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Wisconsin State Journal from Madison, Wisconsin • 12
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Wisconsin State Journal from Madison, Wisconsin • 12

Location:
Madison, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

We'dnes'day, May 22, 1935 Wisconsin THE WISCONSIN STATE JOURNAL1 Madison Page Twelve Today's Crossword Puzzle Miss Kleist Buried in Portage Cemetery TStat Journal New Service PORTAGE Miss Anna Kleist died Radio News and Programs Central Standard Time athletic fields of Verona high and graded schools Thursday. Commencement Friday Verona high school will close its year's work Friday, May 24. After the final examinations, which will end today, commencement activities will begin. An inter-class meet was held on the athletic field this afternoon, flo-lowed by a picnic supper. Class night exercises will be held In the Modern Woodmen hall Thursday night, and commencement exercises win be held Friday night in the same building.

T. H. Shaw, Madison, of the state department of public Instruction, will give the commencement address. The program also will include the processional by Mis3 Helen Charl-son; invocation by the Rev. H.

Lehman; and benediction by the Rev. T. J. Gibson. The Verona civic cfcorus will sing several selections, Nona Way and Pauline Rhiner will give ihe salutatory and valedictory addresses, and Prin.

A. C. Jones will present the diplomas. Ball Tourney May 27 The final baseball tournament for4 Black Earth, Middleton, Ridgeway. and Verona high schools will be held here Monday, May 27.

III 2 T4. 6 7 aT3 Ti "i4 111 16 hhm wmmmmm mmmmm mmmmmtm tmmmmm imvi mmmmm mtmmmm mm UQh 2S 26 US 27 IIZIIllLlI 1 I I I 1 1 I I st Car Thrown in Ditch, (State Journal News BLOOMINGTON co: up Bridgeport hollow or. 35 and 18 Sunday afterr.ov.. John Carlisle and daughter. Ft more, were thrown into when another car struck the rear.

Mrs. Carlisle eral severe cuts on her her daughter also wa cut on face and one wrist. Bert Stenner, with his son, also of Fennimore. shortly after the at curred and brought them to i. -sician's office here, witer -wounds were dressed, i.te car was left standing or.

its in the ditch. ''TX CM 1 'c PARKWAY Saturday Eve. 8:15 P. M. One Performance Only Madison Has NEVER Had Such a Show Before! 80 Broadway Stars 24 Scenes 9 22 Musical Numbers SAW TT.

Pmwnta DOROTHY ETHEL STONE WATERS 9k a 195 SEATS STILL AVAILABLE Buy Them Early and Don't be Disappointed PRICES! S3.30 S2.75 S2.20 S1.65 1.10 including tax. OVER! Musical Romance! 1 r- BE TRAFFIC TIPS Lythe NATIONAL SAFETY COUNCjT When It's Time to Retire A first rule of marching armies is to take care of the feet. The proper care of the "rubber feet" of the auto is always extremely important. Tires, like sponges, have a wear-and-tear saturation point. They will stand for lots of abuse and then, like humans, they blow up and leave you flat.

Blowouts during recent years have caused "Several hundred deaths and many thousand injuries annually. They are supposed to occur without warning yet in nearly every case the warning has long been apparent in the condition of the tires. Calm headwork is necessary when a blowout occurs. A crash can often be avoided by letting the car coast to a low speed before applying brakes. Each case, however, requires special handling for often a driver must take a chance on quick brake action.

Always keep the right amount of air in your tires. The best way to prevent blowouts is to discard the tires before they reach the danger point. Tires are always cheaper than accidents. tt IS i I VTIXD 60 WENR-WLS 870 WTMJ 620 WHA ,640 WSB 740 WHO 1000 WON 720 WTAM ....1070 WIAV 700 KMOX ....1090 WSM 650 WISN ....1120 WMAQ 670 WJJD ....1130 WBBM 770 W1BU ....1310 WCCO 810 W1BA ....1280 WHAS 820 WOO 1420 These programs are subject to change at discretion of stations. WIB A Tonight 5 -oo NBC Lotus Gardens Orchestra, 5 15 NBC Oriental Garden.

5-30 NBC Little Concert. 5:50 Baseball Scores. nbc One Man's Family. 6:30 Studio Program. 7:00 Studio Feature.

7:30 Triangle Glee Club. 8:00 NBC Pleasure Island. 8:30 Pic and Pat. 9:00 Nieht News Flashes. 9:15 NBC Tony and Gus.

9:30 NBC House of Glass. 10:00 Brandy's Orchestra. 10:30 NBC Lights Out. 11:00 NBC Bismarck Orchestra. 11:30 NBC Wandering Minstrel.

Other Stations Tonight 5:00 Hal Totten WMAQ 5 Happy Jack Turner WENB 5:00 Jimmv Allen WGN 3:00 Just Entertainment WBBM 5:15 Just Plain Bill WBBM 5:15 Lum and Abner WGN 5:15 Tony and Gus WENR 5:15 Black Chamber WMAQ 5:30 Easy Aces WMAQ WTAM 5:30 Red Davis WENR WSM 5:30 Jack Armstrong WTMJ 5:30 Buck Rogers WBBM WCCO 5 :45 Boake Carter WBBM WCCO 5:45 Heinle's Grenadiers WTMJ 5 :45 Amateur Night WGN 5:45 Dangerous Paradise WENR 5 rjncie Ezra WMAQ 6:00 One Man's Family WMAQ Hal Kemp Orch. WLS WXW 6:00 Lone Rangei1 WGN 8:00 Johnnie Foursome WBBM 6:15 Pat Flanagan WBBM 6 :30 Chandu the Magician WGN 6:30 Wayne Kir WMAQ WTMJ 6:30 House ot Glass WLS WLW 8:30 Broadway Varieties WBBM 7:00 Town Hall WMAQ WTMJ 7:00 Home on the Range WLS 7:15 Comedy Stars WGN 7:30 Bums Allen WBBM WCCO 7:30 Harv and Esther WGN 7 :45 Newsreel WGN 7:45 world Affairs WENR 8:00 Jack Pearl WBBM WCCO 8:00 Waring Orchestra WTMJ 8 :00 Hits and Bits WENR 8:00 Pleasure Island WMAQ WLW 8 :30 Hawthorne Chorus WENR 8:30 Vivian della Chiesa WBBM 8:30 Noble Orch. WLW WMAQ 8:30 Golden Gloves WGN 9 :00 Variety Show WLW 9:00 Amos 'n' Andy WTMJ WENR 9:00 Donald McGibney WMAQ 9:15 Globe Trotter WENR 9:15 Jesse Crawford WMAQ 9:13 Tony and Gus WTMJ WSM 9:30 House of Glass WTMJ WSM 9:45 Hoofinghams WMAQ 10:00 Dance Music WBBM WTMJ WENR WMAQ 10:30 Lights Out WENR 10:30 Ben Bernte Orch. WBEM 10:45 Joe Sanders Orch. WGN 12:00 Voice of Love WBBM WIBA Thursday 7KX) NBC Breakfast Club.

7:15 Morning Alarm. 7:30 State Journal News. 7:50 Morning Alarm. 8:00 NBC Press Radio News, 8:05 Morning Alarm. 8:45 NBC Studio Parade.

9 :00 NBC Soloist. 9:15 NBC House Detective. 9:30 NBC Carnival. 10:00 NBC Fields and Hall. 10:15 NBC Merry Macs 10:30 NBC Song of the City.

10:45 NBC Merry Madcaps. 11:00 NBC Oriental Gardens. 1 1 :15 Interlude. 11:30 NBC Farm and Home Hour. 12:30 Noon News Flashes.

12:50 Livestock. Poultry Markets. 1:00 Afternoon Shopper. 1 :30 Eastwood Organ. 1:45 Everett Ballard: Pianist.

2 :00 Housing Program. From Italy. 2:45 NBC Harvest of Son'. 8:00 NBC Parents Teachers. 3:30 NBC Kay Foster.

3 :45 NBC Jolly Journies. 4:00 NBC Stubby Gorden's Orch. 4:30 NBC News: Mary Small. 4:45 Jews Christians. NBC Glen Island Casino.

15 NBC Arthur S. Vernay. 5:30 NBC Oriental Gardens. 5:50 Baseball Scores. 6:00 Madison Schools.

6:30 Dane County Sportsmen. 6:45 Dane Co. Medical Society. 7:00 NBC Show Boat. 8:00 NBC Whiteman Music Hall.

9:00 Night News. 9:15 NBC Tony and Gus. 9:30 NBC National Forum. 10:00 Interlude. 10.15 Brandy's Orchestra.

10:30 NBC Dancing in Twin Cities. 11:00 Brand v's Orchestra. 11:15 NBC Terrace Gardens Orch. 11:30 NBC Husk O'Hare Orchestra. WHA Thursday 8:00 Band Wagon.

8:15 Morning Melodies. 9:15 Magazine Rack. 9:35 Book Trails. 0:55 World Book Man. 10:00 Homemakera: Tools and Toll Make the Garden, J.

G. Moore and O. B. Combs; News. 10:45 Ruth Buellesbach.

R. N. 11:00 Music Appreciation. 12:00 Noon Musicale. 12:30 Farm Program: What's Going on: Old Song Book, Frederick Fuller: Farm Situation, Don Anderson.

1 Organ Melodies. ACROSS 2 Japanese aash 8 Selzs 8 From 10 Become liable to It Note of the It Narrow valley 25 Cereal cpilces 17 Stubborn 20 A small mass 21 Frozen water 22 Piece out 27 A continent (abbr.) 2 Ventilate 29 BojrB nick name 21 City In Florida IS Eating Implement 35 Poker term S7 Unoccupied 33 Note of the scale 39 Fear 42 Part of verb "to be" 43 Girl's nam, 44 Kind of tie 24 Neuter pronoun 25 One who bake DOWN Unsinkable object 11 A muscle 1 Marsh 8 Cribs 4 Within 6 Greek letter Any plane surface Twice (music) pain 12 Journeys 14 Reflux of tide 16 Consumed 18 Coronet At Ta I have Just returned from a visit to an architectural school in the east where I was enrolled as a student before entering the Taliesin fellowship. A discouraging visit. I Discouraging, not only because of ithe cramped concepts of the so- called "crits" and students but because of the principles which established the entire architectural school system under the stagnation of Beaux Arts competition-Try to conceive the group of young people in the United States who enter this system each year. These young people who enter i don't come to flounder through a 1 college course with the hope of hit-jting upon some work that interests them sufficiently to make it their vocation.

Rather, they have within them some, creative urge that inclines them toward a profession as difficult and as extraordinary in its attainment as architecture. Their minds are growing, receptive, plastic. These are the qualities with which they enter only to be subjected to a system of superficial paper architecture which their imagination because copying iand even "calclng" of documents ft ji in Golden Gloves Bouts, Wallace's Address, Hutchins on Radio Wy WILLIAM I DOUDNA State Journal Radio Editor! Addresses by Agriculture Secy. Henrv A. Wallace and Pres.

Robert Hutchins of the University of Chicago: a broadcast of the Italo- American Golden Gloves iignta; a concert by Dr. Sigfrid Prager's little Symphony orchestra, and a broadcast of a Mozart opera from Rome will headline tonight's and Thursday's offerings. The aces: TONIGHT 1 p. m. Little Symphony (WTBA) Town Hall Tonight: "The Square Dance," "Love and a Dime," plus Fred Allen (WMAQ).

7:30 p. m. Barns and Allen: in court (WBBM). 7:5 p. m.

World Affairs: Dr. Hutchins on the future of the world trade (WENR). 8 p. m. Pleasure Island: Lom-bardos offer "The Desert Song," "One Alone," (WIBA, WMAQ).

8:30 p. m. Ray Noble Orchestra: "Moonlight on the Ganges," "This Is Romance" (WMAQ) Golden Gloves: Italian, Chicago champs (WGN). THURSDAY DAYTIME 11:30 a. m.

Farm hour: Secy. Wallace on "A Test of Economic Democracy" (WTBA). 2:30 p. m. From Rome: Mozart's "Abduction from the Seraglio" (WTBA).

3 p. m. National P. T. E.

O. Melby, George A. Works (WTBA) Condensed Log of Foreign Stations fM means megacycles: hours ply-en in central standard time; dally unless otherwise noted). Barranqullla, HJ1ABB, 6.43 A to 9 p. m.

Berlin. DJA, 9.57 7 to 10:30 a. 4:15 to 8:15 p. m. Berlin.

1MB, 1550 3:45 to 8:15 p. m. Berlin, DJC, 6.02 11 a. m. to 3:30 p.

4:30 to 9 30 p. m. Berlin. DJD. 11.76 11 a.

m. to 3 :30 p. m. Berlin. DJN.

9.54 7 to 10:30 a. 4:13 to 9:30 p. m. Brussels. ORK, 10.33 1:45 to 3:15 p.

m. Buenos Aires, LSX. 10.35 8 to 10 p. irregularly. Caracas, YV2RC, 6.11 4:15 to 9 p.

n. Caracas, TV3RC, 6.15 4 to 8:30 p. m. Eindhoven. PC J.

1552 7 to 9 a. m. Sunday. Genera, HBP. 7.80 4:30 to 5.15 p.

m. Saturday. Guayaquil. HC2RL, 6.66 4:45 to 7 p. m.

Sunday. 8:13 to 10:15 p. to. Tuesday. Havana.

COC, 6.01 4 to 8 p. Hulzen. PHI. 11.73 7 to 9:10 a. m.

Monday, Thursday. Friday; 7 to 9:30 a. m. Saturday, Sunday. Jeloy.

LCXi, 9.55 11 a. m. to 5 p. m. Lisbon.

CT1AA, 9.60 3:30 to 6 p. m. Tuesday, Thursday. Saturday. London.

GSA, 6.05 3:30 to 4:45 p. 5 to 7 p. m. London. GSB.

9.51 8:13 to 11 a. 12 m. to 4:45 p. m. London.

GSC. 9 58 5 to 7 p. m. London. GSD, 11.75 11 to 11:45 a.

m- 12m to 3:30 London. G3E. 11.86 5 to 8 a. 8:15 to 9:45 a. m.

London GSF. 15.13 5 to 8 a. m. Madrid, EAQ, 9.87 4 to 8 p. m.

Moscow, RNE. 12.00 9 to 10 a. Sunday. Melbourne, VK3ME, 9.51 4 to 5:30 a. m.

Wednesday, 4 to 6 a. m. Saturday. 11.90 10:15 a. -n.

to 1:15 p. 2 to 5 p. m. Paris, Pontoise. 11.71 6 to fl p.

nu 10 to 12 p. m. 1555 6 to 10 a. m. Rabat, CNR, 8.05 It, 2 to 4 p.

a. Sunday. Riobamba, PRADO, 6.62 8 to 10 p. m. Thursday.

Rio de Janeiro, PRF3. fl.50 4:30 to 5:15 p. m. Rome. 12RO, 9.78 1 :30 to 7 p.

m. Monday, Wednesday. Friday. Rome, 12RO. 6.09 M-, 1:30 to 7 p.

m. Monday. Wednesday. Friday. Sydney, VK2ME.

9.59 12 p. m. to 2 a. 4 to 10 a. m.

Sunday. To Impress on children the "communal Idea of the sense of leader and follower," modern schools In Germany have the pupils sit at tables In a semi-circle with the teacher In a chair on the same level. 1:30 State Capitol: Sen. John B. Cashman, Sen.

Sherman W. Wade. 2:05 Young Aviators Homecoming. 2:30 Music ot the Masters. 3 :30 Silent.

5 :30 "The Hills of Home." 6:00 Cathedral Echoes. of scenic highways If WINNIPEC $12.00 FARCO $7.50 BISMARCK $11.25 BUTTE $23.60 SEATTLE $29.50 a. Ridgeway Prep Nine Wins Tourney Title RIDGEWAY, Wis. Coach Oscar Meyer' Ridgeway high school baseball team won the Iowa county league tournament at Livingston Saturday by defeating Linden in the first game, 10 to 5, and Montford for the Championship. 9 to 6.

by easily defeating Livingston. 6 to 1. Phohaska, Montford portsider set Livingston down with two his. Moon, Ridgeway hurler, allowed Linden only one scratch hit while he tied with Hand at three hits each to top the Ridgeway attack. Moon made two doubles and a triple in three trips to the plate.

Prohaska started on the mound for Montford in the championship game but was relieved by Winters In the second inning. Woody Allen took over the mound duties for Ridgeway in the third, as Moon had pitched the nine innings allowed under W. L. A. A.

rules. Box score of championship game: Ridgeway IMontfort ah ibrh Subka.2b 4 1 2 Holmei.2b 4 13 Dav1s.3b 4 1 2 Frankland.c 4 0 0 Hand. lb 3 10 4 0 0 4 Prohka.p.lf 4 0 0 Moon.p. 4 1 Wlntern.lf.p 4 2 1 Gnst.rf 4 1 3IWInkins.rf 3 10 Allen.se.p 3 1 3 11 Leieh.cf 10 0 Hoffland.lb 2 11 3 1 2 0 1 Totals 30 914' Totals 30 7 Score by Innings: Montfort 0022 1 1 06 Rldtewav 041202 9 Umpire Kindshi (PlatteviUe). Verona News (State Journal News Service) VERONA The Verona American Legion post is making plans for a junior league baseball team tMs summer.

All boys who have not attained the age of "17 years by June 30 will be eligible to participate. Plan Poppy Sale Saturday, May 25, has been set as poppy day throughout the nation, and in accordance with the movement to honor the boys who gave their lives on the fields of Flanders and the disabled veterans, girls from the Verona schools will be stationed on the streets of Verona selling the poppies. The poppies are made by disabled soldiers in the hospitals. Play Day Thursday The rural school play day for Verona township will be held on the has no basic knowledge on which to build new forms. During my visit these are the things I discussed with the head of the architectural department and here is the substance of his answer: In every age there are leaders i like Mr, Wright who surge ahead i until they have left the scope of the average mentality of the mass.

These leaders hare their followers, even as the apprentices of Mr. Wright. But it is the duty of the architectural schools to educate their students only to the level of the mass mind so that their architectural knowledge serves the mass in the thing it wants and can com prehend. I maintain this view to a stupid outlook or goal for any edu cational institution lor, it seems to me, that it is the duty as well as privilege for an educated person to give to the inexperienced mass someimng that it has been unable to attain for itself. A fruitless argument.

For when I left the office of that great high chief of the archi tectural department he placed upon me the stamp of "young But perhaps since it is a slight distinction from the mass, the title is not to be scoffed at. L. CORNELIA BRIERLT TONIGHT At the Beautiful Heidelberg Hofbrau THE FINEST DINNER IN WISCONSIN 80c up A Genuine Kentucky Mint Julip. 35c TOMORROW Tbe Fin est Luncheon in 50c LAST TWO DAYS Onttandlng Features? Arllss snrpssses himself In the supreme dramatic achievement of his career. FEATURE SO.

2- Rlde the waves of Love and Laughter on a Musical Cruise of the World: JIMMV RAVI 1.. CHARLES BLTTERWORTH BILL CARLS EN Dance Sensation FRIDAY, MAY 24th KARLEN HALL MOXTICELLO, WIS. OLD TIME UDANCE TONITE LEAVER'S HARP Orchestra of Beloir, Wis. Per 25c Person Edwards PARK LEADING THEAT RES early Sunday after an extended ill ness. She was a daughter of the late August Kleist and was born in Verlange, Pomerania, Germany.

With her parents she came to Port age when six months old and had lived here since. For many years she was employed at the Portage Hosiery co. She is survived by her mother, Mrs. August Kleist; two brothers, Frank Kleist, Milwaukee, and Paul Kleist, at home; and a sister, Mrs. Edward Gadow, Horicon.

Funeral services were held at the family home and in St. John's Lutheran church Tuesday. Burial was in Silver Lake cemetery. Play Ball Gen. Johnson to Be Umpire WASHINGTON CJ.R) Gen.

Hugh Johnson, former umpire-in -chief of the NRA league, signed today to umpire tbe annual baseball game Saturday between members of congress and press galleries. With the signing of Johnson, Vice Pres. Garner, who had been tentatively selected, was given his unconditional release. Both teams claimed to be in training today for the clash at Quantico, Va. The exact nature of the training was not made known.

Both were optimistic of victory. Gen. Johnson, it was announced, will see that NRA "rules of fair competition'' are enforced. TJ. S.

marines will stand by for any emergencies. Other Stations Thursday A. M. 7:00 Sun Dial WTMJ 7:00 Devotion WLS WLW 7:15 Joily Joe; Ford Rush WLS 8 :00 News; Smackout WMAQ 8:00 Ridge Runners WLS 8:00 Romantic Bachelor WON 8:00 News: Music WBBM 8:15 Morning Varieties WBBM 8:15 The Giris WGN WTMJ WLW 8 :30 Today's Children WLS WTMJ 8:30 Amateur Show WBBM 8:45 Mrs. Wiggs WBBM 8:45 Morning Parade WMAQ 8:45 Morning Minstrels WLS 9 :00 Flannerys: Sodbusters WLS 9:00 Galaxy of Stars WMAQ 9:00 Fish Tales WBBM 9:15 Traffic Court WBBM 9:15 Household Parade WLS 9:15 Tony Wons WMAQ 9.30 Carnival WMAQ WTMJ WHO 9 :30 Backstage Wife WGN 9:30 Marv Lee Taylor WGN 9:45 Mary Marlin WBBM 9:45 Mary Sot hern WGN WLW 10 :00 Masquerade WMAQ 10:00 Westerners' Roundup WLS 100 Voice of Experience WBBM 10:15 The Gumps WBBM 10:15 Old Music Chest WLS 10.15 Looking Glass WGN 10:15 Home Service WMAQ of the City WMAQ WLW 10:30 Five Star Jones WBBM 10:30 Melody Men Sophia WLS 10:45 Vibrant Strings WLS 10:45 Painted Dreams WGN WLW 10:45 Public Schools WMAQ 11:00 Virginia Lee WLS 11:00 Court Broadcast WTMJ 11:00 Good Time Joe WBBM 11:15 The Cavanauhs WBBM 11:30 Air breaks WMAQ 11:35 Heinle's Grenadiers WTMJ 11:45 Ed McConnell WBBM 1 1 :45 Dinner bell WLS P.

M. 12:00 Temple Bells WMAQ 12:00 Little Princess WBBM 12:15 Helen Trent WGN 12:30 Al Pearce and Gang WMAQ 12:30 Pa and Ma Smithers WLS 12:45 Homemakera" Hour WLS 12 :45 Royal Hawaiians WBBM 1 :00 Home Forum WMAQ 1:15 Vic and Sade WMAQ WLW 1 :30 Ma Perkins WLS WTMJ WLW 1 :30 Flanagrams WBBM 1:45 Baseball WBBM WGN 1:45 John Brown WLS 1:45 Dreams Come True WTMJ WXW WMAQ WHO WTAM 2 :00 Betty Bob WENR WTMJ 2:00 Woman's Review WMAQ 2 :15 Singin 'Sam WENR 2:30 From Rome WENR 2:45 Harvest of Song WMAQ 3 :00 National P. T. A. WMAQ 3 :00 Danny Dee WENR 3 :05 Baseball WTMJ 3:15 Adult Education WENR 3:30 Kay Foster WMAQ 3:45 Dici Tracy WBBM 4:00 Little Old Man WENR 4:15 Wooley the Moth WENR 4:30 Singing Lady WGN KIL 4:30 News WMAQ WENR 4:30 Jack Armstrong WBBM WLW 4:45 Dolln Grenadiiers WMAQ 4:45 Orphan Annie WGN KSTP 4:45 Lowell Thomas WLW 5 :00 Just Entertainment WBBM 5:00 Jimmy Allen WGN 5:00 Hal Totten WMAQ 5:05 Happy Jack Turner WENR 5:15 Tony and Gus WENR 5:15 Exploring Burma WMAQ 5:15 Lum and Abner WGN 5:15 Just Plain Bill WBBM 5:30 Buck Rogers WBBM 5:30 Jack Armstrong WTMJ 5:30 Street Singer WGN WLW :30 Minstrels WMAQ WTAM 5:30 Floyd Gibbons WENR WMT 5:45 Tune Twisters WENR 5 :45 Heinae'B Grenadiers WTMJ 5:45 Boake Carter WBBM 6:00 Art Jarrett Orch.

WBBM 6:00 Rudy Vallee WMAQ WLW 6 .00 Pastorale WLS 6:15 Pat Flanagan WBBM 6:30 Rudy Valee WTMJ WMAQ 6:30 Freddie Rich WBBM 6 :30 Chandu the Magician WON 6:30 Hendrick Van Loon WLS 6:45 Sunset Dreams WLS 6:45 Joe Sanders Orch. WGN 7 :00 Death Valley Days WLS WLW 7 Show Boat WMAQ WTMJ 7 :00 Caravan WBBM 7:30 Mexican Tours WENR KOIL 7:30 Wayne King Orch. WGN 7:30 Waring's Orch. WBBM 7:45 Cyril Pitts WENR 8 :00 Paul Whiteman, WMAQ WTMJ 8 :00 Sinfonietta WENR 8 1 5 Symphonette WGN 8:30 Economics Talks WENR 8:30 Heidt's Brigadiers WBBM 9:00 Amoa 'n' Andy WENR WTMJ 9:00 Happy Jack Turner WMAQ 9:00 Dudley Crafts Watson WGN 9:15 Jesse Crawford WMAQ 9 J5 Tony and Gus WTMJ 9:15 Dream Ship WGN 9:30 National Forum WMAQ 8:30 Show Boat WLW 9:30 Wayne King Orch. WGN 9:30 Art Jarrett Orch.

WBBM 10:00 Dance Music; WBBM WGN WENR WMAQ WLW 12:00 Voice of Love WBBM 12:00 Moon River WLW Eastwood Tonight 15c All Evening OS OUR STAGE: AMATEUR STAGE BAND REVUE Bert Robt. WHEELER AND WOOLSEY 'KENTUCKY KERNELS' THURSDAY BARGAIN NIGHT "MOONSTONE" with David Manners Phyliss Barrv WHERE THE BIG PtCTUMSS PLAY' HELD 'VICTOR HERBERTS Greatest TVy Jea riELSwn euu i in Mcfro-GoIitt-yn-Mayer 19 Indispensably 20 Command 33 Sincere 25 Two-footed animals 26 Swift flowing part of a river 28 Amount (abbr.) 30 Bow the head in assent 22 A source of Indigo 34 A hodgepodge 36 Personal pronoun 40 Sun god 41 River la Livonia Answer to previous pnzzle. liesin receives the laudition of crit of such pallid resources that few of them have even had the opportunity of experiencing the growth of a single building under the direction of their own creative energy. Naturally they are unable to teach from experience and lean instead on shelved reviews of foreign architecture that belongs, not in the soil of America, but in Normandy, England, Spain, and Italy, where it was develoged. How much better it would be if those students were to be taught to reason out, as Mr.

Wright suggests, the harmonious relationship a building has with its site when it grows from the soil and fits with the character of the people who live there. And how much more valuable a crit would be who, instead of helping his students make meaningless renderings for Beaux Arts awards could show the value of the space enclosed by a building or point out the romance of using materials according to their nature stone as stone, wood as wood. These are principles that present an outlet to the creative student mind that under the present system wants to be original but ONLY THREE MORE DAYS TODAY, THURS. 1 I SUN. ONLY Be Played Thursday and Friday Pv Gt I I TIE.

ft fT Njoj iR04 ft In 1 JLE ft. IjT lLB. nI2 mis- Ppl. Ho1w1eqt1o1o MORGAN and Cast of Thousands I MiV'A'M' Exciting ataxe I Bd a Bl a a fr 1i "A TiMUl- offers in modern streamlined buses at It 13 FRIDAY! 15c 'Till 6: 2.V" to TODAY and TOMORROW: Double Feature JOAN CRAWFORD CLARK GABLE TMONTOCMHRY yALL OTHERS v- iv A World" With SPENCEK TKAf WENPIE BtBKlC caf filTiTTVTnTir mm rn: ft ago g- ALSO ROSCOE ATES and SHEMP HOWARD COMEDY CARTOON DIXIELAND PARAMOUNT NEWS i 1153 STARTING VICTOR HUGO'S ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW AT THE SAKKInAY S-'IT1i 25c til 6 p.m. vL4f i and Most (CLife Begins at 40 with SUNDAY LOUISA M.

ALCOTTS "LITTLE MEN" i I 1 if:" I Human E-I- 1 Role i tfllr in 3 over 50,000 miles SAT. DAMON RUNYON'S 1935 COMEDY CLASSIC! "Ifflollflll 'Emm Yafle" 1 0 I ST A 1 0 Sample Low One Way Fares Hundred of Others II I NEW YORK $17.00 WASHINGTON BUFFALO $11.00 PITTSBURGH $11.00 DULUTH $7.00 VOs-i MADISON BLUES vs. rrL MILLS xSsJjfr yy 4 Cents 40c xlfcW Jt I Women and TonightO TVTIoc and Thurs. Night) Jyvi" Breese Stevens FieldWVw II UNION BUS DEPOT Wisconsin Power Light Bldg. Telephone Badger 4110 NORTHLAND GREYHOUND In Case of Rain Games Will.

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