Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 November 1940 — Page 4

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Art Display Opens Tomorrow—|

An exhibit of oils, water colors, and pastels of the Art Student's

League of Indianapolis will be dis!

played by the Indiana Central College Art Department from tomorrow to Dec. 2. The exhibition is to be open to the public every day in the week with the excep-

tion of from 8 a. m. to 4 p. m. Sat=|.

urdays.

Group to Form Auxiliary—The Indianapolis Alumni Associgtion of Kappa Delta Rho Fraternity will meet at 7:30 o'clock tonight in the Hotel Riley to organize an auxiliary composed of the wives of members.

Mayer Maloney is president of the!

association.

Thyroid | Topic for Doctors—A panel discussion on thyroid disease will be given by the Indianapolis Medical Saciety of Marion County at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Speakers include Drs. Goethe Link, Robert

Moore, E. F. Kiser, W, D. Little, |

E. F. Boggs and Wayne Carson. Junior| C. of C. officials to Meet

The Executive Committee of the],

Junior Chamber: of Commerce will hold its, regular meeting Friday noon in the Canary Cottage.

Lions Club Plans “Country Store” —Lions Club of Indianapolis will hold its annual “Country Store” at noon Wedngsday in the Claypool Hotel. Proceeds will be used for the organization’s Christmas fund.

Two Townsend Clubs to Gather— Two Townsend Clubs will meet tonight. Club 9 will hold a business meeting at 7:30 p. m. today in the I. O.| O. F. Hall, Hamilton Ave. and E. Washington St. Club 14 will sponsor a supper tonight in the social room of the Holtieay Building,

Arrius Court Dance Tomorrow— Arrius Court {5 of the Ben Hur Life Association will hold its annual Thanksgiving| dance at 8:30 p. m. tomorow in (Castle Hall. Joseph Hunley, Arthur Basey, Mrs. Ethel Emmons and Miss| Elizabeth Himes are in charge.

Miss Kitson to Sing—Miss Winefride Kitson, a member of St. John's Choir, will sing at Catholic Vesper services at 4 p. m. tomorro at the U. S. Veterans’ Hospital. She will be accompanied |by Miss Mary Agnes Keller. | Rev, Walter Nugent, chaplain, will| deliver the sermon.

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Civic League to Meet—The East Sun Street (Civic League will meet 8 p. m. tomorrow at School 1, BN and Gale Sts. W. B. Leighty is secretary of the league.

Charles P. McCann (above), Newark, N. J.,, national president of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, will address. the Indianapolis Aerie, 211, at 8:30 p. m. today in the Eagle Temple, 43 W. Vermont St. An active Eagle for 20. years, he was elected president at the organization’s 1940 convention in Chicago. He formerly served as secretary of the Newark Aerie.

ARRANGE RITES FOR TEXAS OIL LEADER

EL PASO, Tex., Nov. 18 (U. P.).— Funeral arrangements were being made today for Joshua S. Cosden, 59-year-old petroleum company head, who died aboard a Southern Pacific passenger train at Wilcox, Ariz, yesterday afternoon. Mr. Cosden, president of the Cosden Oil Co. of Ft. Worth, Tex., died of a heart attack. The body was brought to El Paso pending arrival of Mrs. Cosden from New York. Two sons, Joshua Jr. and Jack, came from Ft. Worth last night. Mr, Cosden was a colorful figure in the oil business, starting his career as a. daring wildcatter. He rode to prosperity in the Twenties on the high tide of the oil boom in Oklahoma, and crashed on the eve of the depression. During the Thirties he staged a comeback.

PESSIMISTIC OVER ORIENT

HONOLULU, Nov. 18 (U. P.).— Conditions in the Orient are “bad and getting worse,” according to Wilfred Fleisher, former editor of the Japan Advertiser. His newspaper, formerly American-owned, recently was sold to Japanese interests, and Mr. Fleisher is en route to the United States.

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g [BREAKDOWN IN MORALS CITED

Responsible for War, Msgr. Sheen Tells Overflow

Forum Audience.

The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Fulton Sheen, speaking before an overflow audience in English’s Theater last night, blamed a moral collapse for the present world conflict and described th» war as “the judgment of God

that it is a punishment.” His subject, “The Cross and the Crisis,” was the first of the annual Catholic Forum series sponsored by the International Federation of Catholic Alumnae. Four more addreses are. to be heard on the Forum series, the next Dec. 8 in the Indiana World War Memorial Shrine Auditorium. Msgr. Sheen said that God is not an angry, wrathful God of revenge. “Whenever we do anything wrong, we produce an effect which we did not intend. We have willed to be separated from divinity and, having willed, we have produced a war,” he continued. In opening his address, he said that “the cross is the viewpoint of faith and the crisis is the war.” Msgr. Sheen, who is professor of philosophy at the Catholic University of America, said that civilization has been “spending” its beliefs for four centuries and that “we now live on husks; we have come: to the end of an era.” He absolved the people and world

Lleaders of consciously making war,

but placed the blame on a breakdown of principles that have war as an effect. However, he reflected, war is releasing the germs of a “better, finer lifc in breaking the shell of civilization.”

Tom Mix Estate Is Only $115,000

‘ HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 18 (U.P.). —The late Tom Mix, who earned millions of dollars as the movies’ leading cowboy actor, left only $115,000, according to his will. The estate was divided equally between his wife, Mrs. Mabel Mix, and his daughter, Tomasina, Counsel for the estate explained that Mr. Mix’s wealth had dwindled quickly after he passed his peak as a star. He paid $500,000 to a former wife, now Mrs. Victoria de Clazabal. He was sued frequently. The depression wiped out numerous investments. He was heavily interested in circuses, which have not been paying well in recent years. Mr. Mix left his old and famous horse, Tony, to a friend,

PRIEST TO LECTURE "AT READING ROOM

The Rev. Fr. James Moriarty, known as a member of the Catholic Motor Mission and for his street preaching in Indiana, will lecture at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the Catholic Reading Room, Capitol Ave. and Georgia St. Fr. Moriarty is an assistant pastor at the Holy Cross Catholic Church. He will discuss books as approved or disapproved by the Catholic Church and also fasting and abstinence. ; His lecture is one of a series sponsored by the Catholic Information Bureau and directed by Rev. Fr. Richard Grogan.

DOUGLAS TO BUILD BOMBPROOF PLANT

SANTA MONICA, Cal, Nov. 18 (U. P).—Douglas Aircraft Co., revealed today that it is buildirg the American airplane .industry’s first “blackout” plant with bombproof shelters for workers and under-

= | ground storage for planes.

The decentralized factory with buildings scattered about for further protection from bombings will be erected adjacent to the long Beach, Cal, municipal airport. It will cost $11,000,000. At night, the factory will be virtually invisible, both from the ground and from the skies, “Light traps” will wink out all illumination. Huge lightproof doors will darken the double-tracked entrance to the plant’s interior railroad terminal. Landscaping will the plant.

ACTOR’S SON AND COMPANION HURT

HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 18 (U. P.).— George "Morgan, 23-year-old son of Actor Frank Morgan, and his companion, Miss Fairol Warren, 24, were in Hollywood Hospital today with severe head injuries, cuts and bruises received in an automobile accident. Mr. Morgan’s automobile skidded in the rain last night, and hit the only section of a concrete wall a truck had not knocked down in an accident two weeks ago.

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By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN United Press Hollywood Correspondent. HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 18.—~William A. de Havilland, a gaunt Britisher of 170, charged today that his famous daughters, Olivia de Havilland and Joan Fontaine, repeatedly had ignored his pleas for financial assistance after anti-English feeling in Japan ruined his Tokyo legal

' |practice.

Alice Faye and Betty Grable are in the process of showing you how a hot wicky-wacky hula was put over in 1917. It’s part of their stint-in “Tin Pan Alley,” which will be at the Circle beginning Thursday. The Misses Faye and Grable will help revive pleasant memories of the days before the juke box had replaced the ukelele,

MUSIC

Rachmaninoff in ‘Grand Manner’ Delights a Capacity Audience

By JAMES THRASHER

MARTENS CONCERTS, INC, which was founded 11 years ago by the late Mrs. Nancy Martens, began its first season under the guidance of Miss Gladys Alwes and Mrs. Mary Ramier with ‘a recital by Sergei

‘Rachmaninoff at English’s Sunday afternoon.

A capacity audience that included many standees was on hand to welcome and applaud the eminent pianist-composer, who has been

missing from our musical life for too many years. To describe piano playing as be« ing in “the grand manner” is to fall hack upon a rather threadbare phrase. Nevertheless it seems as apt a label for Mr, Rachmaninoff’'s performance as any. Certainly he regards the piano as a self-sufficient instrument, and one to be approached seriously and with no trace of diffidence. Obviously, too, it is to him an instrument capable of expressing a wide and varied sweep of emotion, a thing to be delighted in for its own sake and as the vehicle of. a deep and personal feeling. “The grand manner” is not generally identified with our younger tribe of pianists, nor would one expect to find a virtuoso who has lived his whole life in the 20th Century choosing the program which Mr. Rachmaninoff played yesterday. ” EJ ” EXCEPT FOR an Etude-Tab-leau of his own composition, Mr. Rachmaninoff’s selections formed a list typical of the day when the piano virtuoso vied wih the prima donna for dominance of the musical world. And since Liszt was the king of pianists in that day, it 'is not surprising that he was generously represented on yester=day’s program. .His transcription of the Bach Organ Prelude and Fugue in A Minor opened the program. An-

other transcription (of Schubert's song, “The Trout”) closed the first half, and three Liszt Etudes ended the printed list. Mr. Rachmaninoit very frequently rescues music from the confines of the teacher’s studio, places it upon his recital list and proceeds to breathe new life into it through the perception of a great interpreter who finds new beauty in the ultra-familiar. Such was the case with the Liszt D Flat Etude and the “Waldesrauschen” and “Gnomenreigen” of the same composer. Every advanced piano student studies them, but when have we heard them done by a top-ranking artist? The program also included the “Apassionata” Sonata of Beethoven; Schubert's A Flat Minor Impromptu, and four of the Etudes, Opus 25, by Chopin— those in C sharp minor, E minor, A minor and C minor. Of these only the Etudes may be called staple pianistic fare today. Even such a favorite as the “Appas=sionata” is neglected in favor of

.the last four or five of Beethoven's

sonatas. ” EJ s

MR. RACHMANINOFF'S conception of it is a highly persone

alized one. And whether it fits your own ideas or not, it makes eloquently convincing listening. To Mr. Rachmaninoff, the subtitle of “Appassionata” is no idle bit of rhetoric, nor should it be. Passion and sonority are abundantly present in his interpretation, which fairly storms the heavens in the last movement. It was, by and large, a sonorous afternoon. Yet when the occasion demanded, there was delicacy and crystalline clarity. This was particularly true of the SchubertLiszt transcription, which was

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played with such a wealth of grace and nuance as to render words decidely inadequate. A special word might also be said of the Etude-Tableau, if only a word of regret that the program included only one Rachmaninoff composition. With the exception of Debussy, it is doubtful that anyone has contributed so much to 20th Century piano music as yesterday's artist. And needless to say, Mr .Rachmaninoff accords his own music an impeccable interpretation. ” ” ” IT IS IDLE to attempt al detailed discussion of Mr. Rachmaninoff’s pianistic powers at this late date. He is, however, arriving at an age when his listeners begin to marvel that the authore ity and elegance and ripe artistry of his playing have lost none of their potency with the passage of time. Yesterday's recital was received with tumultuous applanse, of course. And Mr. Rachmaninoff had to play three encores before his audience would permit him to be on his way. One was a Chopin mazurka, ' another the pianist’s transcription of “The Bumble Bee” by Rimsky-Korsakov, and the other—well, it. seems scarcely neces= sary to identify it. It is nearly 50 years since Mr. Rachmaninoff wrote the C Sharp Minor Prelude. Since then he must have played it at ‘least 50 times a year and become thore oughly and completely sick of it. But apparently his hearers never will be. . . , Still, it must be quite a cross to bear,

SCHIPA'S DIVORCE

HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 18 (U. P.).— A contest of Tito Schipa’s divorce suit against his estranged wife was on in Superior Court after Mrs. Schipa, from Rome, Italy, filed a cross complaint through her attorney here. Mrs. Schipa charged that the opera star deserted her nearly two years ago and left her with no means of supporting herself and her two children, Elena, 18, and Liana, 11, who are with her in Italy. She asked that Mr. Schipa be refused a divorce and that, instead, she be granted separate maintenance, “appropriate” to the singer’s income.

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SUIT CONTESTED

He said he believed his daughters refused to answer his letters because he married a Japanese woman after their mother divorced him. Mr. de Havilland, who arrived here aboard the Japanese liner Tatuta Maru, added that he was en route to South America, where he hoped he could live cheaply with his Oriental wife. The Misses de Havilland and Fontaine, two of Hollywood's brightest stars, phoned their mother in Saratoga, Cal, when they learned of their father’s accusations and issued a statement under; her name, Mrs. Lillian Fontaine. Tt said: “The news of Mr. de Havilland’s arrival comes as a surprise to me and my daughters because during the 21 years that have elapsed since our separation and subsequent divorce my daughters and I have had only one contact with him. The girls and I came to America in 1919, where I have brought them u Yi “And that,” added Miss de Havilland, “is all we possibly can say.” Arrival of their father, whom they had seen only once since babyhood, brought to light a story which the movie studios long had soft-pedaled.

WHEN DOES IT START?

CIRCLE LL West Mounted Police,” with Gar Cooper, Madeleine Carroll, Paulette Goddard, Robert Preston, at 11:23, 1:58. 4:33, 7:08 and 9:43.

INDIANA raming Out Loud,” with Lum and Abner. Frank Craven. Frances fingtord Tat 12:48, 3:58, 7:08 and

“Too Many Girls,” with Lucille pall, Richard Carlson, Ann Miller, at 11:22, 2:32, 5:42 and 8:52.

LOEW'S

“Kit_ Carson,” with Jon Hall Lynn Bari, at 12; 20, 3:40. 6:55 and

“Dr. dare Goes Home,” with yres, Lione Ban ore Loraine’ Day. at (11, 2:15, 5:30 and

LYRIC “Hollywood on the Loose.” with Tom Brown, Arleen Whelan, Alexander D’ Arcy, Judivh Allen, on stage at 1:02, 1, 6: nd 9: “Hit Parade of 1941, » with Kenny Bager: Frances Langford, Ann Mi at 11:15, 2:07. 4:56, 7:45 and 10:3

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Famous Daughters Denied Him Aid, de Havilland Says

The Misses de Havilland and Fontaine, now 24 and 23 years old, respectively, were toddlers when their mother left Mr. de Havilland

21 years ago. Mrs. de Havilland brought her daughters to America immediately and settled in Saratoga, where she and the children became American citizens. After nine years in this country Mrs. de Havilland returned to Tokyo to divorce her husband. The next year the still prosperous Mr. de Havilland visited America and met his daughters, then in their early teens, He returned to Japan and married his Oriental wite. His daughters have not seen him since. Mrs. de Havilland later married a California businessman. “For 47 years I was a patent attorney in Tokyo,” Mr. de Havilland said upon disembarking. “With the Sino-Japanese War, my business was ruined. I appealed and appealed again to my daughters for help. They ignored me, perhaps because of my wife, whom I love deeply. “I am here because I was forced by lack of money to leave Japan. I had to find a place where I could live cheaply with my wife, Since she is an Oriental I cannot

Herb 1s With Long-Shot Winner

A theatrical long-shot that fine ished in the big money is due to arrive at English’s Wednesday night, with Katharine Hepburn “up,” as they say around the tracks, And Miss Hepburn’'s loyal fans who turned out to see her at the same theater in “Jane Eyre” a few seasons ago will be glad to know that she’s finally with a winner, Plays are notorious gambles, as the list of any veteran producer's expensive failures proves. But Philip. Barry's “The Philadelphia Story,” which brings Miss Hepburn to town, was more of a gamble than ‘most. For one thing, the Theater Guild might have thought twice before backing the show. Mr, Barry is a successful playwright, of course, but his latest play, “Here Come the Clowns,” had pleased only about half the New York critics. Miss Hepburn gambled, too. Her first post-Hollywood play, ‘The Lake,” was a dismal failure in New York. And the second, ‘Jane Eyre,” never got there at all. However, when she read the Barry comedy she bought herself out of the last two pictures on a long-term movie contract at a fancy price, and left

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