Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 115, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 September 1930 — Page 5

SEPT. 22, 1030

U. S. TO FACE TARIFF WALL AROUND GLOBE Retaliation Is Started by Other Nations, England Pressing Action. BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Srripnft-llnKard Foreign F.ditor WASHINGTON, Sept. 22 On the principle that what is sauce lor the goose also is sauce for the gander, the world now seems bent upon raising its tariff walls against American and other foreign products. A wave of economic nationalism, or economic fascism, is sweeping the earth, according to the leading speakers before the League of Nations assembly at Geneva, and Uncle Sam is to blame. A year ago it was hoped that the nations of Europe might enter into a tariff truce. Some twenty-six nations, ’ under the joint leadership of Britain and Belgium, agreed as late as last spring not to raise their tariffs. Now, since the United States boosted its already sky high tariff, declares William Graham, president of the British Board of Trade in the MacDonald government, there seems little hope of the agreement being ratified. Warned on Tariff Higher tariffs, Graham solemnly warned the official representatives of the European governments at Geneva, would aggravate, not relieve, their ills. Unless they aboutfaced and fulfilled their springtime promises, he added, Britain would withdraw her pledge not to raise her duties, a clear inference that this, the greatest free trade nation of them all, might find herself forced to go high tariff, too. Canada definitely has taken the plunge, the wave of economic nationalism having spread from the United States to that country with a vengeance. Scrapping the high tariff wall raised by the outgoing Liberals of Premier MacKenzie King, the incoming Conservatives of Premier Bennett have erected a far higher one, with the promise to add more bricks as soon as parliament meets this autumn. Canada’s example almost certainly will give impetus to the movement in the direction of universal high tariffs. Australia, New Zealand and other British dominations are likely to follow Canada and the effect on England will be enormous. Move to Rear Wall Already the ranks of high tariff advocates are growing fast in the British Isles and while the Canadian stand is not entirely to their liking, in a general -way it fits very well into their scheme of things. Under the leadership of Lord Beaverbrook, one of the ablest men in England, a movement in favor of a tariff wall about the empire with free trade, or preferential treatment, within it, is gaining strength daily. The Canadian tariff hits certain British products, causing Beaverbrook's enemies to jeer, but he answers by saying that under a tariff system England will be in a position to obtain mutually beneficial concessions from the dominions. Anri for it all, Europeans are saying, the United States is to blame.

I Day Programs

WFBM (12110) Indianapolis ilndiananoils Power and Light Compant TUESDAY A M. , on-Fep Unlimited Club. !fl:oo—Aunt Sammy hour. 11:00—Town Crier dramaloitue. 11 15 to 12:00—Silent. 12:00 Noon—Farm Community network ICBSI. P. M. 1 00—Jim and Walt. 1 30—For vour information (CBS'. 2:oo—Two o'clock tunes. 'ls—Studio recital. 2:3o—Columbia artists (CBS'. 3 00 to s:oo—Silent. WLW (700) Cincinnati TUESDAY A. M a 30—Ton O' the Mornin'. H:3o Time announcement. (1 30—Morning exercises, n 45—Jollv Bill and Jane (NBC 7:oo—Quaker Crackels man 'NBC'. 7 15—Mouth health. Time announcement. 7:3o—Morning devotion. R 00—Croslev homemakers, o 00—Ortsan. o 30—Livestock reports. 3:4o—Morning medley. 10 00—McCormick's fiddlers. 10:15—Vocal solos. 10:30—Salt and peanuts. 10:45—Weather and river reports. 10:55—Time signals. 11:00—Tuxedo entertainers. 11 15—Orcan program. 11:30—Time announcement. 11:30—Orchestra at Hotel Gibson. 11:50—Live stock report. 12 Noon-National Farm and Home hour i NBC'. P M. 12:30 Organ 12 55—Maikets. 1 00—Matinee olavors 1 30—Chicago serenade 'NBC. 3 00—Pacific vagabonds 'NBC . 3 00—French lessons. 3 30— Livestock reports. 3 40—Program chats. 3:4s—Woman's Radio Club. Liquor Place Wrecked Hu f'tHtcil Press WABASH. Ind.. Sept. 22.—Metropolitan gangster methods were employed by bootleggers along the Eel river over the week-end when two members of a gang of local bootleggers went to the shack of a rival gang, leveled the place with axes, then set Are to the wreckage. The two men then went out on the river 't here the owner of the shack was fishing and beat him.

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DE MILLE STARTS SMART SOCIETY FAD Does Not Specialize in Nifty Bathrooms This Time, but in Making Wild Whoopee on a Zeppelin. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN FORGETTING for the time that he glorified the American bathroom and the tub, Cecil B. De Mille now has gone in for glorifying the Zeppelin as the very best roadhouse. We all know how extravagant this director was when he turned his hand to make more beautiful the American bath tub, well, he is equally extravagant in turning the air into a wild roadhouse.

Am speaking of “Madam Satan” and in talking of all De Mille movies we generally mention the director first just as we do with D. W. Griffith's movies. The cast just naturally comes second when these two directors are concerned. “Madam Satan” is about as wild and as fantastic a thing as

De Mille has ever dreamed. You recall that isome months ago when I was in New York doing some show shopping for you, I took a night off to see the stage production of a melodrama called “Zeppelin.” De Mille in his “Madam Satan” uses a Zeppelin as the scene for most of his j modern Roman wildness. And it is a corking good

idea. De Mille is the first one to create a jazzy, roadhouse in the air. And when the drinks are served in baby Zeppelin carriers, you think the world has reached the last word in serving its drinks. You can bet on Cecil going the limit in everything. Then, when you have had lots of dancing with a lot of meaning on the Zeppelin with Theodore Kosloff doing a mighty fine ballet mechanique; with Kay Johnson and Reginald Denny staging a domestic fight of conquest which is a peach, and with hundreds of people apapearing in fancy mask costumes, De Mille then introduces his big melodramatic crash. And that crash, of course, is the complete destruction of the Zeppelin, with pretty ladies falling out of the airship in parachutes. My. my, my, those air currents. And De Mille is just clever enough to put a lot of comedy as well as tragedy in these scenes. The sound effects during this breaking up of the Zeppelin are marvelous. Os course, it is mostly due to the splendid direction. The work of Kay Johnson. Reginald Denny, Lillian Roth £nd Roland Young fit perfectly into the extravagant dream of De Mille. Just the right cast. Rather think that I will give the first prize for the best work (the first prize being an old-fashioned brick sidewalk! to Lillian Roth as Trixie. who is a very, very hot sketch, meaning the character as played by Lillian. Here is anew dose of extravagant melodramatic burlesque done with the golden touch of De Mille. It Is sure a three-ring circus when it comes to beinsr a spectacle. Now at the Palace. n a u SPEAKING OF A LATE ACTOR The other evening when I went to the Apolij to see “The Sea Wolf” at a private showing, the night press of the country was announcing the sudden death of the star of this movie, Milton Sills. And 'yet while Sills will never speak again in natural life, I heard him talking and acting a powerful role in “The Sea Wolf.” It seems rather weird but

we would give almost anything if we could have talk in g movies of DuseAnd as we have often heard the saying, “The show must go on,” just so the movie must go on even when its star is in the grave. I have been told, the information coming from the Fox exchange, that this was actually the last picture Sills made' before his fatal

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Raymond Hackett

attack. Sills was just recovering from a severe illness and just getting back his slipping audience when he was called away. Too bad because he was just finding himself on the talking screen. You will never forget him in “The Barker - ’ and in “The Sea Wolf.’’ His role of “Wolf’ Larsen, captain of a whaler, is a cruel and a very unpleasant one, but Sills plays it with so much power and conviction that you know that Larsen just had to be bad and cruel to keep on top. The love romance of this London story is played by Raymond Hackett and Jane Keith in convincing fashion. They take a lot of physical and mental punishment from “Wolf. - ’ John Roogers is magnificent as Mugridge. the fva.l cook who is tossed overboard because he did not keep a clean kitchen. This sea bath cost him a leg. The sharks got it. And that loss of leg caused “Wolf’’ Larsen his eysight. See the movie for the reason. The picture has been well directed. The sound is good. The sea fights well done. Here is a he man's story. Now at the Apollo.

WILD THEY ARE THESE MARX BROTHERS About the wildest comedians on ! stage and screen are the four Marx | brothers. These brothers are wild birds. They keep together even if one of them is just so and so in talent. Os course you know that the Marx brothers have made a movie version of “Animal Crackers” which was a box office wow on the stage. And if I am only half right, it will make even more money on the screen than it did on the stage. The Marx brothers have the theory that they will make only movies out of the stage plays they have appeared in on the legitimate stage. In other words, they use a musical show on the stage for a couple of years. Immediately that the tour is finished, they start making it into a movie with about the same cast. This makes the leads about letter perfect in everything. And such a method does get results 'or at least the brothers do. “Animal Crackers” is better than their first movie because a bunch of dancing dames have not been rushed into the movie version. I am beginning to believe that pretty female hoofers shine only in the flesh. And the Max Brothers know this. So they have cut out the hoofers and use certain ones just as background after the story gets started. “Animal Crackers,” in movie form, is really a farce comedy with the Mark Brothers pulling off their grand nutty stuff. There is very little lost motion. One of the brothers generally is present except when a mystery is being solved, or the young love birds are making love. Groucho pulls one fast one after another. The trouble is that the audience gets laughing so loud that you miss the next wise crack. I believe that Chico registers better on the talking screen than on the stage in straight comedy work. His piano stuff stops any show. As far as I am concerned, the less that Harpo plays on the harp the better. I know you probably will shoot me at sunrise, but that’s my feeling in the matter. Asa clown of pantomime, he never speaks a word; he is the best on stage and screen. Asa movie ‘“Animal Crackers” has been wisely adapted to the screen. It is a comedy wow. It floored me from a comedy standpoint. “Animal Crackers” is the funniest thing that has struck this town in six months, and I am not forgetting “Caught Short,” with Marie Dressier and Polly Moran. Now at the Circle. nut* BUNCH OF SILLINESS PROVES LOTS OF FUN Wherein silliness and the improbable run hand in hand, that is the main substance of “Let’s Go Native.” But it is oftentimes this sort of meaningless comedy that creates the most mirth. Judging from Saturday night’s audience at the Indiana. certainly no one can say that this picture Is not getting the laughs and many of themYou have to enter into the imagination of the thing, or you will not see the funny side of it. I forgot

Reginald Denny

Jjf • / t

Jack Oakie

accent. What little story is there, is lost in the many off shoots of nonsense, that mean absolutely nothing to its development. There is one song number between Jeanette MacDonald and James Hall, who singing about spring while standing in falling snow, gives you glimpes of animal life and love making between two burly bears. The cast of this picture makes it a great box office draw. Besides those I have all ready mentioned, it includes Kay Francis, Eugene Pallette and William Austin. The song numbers are all fair, with one sure hit in “Let's Go Native.” I j,lso liked “I've Got a Yen for You.” If you see this picture, forget your self and enjoy it. It is funny, if you can see it that way, it’s up to you. On the stage Charlie Davis offers “Sky High.” Paul and Ferral do some serious acrobatic dancing that it good. The Campus Four are pleasing as a male quartet. Hilton and Almy, comediennes are funny, and get many laughs from their wise cracks, but I think still bet-

NEW CROUP TO BEGIN PROBE OF GOTHAM GRAFT Citizens’ Committee Asks City Jobholders’ Help in Investigation. Bu J'nited Press NEW YORK, Sept. 22.—Another [ channel through which it backers j hope that charges of municipal graft and bribery will flow, was marked out today following formation of the city affairs committee of New York. With an extraordinary grand jury continuing to sit after returning indictments against four persons; with an inquiry affecting the entire local judiciary structure about to begin, and with a number of other minor investigations under way, the new committee Sunday called on city employes to co-operate “in a genuine exposure of the corruption and mismanagement in our administration.” Although assertedly nonpartisan, the committee is an outgrowth of the unsuccessful mayoralty race run last year by Norman Thomas, Socialist. The officers include Thomas, Professor John Dewey and such prominent churchmen as John Haynes Holmes, Bishop Francis J. McConnell and Dr. Stephen S. Wise. In the letter to municipal jobholders, the committee said: “We would like to get your side i of the picture. Have you been approached by outsiders who offered direct or indirect bribes for special favors? Has any political leader brought pressure to bear upon you for a party contribution? Do you know of deadheads on your department roll who are drawing a salary without conmensurate service? Most important of all, have you any constructive suggestions to offer concerning the reform of your department?” KILLED OVER 25 CENTS Cleveland Barber Stabbed to Death in Argument Over Quarter. Bu I ni'rd Press CLEVELAND, 0., Sept. 22.—Salvatore Crisa, 48, barber, is dead today as a result of a quarrel over 25 cents, police said. A man approached Crisa in his barber shop and asked him for the loan of a quarter and was refused. An argument followed. The man is alleged to have stabbed Crisa several times. PASTOR ENDS SERVICES Irvington M. E. Minister Will Go to Columbus (O.) Church. The Rev. J. B. Roremurgy conducted his final service at the Irvington M. E. church Sunday ,and next week will assume the pastorate of the King Avenue M. E. church at Columbus. O. Following the night service board members of the church sponsored a reception for the pastor and Mrs. Rosemurgy. Terre Haute Tax Higher Bu Times Svecial • TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Sept. 22. A city tax rate of slightly more than $4.21 for 1931 is proposed for Terre Haute, following compilation of all levies by County Auditor Carl Pinson. The 1930 rate was $4.04. New Rabbi at Anderson Bu Titnes Snccinl ANDERSON, Ind., Sept. 22.—Rabbi Hirseh Freund, Sumner, N. C., will assume leadership of the Jewish congregation here, succeeding Rabbi Louis Segal, who resigned to take a pastorate at Natchez, Miss. ter results might be attained if their act could be shortened. Frank Parrish of the Davis orchestra stopped the show at the performance I attended, singing “Tea for Two,” which he sang with Bernice Clair on her personal appearance here last week. There is also an overture, well played, with Ed Resener conducting. Now at the Indiana—(By Connell Turpen.) Other theaters today offer: “Oh Sailor Behave,” at the Lyric; “Manslaughter,” at the Ohio; “Way Out West,” at the Terminal; “The Pleasure Seekers,” at the Mutual, and movies at the Colonial. New Way to Hold Lower FA 7 SE TEETH Firmly in Place Do false teeth annoy and bother by dropping and slipping when you eat. talk or laughV .just sprinkle a little l-'asteeth on your plates. This new. tasteless powder holds teeth tirui and comfortable. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste. Makes breath pleasant. Get Pasteeth today at Liggett’s. Hook Drug Cos. or any other drug store.—Advertisement.

all reality, let myself slide, and the result, I laughed until my jaws ached. Imagine Jack Oakie running around in his long underwear; Skeets Gallagher king on a desert isle, which, according to him, had been one of the Virgin Islands, until it had drifted; native hula girls who speak with a Brooklyn

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

WFBM (1230) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Power and Lizbt Comoao?) MONDAY P M. 5:30 Evangeline Adams (CBSi. s:4s—Studio orogram. 6:oo—Mardl Gras iCBS>. 6:3o—Democratic Countv Committee. 6:3s—Concert trio. 6:4s—Peerless Jamboree. 7:oo—Automobiles service svneopators. 7:IS—WFBM saxophone auartet. 7:3o—Phiico dealers program. B:oo—Robert Burns Panatela program ICBS). 8:30—. .ewsacting. B:4o—Jubilee singers. 9:oo—Philfuels favorites. 9:ls—Hevwood Broun CBSi 9:3O—WTAR anniversary (CBS'. 10:30—Nocturne (CBS’. 11:00—Time, weather. 11:01—The Columnist. 11:15—WFBM dance orchestra. 11:45—Dessa Bvrd request organ program. VVLW (700) Cincinnati MONDAY P. M. 4:oo—Mormon Tabernacle choir ’NBC). 4:3o—Nothing but the truth. 4:4s—Maids of melody. s:oo—Time announcement. Vocal solos. s:ls—Brooks and Ross. s:2s—Baseball scores. s:3o—Time announcement. White-Haines Vision-aires. s:s9—Weather forecast. 6:oo—Sinton Hotel orchestra. 6:ls—Ohio night school 6:3o—Koolmotor orchestra. 7:oo—Duro Automatics. 7:3o—Real folks INBC). 8:00 —Stardust. B:3o—Croslev Burnt Corkers. 9:oo—Estate weather man. Salt and peanuts. 9:ls—Variety. 9:3o—Amos 'n' Andv. 9:4s—Literary Digest, topics of the dav Floyd Gibbons. NBC).

Two operatic excerpts, ‘ Lohengrin's'’ “Reproof.- ’ from Richard Wagner’s “Lohengrin.” followed by a vocal arrangement of the famous “Intermezzo,” from Pietro Mascagni's “Cavalleria Rusticana,” are outstanding on Mormon Tabernacle choir ’•.id organ program to be broadcast from Salt Lake City bv WLW and the NBC, Monday night, at 4 o’clock. A large ensemble of artists will participate in the Mardi Gras festival over WFBM and the Columbia broadcasting network at 6 p. m., Monday. Freddie Rich and his orchestra will be supported by Ben Alley, tenor: the Round Towners male quartet; the Columbia Girls’ trio, and a chorus. *

On the evening of the opening day of the United States amateur golf chamEionship tourney at Haverford. Pa.. Robert . Ripley. Believe-It-or-Not cartoonist of The Indianapolis Times, will present some of the most amazing golf ffets on record during the Colonial Beaconlights program over WEAF. WGY and an NBC network, Monday at 5:30 p. m. Two amusins popular tunes. “Digga Digga Do." telling of the joys of the carefree life in Samoa, and “On Revival

Times Radio Dial Twisters

Fishing the Air

HIGH SPOTS OF MONDAY NIGHT’S Program. S:OO—NBC (WE AF I— National golf championship review. 6:oo—Columbia —Mardi Gras. Freddie Rich's orchestra; variety to WFBM. 6:3O—NBC (WEAF) —A. & P. Gypsies, directed by Harry Horlick. Columbia—Business paper editors national meeting. 7:oo—Columbia Minneapolis symphony orchestra to WOWO. NBC (WJZ) —Maytag orchestra Marion Keller, guest. 7:3O—NBC (WEAF)—Motors partyBrigadiers’ quartet. NBC (WEAF)—ReaI Folks.. 8 00— NBC (WJZ)—Stromberg Carlson orchestra. Columbia—Guy Lombardo and Royal Canadians. B:3O—NBC (WEAFI—Sign of the Shell-Ray Perkins; Kassell’s orchestra. Columbia—Don Amaizo, violinist; 14-piece* string orchestra. 9:30 Columbia—WTAß anniversary; Governor John Pollard of Virginia to WFBM.

NO W... Free Club-Lounge Gar added to the Hoosier * and dining car patrons, who arc invited to P Si • ’• ■ . f yea to read, convene or rest. & 'fob Th MONON our patrons. Luxuriously Furnished Convenient Schedule Shortest Route In the center are finely upholstered sec- wn. a r , , , tions with tables for your favorite game of Thc Hoosier leaves Indianapolis each 1 “ e Monon is the shortest line between cards. Library and end tables offer you the evening at 5 ; oo o’clock and arrives in Indianapolis and Chicago. It is equipped latest magazines and periodicals. Comfort- Chicago at 9:30 p. m. Southbound, W!th Automatic Block Signals and Autoable chairs invite you to read, converse or ic leavcs Chicago at j : oo p. m. and m * tlC jrain Stop all the way—latest travel lounge in an atmosphere of quietrefinement. arrivcs “ Indianapolis at 9:30 r. m., safety devices. * stopping at Boulevard station(3Bth Street) ** hen you travel between Indianapolis m Radio, Too in each direction. and Chicago do as most people do—travel A handsome radio too brings vou the latest on thc Monon ’ and be of tbe . news, world events, and the sparkling -mum in convenience, comfort and safety. entertainment that comes in over the air. An excellent buffet service, including soft drinks and sandwiches, is available at ' all timts. WJIaIBI §8 aB 1 SI §a L j SmokingCarfor Ladies andGentlemen fifi 1| | pig Bg|| > M Combination ash travs and service rabies Mgg & |H| I. W * ■ * m if throughout the car for of smokers—both ladies and gentlemen.

10:00—Time announcement. Castle Farm orchestra. 10:30—Croslev Theater of the Air. 11:00—Htel Gibson orchestra. 11:30—Sweet and low down. 12 Castle Farm orchestra. 12:30—Time announcement—sign off.

DISTANT STATIONS

MONDAY —6:30 A. M.— KYW (1020). Chicago—Spitalnv’s orchestra. NBC System-A. & P. Gypsies to WEAF. WGN. WTAM. WLS (870) Chicago—Water Witch time. —6:45 P. M WBBM 1770), Chicago—Gendron’s orchestra. —7 P. M Columbia—Minneapolis svmphonv to WABC. WKRC. KMOX. WO’VO. NBC System—Mavtag orchestra to WJZ. KDKA. KYW. WLS (870i. Chicago-Variety. WMAQ (670). Chicago—Studio. —7:30 P. M KTHS (1040), Hot Springs—Arlington orchestra. Columbia—An Evening in Paris to WABC. WKRC. WOWO. WBBM. KMOX NBC System—Motors party to WEAF WGY. WTAM. WGN. WHAS. WENR (870). Chicago—Farm program NBC System—“ Real Folks" to WJZ, KDKA. KYW. WLW. —8 P. M.— Columbia—Burns program. Lombardo's Canadians to WABC. WOWO. WMAQ. KMOX WBBM (770), Chicago—Gerolsteiner program. NBC System—Moonshine and Honeysuckle to WEAF. WGY. WENR (870). Chicago—Smith tamilv. WFAA (8001. Dallas—Simms singers. —8:3(1 P. M KYW (1020). Chicago—Spilalyn's orchestra.

Day, a rhythmic version of the spiritual, will be offered by the quartet during the A. & P. Gypsies broadcast over WGN, WTAM and an NBC network Monday at 6:30 p. m. “Sweetheart, Do You Remember?” from Romberg's celebrated operetta. “Maytime.” is one of the selections Marion Keeler, contralto, will sing when she is heard as guest soloist on the program the Mavtag orchestra will broadcast from WHAS, KYW. and the NBC Chicago studios, Monday at 7 p. m. Eighty-five gifted musicians of the Minneapolis symphony orchestra from nearly every country in the world will be heard in a program of classical selections during the Minneapolis-Hone.v-welt symphony hour Monday from 7 to 7:30 p. m.. over WKRC, WOWO. WBBM and the Columbia Broadcasting network. Not to be outdone by the United States amateur golf championship tournament, the Real Folks are conducting a medal play of their own, and a play by plav report of the final match will be broadcast over WLW and an NBC network. Monday night at 7:30 o'clock. James Melton, tenor, will be the soloist during the General Motors Family Party which will be broadcast over WGN. WTAM and an NBC network Monday at 7:30. University of Southern California songs will be heard during the Robert Burns Panatella program to be broadcast over WFBM and the Columbia broadcasting network at 8 p. m., Monday. A medlev of the university’s most popular numbers will be sung bv the Robert Burns male quartet. Mildred Davis Lewis, contralto, has selected the aria. “Mv Heart Is Weary,” from A. Goring Thomas' romantic opera. “Nadeshda,” as her soio on the Strom-berg-Carlson program to be broadcast Monday night. Originating in the studios of WHAM. Rochester, this feature will go on the air over WHAS. KYW and an NBC network, at 8 o’clock. A medley of college songs will be played by the orchestra during the broadcast of the Sign of the Shell from WTNR. WTAM and the NBC Chicago studios Monday at 8:30. The anniversary program of station WTAR in Norfolk wil include talks bv Governor John Garland Pollard of Virginia and S. Heth Tavlor. mayor of Norfolk. This program will be presented over WFBM and the Columbia broadcasting network at 9:30 p. m.. Monday.

Coluumbla—American Maize program to WLBW, WKRC. WBBM. WFAA (800). Dallas—Recital. WON (7201. Chicago—Entertainers. NBC Svstem—S(gn of the Shell to WEAF. WENR —B:4.’! P. M.— WBBM (770). Chicago—Aaronson s orchestra. . —9 P. M . (1020). Chicago—News: “State street.” stem—Spltalnv’s orchestra to *VfcAr\ WTAM. voFvr R , ' -Chicago—Mike and Herman. WGN (<2O(. Chicago—Tomorrows TribuneHungry Five. WMAQ (670>, Chicago—Dan and Sylviastyle hour. —0:15 P. M.— Colmnbla-Heywood Broun to WABC. WENR. S WTAM nCIe AbC DaVid t 0 —9:30 P. M.— W symphony.’ ChlCae °~ Danct ' vvn i 79 ?' Schenectady— Organist. AndV IO KYW ’ —9:4.1 P. M.~ Shicaso —Gerun's orchestra. System—Nat’l. News events to WENK. ‘BOOL Ft. Worth—Studio Droaram. WDA.F ( 610). Kansas Citv—Dance music*ones. WMAQ (670). Chicago—Marathon dance. —lO P. M.— KYW (1020), Chicago—SDitalnv's orchestra. ' B7o ' Chicago—Air vaudeville. v,9^5 vs J. e ? l—Dance orchestra to WEAF. WgC. ¥J. WOC - KSD. WSM WWJ. WFJC. WDAF. WTMJ. WGN (720i. Chicago—Dance music. WMAQ (6 4 0). Chicago—Dance music <3 hours). WTAM (1070). Cleveland—Dance Drogram. —10:30 P. M.— Columbia—Organ to WABC KMOX (1090), St. Louis—Novelty orchestra. —ll P. M.— KYW T 020). Chicago— Panico’s orchestraGet\m's orchestra. KMOX (1090). St. Louis—KMOX revue; organist. WBBM < 770. Chicago—Dance orchestra (1/2 hours). WCCO (810). Minneanolis-St. Paul—Monday Night Club. —11:30 P. M.— KMOX (1090). St. Louis—Organist. WJR (750). Detroit—Diensberger's orchestra.

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GROUP HELD ON BOOZE CHARGES Garage Men Are Arrested by U. S. Agents. Operators and employes of the Partiow-Jennings Motor Company, 419 East Market street, garage rented by the federal government for storage of automobiles seized in liquar cases, face trial for violating prohibition laws. Federal prohibition agents found an automobile containing twentyfive gallons of alcohol, two guns and ammunition in a raid on the garage Saturday, they declared. William Bayless, 450 East Washington street, alleged owner of the automobile, is held on SIO,OOO bond. Others arrested and released on $3,500 bonds each are: Ray Partlow, 1022 East Ohio street; Fred Partlow, 712 East Vermont street; William Hedrick. 2219 Sheldon street; William Horsley. Negro, rear of 2306 Bellefontaine street, and Richard Ternary, 406 East Washington street. * CALLS MIND IMMORTAL Lives on After Man’s Death, Asserts Sir Oliver Lodge on Radio. Bu 1 nited Press NEW Y’ORK, Sept. 22.—Man’s mind lives after his body dies, Sir Oliver Lodge, noted British scientist and spiritualist, told American radio listeners Sunday in a speech broadcast from London.