Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 March 1940 — Page 12

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‘3 After 3’ At English’s

Stars Fill Cast of New Mu-|

sical Production.

Ruth Selwyn and the Messrs. Shubert have reached into the three major branches of entertainment and come up with a starfilled cast for their new musical production, “Three After Three,” which opens at English’s tonight; Top billing goes to Simone Simon and Mary Brian of the movies, and Frances Williams of the Broadway stage. But local patrons are likely to pay an equal amount ef attention to the name of Hoagy Carmichael among the credits. For the Hoosier

song writer, who played a week at

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the Lyric last season, has collaborated with Johnny Mercer on the new show's tunes. Others in the cast are Art Jarrett, the radio orchestra leader; Whiting and Roger Converse, young Hlm players; Marty May of vaudeville fame; Stepin Fetchit, the sepia embodiment of slow motion, and other revue and vaudeville entertainers including Bostock and the Martins. As a basis for the music and dancing there is a book which Playwright Guy Bolton has adapted from one of his own comedies. It concerns three young women who become dissatisfied with their career of raising chickens on a New Hampshire farm. So they pool the family resources and set out for Florida and Cuba in search of rich husbands. . Miss Simon and Miss Brian are both making their debut in musical comedy with “Three After Three,” which has been making an extensive tour prior to a New York opening. Originally co-starred with them was Mitzi Green, who last week had to leave the cast for an appendi-

, citis operation. Miss Williams took

over her part, and Ginger Manners, young screen actress, assumed the role vacated by Miss Williams. The English’s engagement will continue through Wednesday, with a Wednesday matinee.

MISS LAWRENCE IS GIVEN AWARD

Times Special NEW YORK, March 4.—Hollywood hasn’t had a monopoly on the recent presentation of “Oscars” for outstanding performances. In New York, the New York Academy honored Gertrude Lawrence with a gold medallion for giving the best comedy performance of the Broadway season in Samson Raphaelson’s “Skylark.” The presentation was made by Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt Jr., Academy president.

WHEN DOES IT START?

APOLLO

“I Take This Woman,” with Spencer Tracy, Bedy. Lamarr, at 12:43, 3: 58, 7:03_and 10:08. he Mar a Fly Hi h,' with Richard Dix. Chester Y Mor Lucille Ball, at 11:35, 2:50, 5:55 and 9.

CIRCLE

“Castle on the Hudson,” with John Garfield, Ann Sheridan, Fat O’Brien, Burgess Meredith, at 11:55, 2:30, 5:05, 7:40 and 10:20. “Granny Get Your Gun,” with Ma Robson, at 11, 1:35, 4:10, 6:45 and 9:20. ENGLISH'S

‘Three After Three,” a new musi-

Frances Williams, Art Jarre Whiting, Stepin Fetchit. ent t rough Wednesday, Sina 8:30; matinee Wednesday, 2:30.

INDIANA

“The Grapes of Wrath” with Henry Fonda, Jane Darwell, John Oarredine, at 11:18, 1:54, 4:30, 7:06

i ‘of Time—‘The Yatica] of Pope Pius XII” at 11, 1:36, 4:12, 6:48 and 9:24. . LOEW'S

“Northwest passage. with Sp cer Tracy. Robert Young, Walter Brennan, Rus SL at 11:15, 2: 40. 6:15 and 9 “The Lone Woit Strikes,” with ane Niam, Joan Perry, at 1:30,

5 an LYRIC Hal Kemp and his orchestza, on stage at 1, 3:50, 6:40 9:30. ; “Convicted Woman,” with Rochelle Hudson, Frieda Inescourt, at 11:34, 2:24, 5:14, 8:04 and 10:26.

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Starts FRIDAY, MARCH 8

GONE WITH THE WIND

4 Weekday matinees are continuous—not reserved. Come anytime from 10 a. m. up to 2:30 and see a complete per formance. Doors open 9 a. m. Only night shows and Sunday matinees are reserved.

BUY RESERVED SEATS NOW {stesved)

NIGHTS 8 p.m.

.10 incl. SUN, MAT. 2 p.m. (Reserved) $1.10 incl. tax WEEEDAY i (Not reserved)

See it In its sntiraty, same as Atlanta & B THIS PRODUCTION L NOT BE SHOWN ANYWHERE EXCEPT AT ADVANCED PRICES—AT LEAST UNTIL 1941

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MONDAY, MARCH 4,

Jack|

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1940

On Musical Programs

and Attilio Baggiore, tenor, two of

‘Other soloists will be On

Rusticana.” Thomas L. Thomas, baritone.

sored by the orchestra.

Richard Bonelli (above), American baritone of the Metropolitan Opera, will be the Matinee Musicale’s guest artist in a recital at 2 p. m. Friday in Ayres’ auditorium. Below are Janet Fairbanks, soprano,

the soloists who will be heard with

the Indianapolis Sympheny Orchestra next Sunday afternoon at the Murat, when Fabien Sevitzky conducts a concert version of “Cavalleria

Edna Tyne Bowles, contralto, and the same program will be Herman

Berg, violinist, winner of the recent Young Musicians’ Contest spon-

HOLLYWOOD

By PAUL HARRISON

Jimmy Roosevelt Optimistic at New Venture: 2 Features, 6 Minutes

Artists, Mr. Roosevelt is squarely “behind the “eight-ball—an eightball named Recchester. Plans for filming “The Bat” require Rochester in the role of a colored servant, and he won't be available before next September. Jed Prouty definitely has left 20th-Fox and his accustomed role as the papa in the Jones Family pictures, although, for (quite awhile after the split was announced, the studio hoped hed return. Two endings were prepared for the current Jones Family film, “On Their Own”—one for use in case he stayed, the other to eliminate him from the series. . . . The next one of the films, it has been suggested, should be titled, “Life Without Father.” » t-4 ” THERE ISN'T a single sailor, or ex-sailor, in “Sailor’s Lady.” All the navy men are college football players who are supposed to look more like gobs should. . . . Two of Lillian Russell's four husbands are not represented in the picture being made about her life, and one of those omitted is Harry Braham, who really discovered and lifted her to fame. Don’t ask me why. . .. Somehow I can’t quite see Charles Laughton as Benjamin Franklin, but that’s what he’ll be in the filming of Carl Van Doren’s biography. More truth than wisecrack is Martin Greene’s description of the commonest Hollywood triangle: A girl in love with an actor, and the actor in love with himself. I don’t know about the merits of the case, but it’s gratifying to know that Don Ameche got up spunk enough to accept suspension rather than play a role he didn’t like. His career had reached the point where night club comedians were opening their acts by rushing out on the floor and announcing: “Folks, I just saw a picture without Don Ameche.”

” » 2 AT THIS WRITING, “Gone With the Wind” has grossed about 11

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HOLLYWOOD, MARCH 4.—SHORT TAKES: Jimmy Roosevelt is" entirely .confident regarding his newest movie venture—nickel-in-the-slot machines which will show three-minute pictures to barroom customers and lobby-loungers. “How can it miss?” he demands. “Imagine being able to see a double-feature in six minutes!” In his more legitimate enterprise of producing pictures for United

million dollars and is expected to turn 20 million dollars within the year. The staggering revenue is due not only to the high prices but to the fact that literally millions of people who ordinarily don’t go to movies have turned out for this one. There may be other reasons, too, such as its length. One pair of newlyweds bought tickets for a honeymoon. Romance department: Eleanor Powell and Merrill Pye, music and art director, may have something to tell their friends any day now. It’s spring on the campus and Rudy Vallee has given his fraternity pin to Patricia Dane. You never see Nancy Kelly without Irving Cummings Jr. Or Ann Sheridan: without Bruce Cabot. Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier say they’ll wait to be married on British soil, maybe in Nassau, after their tour together. It couldn’t last: Mickey Rooney, who turned misogynist a few days ago, is having dates again. : And Artie Shaw, who announced his retirement as an orchestra leader and married Lana Turner because he wanted to settle down. is organizing another band.

Shaw Resumes His

Times Special NEW YORK, March 4.—Artie Shaw was scheduled to resume his musical activity today with a recording session at the Victor studios. The clarinet-playing band leader,

who branded jitterbugs as “morons” and recently disbanded his band and retired, returned with an orchestra radically different from his former swing outfit. The orchestra consists of 31 pieces, as against 14 in his former aggregation. In addition to the usual instrumentation, Mr. Shaw has added eight violins, three violas, two cellos, a woodwind section and a French horn.

MARCHES SELL HOME

Expecting henceforth to divide: their time between Hollywood and New York, Fredric March and his wife, Florence Eldridge, have sold their Beverly Hills home but will keep their beach home at Laguna and a 10-acre building site in Hidden Valley.

Today! BEST SHOW VALUE » Town! Richard Dix “LOST SQUADRON” Marx Brothers “AT THE CIRCUS”

Musical Activity

W. SIDE GROUP

DELAYS PLANS FOR NEW HOME

Eagle Creek Civic League to Pay for Paving of Street First.

By TIM TIPPETT Eagle Creek-Tibbs Civic Inc., has been forced tem-

The League, erect a community house on Rochester Ave., adjacent to School 617. Pledge cards to finance the project were printed several months ago, but then residents learned that they would have to pay part of the cost of paving Rochester Ave. in front of the two lots the league owns. The assessments for the street improvement have been paid in cash “because we did not want to do it through the Barrett Law” and therefore the league’s members felt that they could not afford to begin the construction of the community house at present, according to Mrs. William HH. Owens, league president.

Up for. Discussion

The community house, long-time objective of the group, will be built within the next year, members hope. The one-story building is to have a large recreation room in the basement and an equally large meeting room on the main floor. Room space will be approximately 30 by 60 feet, Mrs. Owens explained. Plans for distribution of the pledge cards will be discussed at the regular league meeting tomorrow night at the Eagle Creek Park Community House. The league met with success within the last year in several other of their objectives.

Bridge to Be Replaced

The Eagle Creek Bridge at Olin Ave. and W. Michigan St. which has been the cause of “several bad accidents” in the past few years, is to be replaced by a modern 40foot concrete. bridge. “Most of the land grants necessary to construct the bridge have already been obtained and the Marion County Commissioners are ready to let bids for the construction,” Mrs. Owens said. Of the accidents which have occurred at the bridge, there is one which brought the [problem “home to league members.” Two years ago a car crashed on the bridge and the driver was thrown against a lamp post. Today that man is blind and a companion has to lead him on his regular trips to the doctor.

Span 53 Years Old

Mrs. Owens, who told of the accident, said: “The bridge is 53 years old and that fact alone is enough justification for a new bridge.” The league also won its fight to widen W. Michigan St. in its neighborhood. The street is to be reconstructed by thé county to a uniform 40-foot width. Another objective of the league has been establishment of a school for pre-kindergarten children. On March 19 the play school will open, with two teachers in charge. The cost is being met by popular subscription. League members, the majority of them mothers, believe the young children who enter kindergarten are affected by the large number of other children. “This is often a shock and the play school will prepare our children for regular classes,” league members state. Besides Mrs. Owens, league officers are: Vice presidents, Walter King, Edward Monn, and William Miller; corresponding secretary, Mrs. V. L. Dusang; recording secretary, Mrs. J. T. Morris, and treasurer, Mrs. Florence Whileman. Directors of the organization are H. C. Matthews, O. B. Schaub, Robert Liebenderger, Mrs. Richard Ross, -and Mrs. Ora Arnold. The 1940 officers are to be elected at the April meeting.

NAME HARRY HYATT AS COAL GROUP AID

Times Special TERRE HAUTE, Ind, March 4. ~The Indiana Coal Producers Association has appointed Harry C. Hyatt of Cory, Ind, as its director of conservation. Hugh B. Lee, association president, said Mr. Hyatt was appointed “to guide us toward better co-or-dination and accomplishment in our program of planting over burdened slcpes of our mines with trees and opening of stocked ponds to ‘the public. “Our Association has co-operated | for several years with the Indiana | Department of Conservation. Much has been accomplished but a more | systematic program can be established with the work under the direction of someone trained in forestry and conservation.” “We feel this will leave a heritage which we will be proud to pass to our children and their children.” Mr. Hyatt is a graduate of forestry at Ohio State University and the University of Southern California. For six years he was City Forester for Cleveland, O. He made preliminary surveys for the State of Ohic which. resulted in the state’s first game preserve. Mr. Hyatt said owners of strip mines had planted over two million trees, purchased from the state of Indiana and grown in Indiana. Some of these plantings are over 10 years old and the handling of these lands already is a definite forest project, he said. Tonite, Tue.,

ENGLISH 5%. Vos The All-Star Musical Comedy Hit MONE SIMON

JAC McDONALD WHITING BRIAN in "THREE AFTER THREE" with FRANCES ART MARTY J MAY

ond STEPIN FECHIT Nights, $1.10, $1.65, 32:30; $2.78, $3.30. t. We oy , $1. 0, $1.66, $2.20 Incl. Tax, Sens Now.

{ Tom jood . HENRY FONDA Molood o'. JANE DARWEY eer * +, JOHN CArmADIN

FURST

James Stewart—Margaret Sullavan “SHOP AROUND THE CORNER” Priscilla Lane—Wayne Morris—Jane Bryan “BROTHER RAT & BABY

. OPEN Ti :45 a. m. 15¢6 Pp. mi. First Indianapolis Showing! Johnny Mack Brown—Fuzzy Knight

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GUTHRIE M.CLINTIC

ETHEL ne

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porarily to postpone its plan to|

Becomes 3d Soldier to Be Termed Outstanding Lay Catholic.

“| Times Special

NOTRE DAME, Ind. March 4— The Laetare Medal—the highest award a Catholic layman can receive in the United States—this year will go to Lieut.-Gen. Hugh A. Drum

Selection of Gen. Drum marks the third time in the 58-year history of the award that an outstanding military figure has been

annually by the University of Notre Dame upon the person considered the outstanding Catholic layman for the year. Gen. John Newton was awarded the medal in 1886 and Gen. William S. Rosecrans was chosen 10 years later. In announcing the name of the medalist, traditionally made public the fourth Sunday of Lent, the Rev. Fr. J. Hugh O'Donnell, C.S.C. University president, said: “Gen. Drum has had a distinguished career as a soldier, having been decorated for gallantry in both the Spanish-American and the World wars. Moreover, his genius in war is equalled only by his brilliant leadership in peace. The University of Notre Dame welcomes

‘him to the honor roll of Catholic

men and women who have added glory to the Church in the United States.” Gen. Drum was born at Ft. Brady, Mich., Sept. 19, 1879, the son of Capt. John Drum and Margaret Desmond Drum. He was educated at Boston College and in U. S. Army schools. He received his first comPisin as a second lieutenant in - He served as chief of staff under

Gen. Hugh A. Drom Will Get

chosen for the honor. It is bestowed | 3

Lieut.-Gen. Hugh A. Drum . . . “Genius in war, brilliant leadership in peace.”

’| Gen. John J. Pershing in France.

Since he has been Chief of the Army School of the Line, Commander of coast and air defenses of the Second Corps Area, Assistant Chief of Staff of the Army, Inspector General of the Army, Commander of the Hawaiian Department, Commander of the Sixth Corps Area and Second Army. In 1939 he was made Lieutenant-Gen-eral in command of the Second Corps Area. He was awarded the Silver Star for “gallantry in action” in the Phillipines and also has received these recognitions: The Distinguished Service Medal, commander of Legion of Honor and Croix de Guerre with two palms (France) and commander Order of the

Crown (Belgium and Italy).

The last Indian uprising in Indiana, which for a while was complete with feathers and war paint. has been put down and from now on Ko-a-chin-wah can’t keep a personal raccoon around the house. Neither, by the way, can Ko-a-chin-wah and his fellow Miami Tribe Indians spear and trap fish and take game out of season, over which the whole row started and got into court in 1938. The State Conservation Department which won a Federal Court test case in South Bend recently admits that it was unfortunate that this case had to be based on whether

keep a raccoon. Old Treaty Is Cited Ko-a-chin-wah said he was an Indian and that the treaties made between his tribe and the Federal Government years and years ago guaranteed him and his deséendants the privilege of hunting and fishing “so long as the birds fly in the air, and the fish swim in the streams, and the animals roam in the field.” In effect Ko-a-chin-wah and his fellow Indians said “they’re still fiying, swimming and roaming, aren't they?” The Indians also debated their citizenship. The Conservation Department said they were citizens of the State of Indiana and therefore subject to its conservation laws. The Indians said they weren't. Appeals Court Fine After hearing the Indian counsellor plead that the Indians knew no law except that the Great White Father in Washington, Federal Judge Thomas W. Slick ruled that they were in fact citizens of the State of Indiana as well as of the United States and that they were subject to Indiana laws. It all happened because there was a very forceful coon hunting club in Wabash and Miami Counties, where all this has been going on, and this club was angry at reports that Ko-a-chin-wah, disregarding the laws, had a raccoon about the house out of season. A game warden arrested him and he was fined $10 in a Justice of the Peace Court. Ko-a-chin-wah appealed to the Federal Court. Eats Fish Evidence About the time all this was going on another of the Indians was arrested and charged with selling game fish and the arresting officer said he had actually taken a tub of bass to the public square of Peru and sold them. : At the time the office had a citi-

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Ugh! White Father Say

Indians Are Hoosiers, Too

zen make a buy of a bass and instructed him to keep it in his icebox until the trial. The Indians appeared in court on the fish charge dressed in feathers and war paint to prove they were Indians. The trial had not progressed far, however, when it was discovered that the citizen who had made the fish buy had been a little frightened at his role because the law made him equally guilty with the vendor. So he had eaten the fish and there was no evidence and: the case was dismissed. Under the Federal ruling, the Conservation people say, the State courts will be able to uphold the conservation laws and fish and wild-

‘life order will be resumed in Wa-

bash and Miami Counties.

500 EXPECTED Laetare Medal From N. D.

AT OIL MEETING

Dealers, Refiners, Salesmen To Convene at Severin For Two Days.

Five hundred Indiana oil men are expected to throng the Hotel Severin for the Indiana Independent Petroleum Association spring convention Wednesday and Thursday. Dealers, refiners and salesmen representing scores of major and smaller Indiana companies will attend. The lobby and Rainbow Room will be given over to displays in 28 exhibits, where “anything from a bucket to a tank truck may be purchased.” - Several companies plan to show

trailers and trucks outside the hotel. The convention will meet at aft-

planned for both evenings. Paul Ryan, new president of the National Refining Co. of Cleveland, will speak at the Thursday afternoon session. Warren C. Platt of Cleveland, National Petroleum News editor, and Homer L. Chaillaux, American Legion Americanism director, will speak Wednesday, and H. A. Hollopeter of the Indiana State Chamber of Commerce, and H. C. Connors of the Graver Tank and Manufacturing Co. of East Chicago, will talk Thursday. Association officers are J. E. Fehsenfeld of Indianapolis, president; Lewis Bell of Connersville, vice president; Emmett: Farmer of Camby, treasurer, and Goerge W, Hofmayer of Indianapolis, secretary.

JOBLESS BENEFITS UP 34% IN JANUARY

WASHINGTON, March 4 (U. P.) —More than 800,000 people were forced to seek unemployment compensation checks in January because the drop in industrial activity deprived them of their jobs, the Social Security Board reported today. Nearly $41,000,000 was paid out in benefit payments, a rise of more than 34 per cent over the previous month. Reports covering more than 6,000,000 weeks of unemployment were filed with unemployment compensation offices throughout the country, the Board said.

CRIPPLE REQUESTS HUNT FOR LOST DOG

Times Special ] ELKHART, Ind, March 4-—A cripple who gets about only by means of ‘a wheel chair has asked the aid of police and citizens here to find his pal, Buck, a 125-pound St. Bernard dog, missing since last Thursday.

ernoon sessions with entertainment|.

Wabash to Hold 'Party Parley’

CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind, March 4—The fight for the Democratic presidential nomination will be held in Chicago next July, but as far as Wabash Col= lege students are concerned, the issue will be fought right here on the college campus March 15. The school, under the Sponsor= ship of the Government and polite ical science classes, will hold a mock political convention. | The student body voted to hold

a Democratic convention rather than a Republican or non-parti-

afford the best opportunity for a discussion of candidates and policies. Names of six candidates will be placed in nomination. They are President Roosevelt, Secretary of State Cordell Hull, Postmaster General James A. Farley, Senator Burton K. Wheeler, Federal Security Administrator Paul V. McNutt and Vice President John Garner.

KERMIT HEADS VOLUNTEERS. LONDON, March 4—(U. P= Kermit Roosevelt, son of President Theodore Roosevelt, is leaving for Finland “soon” as commander of a

hoped thousands of Americans would join him.

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YOUNG TOM EDISON

A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Picture

He dreamed the wildest of day-dreams at his cellar workbench. ,. His experiments nearly blew up the schoolhouse. . . He published the first newspaper ever printed on a train...He was expelled from school because his teachers said he was crazy..,

“Young Tom Edison” is an exciting story—the story of a great boy who became a great man—a thrilling and amazing career in its beginnings. And it gives Mickey Rooney his greatest role! Later comes Spencer Tracy in “Edison The Man”. Watch for both —they are great, unforgettable pictures!

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