over and fill it to the 1un again. At this first banquet, Humbrech:
Dinner was prepared. An Arch} :| 0. E. S. TO GIVE DEGREES
Feast for
With the Arabs
ate four fried eggs, a steak, fried
potatoes, a dish of native Kushkush, . oranges, cream puffs, dates and
cakes. There was coffee also, The Arab chiefs and French officers who soon arrived took turns banqueting Humbrecht, Three times a day there was a feast.
At each Arab home he visited, a fire was lighted in his honor. The colonel commanding the French officers drove him to the French garrison miles away. There Humbrecht was given fried chicken {and put up at a desert resort hotel. Returning to try to repair his | plane, he found 200 fezzed and turbaned Arabs squatting in a circle around if, just staring. Affer stil another banquet, this one with the leading chief, Humbrecht was taken back to the French garrison to have a banquet with a French general and a rich Arab farmer at the farmer’s house. “A line of Arabs stood on both|’
2 sides of the path to the house with
lanterns, lighting the way,” Humbrecht said. ‘First we had steak and pork. | Then we went to a side room where we had an entire roasted lamb. After that they offered me the eye of a goat, “Then we had a round of desserts,
| topped off by sponge cake. Just like {home.”
Humbrecht spent Christmas eve
{with the French garrison at a Eu-
iropean style banquet and, having repaired his plane, came back to base.
Lawrence chapter 384, O. E. S, will meet at 8 p. m. Thursday at "| the Lawrence Masonic temple for a business session and conferring of degrees. Miss Pauline Barco is worthy matron and Marion Tempke is worthy patron.
COURT STUDIES OLD FLAG RULING
Possible Reversal Seen in Expulsion of Pupils In Salute Case.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 5 (U. P).~ ° The supreme court yesterday opened the door to possible reversal of its two-year-old decision that public school pupils could be exe pelléed for refusing to salute the American flag, even though thetr = religion forbade such saluting. t
The court agreed to review & +
lower court decision which flatly rejected the high court's ruling, The lower court held that children:
of three members of the Jehovah's 7
Witnesses sect did not have to obey a West Virginia board of education mandate to salute the flag. = The opinion of two years written by Associate Justice Frankfurter, split the court to one. Chief Justice Harlan ’ Stone dissented. Three of the justices who them concurred with Frankfurter have announced that they have changed
their views—Associate Justices Huge . i L. Black, Frank Murphy and Wis. og
liam O. Douglas. Thus, of the present elght-man court, at least four are: known to favor reversal. The poistion of Justice Robert B® Jackson, who was not en the eotirt two years ago, is not known. But even if he should vote to uphold the previous decision, the court would be split four to four thus affirming the lower court. There have been only eight members of the high court since Justice James F. Byrnes resigned to become economic sta-
bilization director.
been entertaining at U. 8. army]
because repair materials ave
and drain the pipe.
tained regularly.
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a SABOTEUR of Witer Piper
E coldest part of 1c winter is just ahead and it’s vitally : T= important that you pr ‘otect your water pipes and meter against * freezing—and keep ther: protected! Frozen plumbing in your home this winter will present « more serious problem than ever before,
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Repair broken wiiidows and seal cracks and openings near your water pipes and meter, especially Turn off valve thet controls your outside hose connection
in the base ment.
Wrap exposed waic- pipes, fixtures and mieter with windproof materials to l.c/p prevent freesing.
Drain all water lines in property where | no heat is maine
Make sure main woicv shut-off valve is in good working _ordér for protectic mir cdse of ar emergency.
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