Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 16, Decatur, Adams County, 20 January 1954 — Page 12

PAGE FOUR-A

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Radio Breakfast Show Now On TV Show Is Revised For Television HOLLYWOOD, UP — "Breakfast In Hollywood,” once radio’s most famous show, is being revived for television and glamourised with a swimming pool, fake sunshine and movie stars. The old program had the late Tom Breneman visiting. Crowds of housewives who got up at the crack ojt dawn to stand in line outside a restaurant to be on the show. Today, as progress marches on, "Breakfast in Hollywood” has gone Hollywood. It’s neither breakfast. nor in Hollywood. The television version originates far from Hollywood Blvd, and Vine St. by the pool of the elegant Ambassador Hotel. Tourists don’t have to get up early to be on the show. "Breakfast” is lunch. Although the program is released at 7 a.m. across the country by NBC it’s filmed at the un-breakfasty hour of 1 p.m. Instead of sitting in restaurant seats, the guests lounge under the palm trees in patio chairs. And. allegedly by coincidence the camera switches to the pool where movie stars just happen to be taking a morning dip. The day I watched the proceedings, Actor Aldo Ray and Actress Jeff Donnell were featured. Just why Aldo and Jeff were supposed to have left their apartments to drive many miles to swim shivering in the Ambassador pool at 7 a.m. could not be explained. Master of Ceremonies Jack McElroy said Breneman’s wishing ring and “Good Neighbor” routines have been kept for the new* show. “We want to have a glamorous outdoor setting to show off the California climate,” he explained. “We want people back East who are shoveling snow off their sidewalks to wish they were out

here. " On the show this week you’ll see the usual sunshine, the pool and the palm trees. But don’t let that TV screen fool you. Actually the sunshine these days is liquid. Citizens are shoveling rain off their sidewalks out here. "Well, for days when the weather is bad we have built a replica of the hotel patio at the studio so we can shoot indoors," said McElroy. Australian Music Is Most Promitive Native Music Cited As Most Primitive SYDNEY. Australia. UP — The primitive music of Um Australian aborigine may provide the key to the secret of the beginning of all music, in the opinion of A. P. Elkin, professor of anthropology at Sydney University. Elkin has made two expeditions into the heart of Arnhem Land. On his second trip he recorded secret religious songs heard before by very few white men. Usually only the elders of the tribe are allowed to hear them. “The music of the Australian aborigines is completely different from any other music within my experience and is probably more primitive than any other in the world," Elkin said. "It is quite unharmonic. Any attempt at singing in harmony has been exceptional. There is no attempt at counterpoint. Most group singing is in strict unison. —y- Rhythm Strong "The music, of course, does not conform to the European scale of notes. That is what makes it seem strange to ears accustomed only to music based on our own scale. “But the most outstanding characteristic of this aboriginal music is its rhythm. — i Not only is the singing itself rhythmic, but it is accompanied by a variety of percussion instruments, such as two sticks beaten together or the rattling of boomerangs. The aborigines have no drums, but when a particular type of wood is hit it gives out a hollow, gong-like sound. _ “Even the didjeridoo, the only melodic instrument the aborigines have, is played more in a rhythmic than a melodic manner. It is a long; hollow, wind instrument that has only two notes. Different didJeridoos play different notes. ■The aborigines use their musical instruments mainly to accomOnly occasionally do they play them by themselves. For Dancing “As in most primitive societies, all their music is mainly an accompaniment to dancing. The stamping of the dancers’ feet and the beating and stamping of the watchers give the singing a very rhythmic base. “There are three types of Australian aboriginal music — secret, sacred and secular. “Some of the secret music is very like Middle Age and Byzantine chanting. The aborigines create a very intense religious atmosphere that is very different from their public chanting. “Sacred music, which can be performed in public, does not have the same swing and rhythm as the secret chanting. It is more melodic and more like the hymns and psalms of Western music, “The secular music has an even greater melodic range and is very rhythmic. It consists of both group and solo singing. Some secular singing id very melodic, although further to the west of Arnhem Land it is characterised by a repeated descent from a higher to a lower note." If you have something to sell r rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results.

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THE DECATUR DAILY DBMi

Wk I f w ! WbT" ■' ’ / J!? i‘7' gM” J Ki REF. HAROLD VELDE (above), of Illinois, chairman of the House UnAmerican Activities Committee, is shown in his Washington office after suspending Louis J. Russell, his chief investigator. Velde’s only statement on the suspension of the former FBI agent was that it was done to improve the committee’s effectiveness. Repa Bernard W. Kearney (R-N.Y.) and Francis B. Walter (D-Pa.), committee members, have criticized the dismissal.

don ’ t mi s s favMauf, (tyeantiMCC OF FURNITURE ■ 1111 II) • 11 Jll| K’ 4 11 Jk B 4 a u *>*’j® i I WliilWSunc l “.t !* .Liwm. .'WnrElw ; ... .rj. .....J w — — —. _ — — '■ ' —— - —*■—: ——— r famous Kroehler TWO PIECE suites ... sectionals. .. half sofas ... lounge chairs All Reduced -—■■l.' ■". ■ ' « . . . . — . . ; “ t. . - '' . N a ° . STEDMAN .. . PAOLI... MORRIS .. LOUNGE CHAIRS .. OCCASIONAL CHAIRS .. ROCKERS All Reduced f, . — Kroehler Mengel bed room suites --a fine variety of styles -All Reduced ’ - . ;.■ ■ . ’ ■ ‘ ■■/ . 4 Bassett v _ I • -•- ’ <' . —^—o—tao^o——■ ALEXANDER SMITH AND LEES .. . EVERY 9 x 12 RUG IN STOCK All Reduced .. _ jyj ■ ■ ■ . ~ ' .. . " ■ ■ ' ' ■ .• '. -

DINETTE SETS a REDUCED r Chrome and Wrought Iron .''V■ - ' ' -

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DECATUR, INDIANA

Big Gambling Take By Professionals Seven, Half Million Take Every Month WASHINGTON UP -- Professional gamblers report they are taking the public for approximately <7,500,000 per month. That’s not quite as good as the average of 18,000,000 a month they admitted to in fiscal 1953. And neither figure is . anything at all like the 120,000.000,000 annual gambling take estimated a few years ago by the senate’s crime committee. The gamblers’ own earnings reports are filed with the Internal Revenue Service each month, when the chief of every wagering operation is supposed to pay a. tax of 10 percent on his month’s "handle.” Big Illinois Volume Chances are that some members of the wagering underworld are not reporting. FOr instance, as of last Oct. 31, there were no gamblers registered — no bookies’ no numbers games, no nothing — in lower Manhattan, nor in Vermont, South Dakota, lowa, New* Mexico, or Hawaii, for that matter. The gamblingest state in the union, according to the volume of taxes paid, is Illinois, where gamblers forked over $468,000 during the first four months of the current fiscal year, representing 10

percent of their total take, which would thus be $4,1180,000. The state with the most gamblers, it would Appear, is Washington, where 2,590 signed up in those same four months. But the explanation is punch boards, which flourish in that state and must be registered the same as bookmaking Operations under the federal wagering tax law. Out Os Hiding „ The Internal Revenue Service does not deny the gambling tax and the stamp are not accomplishing what congress said they would —expose gamblers, drive them out of business, or at least net the government a lot of tax revenue. The service never expected the tax to accomplish any of this, because there were not enough federal agents to enforce the tax law. When gambling slackened, shortly after the tax was enacted, officials attributed it to temporary fright on the.. part,Qt-.the underworld op-_ erators. Today they say business is opening up again throughout the nation, and the gambling fraternity is not paying all it owes. Very, Very Interesting HARTFORD. Conn.. UP — The drinks were on the house when a chonstruction worker submitted a bill to an insurance company for $6.11 for a bottle of whisky. He claimed his doctor ordered the liquor to relieve an injury he received while working. The company paid the bill. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur.

LAMPS REDUCED One Group of Floor and Table Lamps

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tables REDUCED One Group of End . Lamp . Cocktail V’ .I- ... - ’ * - ■

THURSDAY. JANUARY M,