Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 February 1941 — Page 4

MONDAY, FEB. 24, 1941 WHEN DOES IT START?

CIRCLE

ey intinia with Madeleine Carroll, "Fred RacMurray: Surling yden, at

1,3 vs Make sie,” Crosby and his orchestra, 4:35 and 8:05.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

i / . : : Work for Model Home| J cc

Oscars to Be Given Out Again Thursday

PAGE 4

FOR ASKS WIDER CIVIL SERVICE

Would Exempt Only Those In Policy-Making Jobs or Needing Senate 0. K.

WASHINGTON, Feb. 24 (U. P.). —President Roosevelt today transmitted to Congress recommendations for placing all but policymaking Government jobs and those requiring Senate confirmation under the classified civil service. The recommendations, aimed at ending the traditional “spoils” system of filling Federal posts, were drafted by a committee of prominent Government officials and business leaders after a two-year study. “I am confident that the report « « « Will help in devising effective means for enlarging the scope and ‘extending the area . .. of civil service,” the President said in a message transmitting the committee report to Congress. The recommendations propose extending classified Civil Service to all Federal positions except those whose holders help determine policy or require Senate confirmation. The recommendations, presented . in a 278-page report after a study that began Jan. 31, 1939, revealed an equal division of the President's committee on the procedure to be followed in bringing government law positions within the classified

Swarthout to Sing Here

Doing the Spade

Bob t 1:10,

INDIANA “Strawberry Blond,” with James Cagney Olivia, de Havilland, Rita Tig at 12:36, 3:47, 6:58 and

, with Clive Brook, at 5:39 and 8:50.

LOEW'S “The Philadelphia Story,” with Katharine Hepburn, Cary Grant, Jathes Swvars, at 41:10, 2:40, 6:10 a .

n : “Gallant Sons,” with Jackie Cooper, Bonita Granville, at 1:15, 4:45 and

LYRIC Vaudeville, with Maxine Sullivan, John Kirby and his orchestra, on stage at 1:04, Gad Shd 9:34. “Road Show, 5° 3% dolphe Men{ie Carols Landis, ha Hubbard, at 2:08, 4:58, 7:48 and 10:28.

‘By JAMES THRASHER

“ON THURSDAY NIGHT they're going to pass the Oscars again in Hollywood. And the ceremony, although an accepted tradition by this time, seems to deserve a few words as a unique happening in the world of art and entertainment. , After 14 years it is scarcely’ necessary to tell the public that Oscars are the gold-plated statuettes which the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences awards every year for excellence in the various branches of the industry. Nor it is necessary to remind the movie-goers that in spite’ of many efforts to the con= trary, an Oscar is the flicker equivalent of the Prix de Rome.

The whole show remains an interesting phenomenon, no matter how accustomed we are to it by now. For it is the only instance in our present or recent history where all the major contributors to a major art form unite to pay tribute to the best of their number. Filmdom votes as an industry because .it is organized as such.

Convo, 11:17, 2:28,

FINDS 'TILLIE' STAR

HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 24 (U, P.).— Because of a chance meeting with Penny Singleton, Kay Harris, brue net Cincinnati secretary, has a long-term movie contract. Miss Harris met the actress in Cincine nati, and when Miss Singleton ree turned to Hollywood she told Columbia Studio she had found a “Tillie the Toiler” for a title movie role.

Gladys Swarthout, mezzo soprano of the Metropolitan Opera Company, will give a song recital at English’s Thursday night as an attraction of Martens Concerts, Inc.

Kirby Started 5-Man Band To Bea Little Different

By DAVID MARSHALL

John Kirby, who once was scared stiff at getting $85 a week for playing with Fletchér Henderson's orchestra and who now would pay twice that for an elaborate wrist watch, sat on a rickety chair in his Lyric Theater dressing room and talked about the beginnings off subtle

PURE OZONIZED AIR

EL a

4 LAST DAYS!

George R. Popp, City Building Commissioner, digs the first spadeful of earth for the Indianapolis Home Builders’ Association 1941 model home. Excavation for the home at Kessler Blvd. and Gladden Drive in the Meridian-Kessler Additjon, will be started this week. A Mt. Vernon Colonial, it is to be completed June 15. In the group participating in the ceremony (left io right) are Walter L. Stace, Arthur Smock, Mr. Popp,

Civil Service. Agree on One Point

Justice Stanley -Reed of the Supreme Court, committee chairman; Justice Felix Frankfurter, Attorney General Robert H. Jackson and Gano Dunn, an engineer, indorsed one plan.

‘Supreme Court Justice Frank

Murphy, who devised an effective Civil Service plan for Michigan while its Governor; Administrative Assistant William H. McReynolds, Prof. Leonard D. White, former Civil Service Commissioner, and Gen. Robert E. Wood, chairman of the board of Sears, Roebuck & Co, indorsed another. But all eight members agreed on the desirability of making government law positions career ones. On the desirability of bringing professional, scientific, higher administrative and investigative Federal jobs into the classified civil service, the committee was unanimous. | It suggested that the Federal Bureau of Investigation, charged © with counter-espionage and antisabotage work, should be exempted from any revision of the merit system. : Proposals Listed

“At this time, however,” its report said, “in view of the exceptional situation prevailing here and abroad and the part which the Federal ureau of Investigation is playing and is likaly to play in the defense of the nation, and in view of the fact that the Federal Bureau of Investigation has now a workable merit, system, the committee does not recommend any present change in the status of its employees.” The committee report proposed: .1. Extension of the civil service act by Presidential executive order to cover all higher grade administrative positions, including attorneys, engineers, architects, natural scientists and social problem scientists. 2. Extension of civil service to cover all investigative jobs involving criminal cases or quasi-criminal cases. The FBI is now under civil service. 3, Larger appropriations for the Civil Service Commission and its agencies to strengthen the machinery by which civil servants are selected. ~~ 4. More positive and direct meth-

Presidential

Committee, that the only way to prevent smoke

Lindemann.

MAYOR IN DARK ON SMOG RIDDLE

Doubts If Drastic St. Loe Program Is Needed To Solve It.

By RICHARD LEWIS Whether Indianapolis should adopt St. Louis’ drastic smoke abatement methods to clear its atmosphere of smog remained a problem for Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan today. But the Mayor declared he could not give the problem serious study until after the Legislature adjourns. Offhand, he said, he doubted that Indianapolis’ smoke nuisance necessitated the drastic treatment which has virtually cleaned up St. Louis. The Mayor conferred with St. Louis. city officials and businessmen

last week on the smoke abatement program, while attending the U. S. Conference of Mayors’ convention there. He said he was impressed by that city’s improvement.

High Volatile Fuel Banned

James L. Ford Jr. chairman of the St. Louis Smoke Elimination told Mayor Sullivan

is to ban the use of high volatile (smoky) fuels. Other methods, such as education and pleas for public co-operation, have failed, Mr. Ford

said.

St. Louis finally fought its way out

of the smog by passing an ordinance which sess up municipal control of fuel distribution in that city, according to Mr. Ford.

The ordinance bans the use of

high volatile coal in all but mechanical heating equipment which burns it efficiently. holder who does not use a stoker

The average house-

ods of recruiting persons for Gov-|must buy low-volatile coal which is

ernment service. 5. Continuation of the Civil Service Commission’s program of announcing annual examinations for inducting personnel in the junior and scientific fields. 6. Further study of the system of giving to war veterans in civil serv- ’ ice classifications.

CATHEDRAL VICAR CALLED BY ARMY

.The Rev. ¥ohn C. W. Linsiey, . vicar of All Saints Episcopal Cathedral, has been granted a leave of absence to answer a call for active duty as a reserve Army chaplain April 1. In making the announcement today, the Rt. Rev. Richard Ainslee ' Kirchhoffer said that the Rev. John M. Nelson had been appointed temporary vicar of the cathedral. The Rev. Mr. Linsley came to All Saints about a year ago from the cathedral at. Manila, Philippine Islands. The Rev. Mr. Nelson is diocesan missionary with headquar“ters here.

livan commented. whether our situation here is bad

smokeless.

“That’s very drastic,” Mayor Sul“I don’t know

enough to warrant a similar ordinance. I have to look into it thor-

oughly before I could decide whether we should attempt anything like

that. Cites Local Campaign “It seems to me Indianapolis has

been fairly clear this winter and we

have made some improvement by our own method.” The Mayor refefred’ to a Safety Board anti-smoke campaign last year in which the Board asked about 50 apartment and industrial managers to use more efficient furnace firing methods to prevent smoke. This program has lapsed this winter because of the resignation of C. W. Clineuens, former City Combustion Engineer. No successor to Mr. Clirehens has been found. The Mayor said he was not satisfied that a ban on cheaper soft coal would not work a hardship on residents who would have to pay more for smokeless coal if the St. Louis plan went into effect here.

Net Cost About Same

St. Louis officials *told the Mayor that while coal cost had risen an average of 30 per cent because of the ordinance, the net fuel bill for the winter would be about the same as before as the result of greater heating efficiency of smokeless fuel. City Councilman Albert O. Deluse, who also investigated the St. Louis anti-smoke method, said he, too,

fl (was impressed with the results. Mr.

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Deluse is chairman of the Mayor's Smoke Abatement Advisory Committee here.

LAFFOON SERIOUSLY ILL

MADISONVILLE, Ky., Feb. 24 (U, P.).—Former Governor Ruby Laffoon of Kentucky, who suffered a paralytic stroke here last Wednesday, today was reported still seriously ill. He is 73.

ESTABLISHED 28 YEARS ¥%

It’s Still There

Piece by piece they've hauled away our old building but, there is THAT which STILL remains—28 years of service which will be a part of the new Institution.

WA-3331

MORTUARY "238 N. MERIDIAN ST.

Seek Pictures of Indiana at Work

THE INDIANA WPA Writers’ Project, which is publishing an “illustrated orofile of Indiana, is seeking photographs of the growing and marketing of farm products, industrial views, assembly lines, modes of living and people at work. The pict res, to be included in the profile along with a running text, will depict Hoosiers at work. The project, which is sponsored by Indiana State Teachers College lat Terre Haute, asks that all prints subrnitted be sent to 33 N Pennsylvania St.

AUTO TOLLS 15, 5 AHEAD OF 1940

George Serbinoff Dies of ‘Injuries; Driver Held By Police.

Marion County's 1941 traffic toll stood at 15 today, five more than on the same date last year, with the death of George Serbinoff, injured ‘by an auto early yesterday in W. Washington St., 500 block. Mr. | Serhinoff, who was 48 and lived at the Westview Hotel, was struck’ by a car driven by Glenn Peters, 30. of 448 N. Colorado Ave. Police were told by Frank Shook, 23, 10f 1808 College Ave., that Mr. Peterd passed him and then struck Mr. Serbinoff, who was crossing the street, After stopping, police were told, Mr. Fgters told Mr. Shook to call] police while he (Mr. Peters) parked | his car. Police said Mr. Peters did not return, They arrested him later at his home on charges of operating & car under the influence of liquor; reckless driving and leaving the stene of an accident. He told them he left the scene because he became frightened. Three other lives were claimed by traffic in the state over the weekend. | Mrs, Walter Ammerman, 33, Alexandria, was killed when the car in which she was riding left the road: and struck a pole on State Road 28 five miles east of Tipton. Mrs. (George B. Summers, 37, South Bend, died yesterday of injuries received Friday in an auto collision in which her husband was killed. Frank Mattinger, 54, was injured fatally at Templeton, Ind., last night when he stepped from behind a | parkec bus into the path of a car driven by Edward Donovan, 33, Chicago. Meanwhile, police continued efforts toclay to identify a Negro man, about 44, who was injured critically yesterday when he vias struck by an auto at 16th St. and Senate Ave, Fingerprints of the victim were sent to, Washington for checking in the FBI files. ‘Mr. Serbinoff, a native of Macedonia, came to the United States in 1910, and was a coremaker at the Nafionzl Malleable & Steel Castings Co. He is survived by his parents, living in Macedonia; a cousin, Philip Serbinoff, and a brother-in-law, Peter Stephanoff, Indianapolis. Servic es will be at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the Stevens & Son Mortuary, with h burial at Glenn Haven,

WASEDA INSTITUTE GIVES UP U. S. FUNDS

TORYO, Feb. 24 (U. P.). — The (Waseda International Institute, endowed by the American Baptist Churcl:,, will abandon foreign support beginning with the April term, it was announced today, in keeping with the Government campaign for nationalization of foreign-infiy-enced schools. Che school was organized in 1935 under the Rev. H. B. Benninghoff 0 educate American-born Japanese and citizens of other foreign countries. Its enrollment of 560 is made up of 13 nationalities.

REVOLT GERMS SEEN IN STIFLED HABITS

PH LADELPHIA (U. P.).—Her-|" bert A. Miller, visiting professor of sqgciology at Temple University, predicts that the disruption of habits

| 05 conquered European people will

lead to revolt. Prof. Miller said the people would fight to -regain their: old ways of living and habits—such as drink-

dling tea at a certain hour in the

aiternoon.

GIVEN

Reg. $2.50 8x10 Photograph of Yourself or || Chiltt With Each Beauty Service Amounting to $1.00 or More. Choice of Proofs—

> NF

Ruby Lee %iov

. 43" Mass. 4 Ave,

8 4. 8p. Me "No Dh Nooecears.

Ross Neeves, Fermor S. Cannon, Charles O. Grin Finds, Home Builders’ president; Clyde Pike and Carl W.

CITY DEDICATES HOUSE AT PARK

N. W. Structure to Be on Regular Schedule Wednesday.

Indianapolis’ newest asset, the Northwestern Park Community House, was dedicated by the Park Board yesterday prior to the opening on regular schedule Wednesday. Jackiel W. Joseph, Park Board president, . officially accepted the

{building for the City yesterday in

the first of a series of dedication programs Which’ continue tonight and tomorrow night. Mr. Joseph paid tribute to the Federation of Civic Clubs of North Indianapolis which initiated the drive for the community center several years ago and predicted the expansion of community activities through new facilities offered by the center. Built by WPA

Located at Northwestern Ave. and 24th St., the new structure was. built by the WPA under Park Board sponsorship. Although completed several months ago, the building was not opened for use immediately because of alterations asked by the City. The building houses library and recreation rooms, an auditorium with a stage and dressing room, a full size basketball floor, locker rooms and showers. These facilities supplement Northwestern Park’s outdoor baseball diamonds, tennis courts and wading ool. P Yesterday's dedication was sponsored jointly by the City and the | civic organization. William D. Brooks, federation president, presided and City Councilman F. B. Ransom presented members of the Park Board. Senator ' to Speak

Tonight's dedication program will feature a talk by State Senator Robert Lee Brokenburr. .Demonstration games and activities will follow. Tomorrow night, City Recreation Director H. W. Middlesworth will outline activities for the center. Wednesday, the center will go on regular winter schedule. Herman Holliday is director of fthe center, assisted by a staff composed of Miss Elsie Clark, Alexander Posey, Anthony Watkins, Herman Anderson Jr., Harold - Williams and Hursel Williams. ‘Civic groups making up the North Indianapolis Federation include the Columbia Place Welfare League, the Northwestern Civic Club, the Hubbard Park Civic Club anc the North Indianapolis Industrial Association.

SPEAKING IN PUBLIC AIDS STUTTERERS

AUSTIN, Tex. (U. P..—That most difficult of all speaking places, the public forum platform, is the proving ground for six University of Texas students who -are trying to quit stuttering. The six were chosen by Jesse Villareal, head of the university speech correction clinic, for the demonstration. Persons interested in voice training attended the forum and questioned the stutterers during the unrehearsed program. The once-impeded students came through splendidly, and Mr. Vil-

(lareal said it would add greatly to

their poise in private as well as public conversations.

MOCK TRAFFIC TRIAL FEATURES MEETING

A mock trial illustrating court|:

procedure in traffic law violations will feature a meeting of Inter-Fleet Safety Contest officials at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Criminal Court room. Safety captains and chairmen anid drivers representing the 50 firms entered in the contest will attend. Prosecutor Sherwood Blue will “prosecute” the mock cases, while David M. Lewis, former Prosecutor, will serve as judge. Nearly * 1600 truck drivers are entered in the contest, which opened last’ fall and will end March 31.

PLE 27 TITNN

ROBERT GOLDSAND The great pianist says of the

famous Baldwin: “Richly Coloured tone—endless grades of shading.” : : —Robert Goldsand.

PIANO BA LDW | N SALESROOM

The tight little community of Hollywood contains what is unquestionably the best film-mak-ing talent in the world. It has always been so—isolated European masterpieces to the contrary nowithstanding—and now with this country the last outpost of free expression the statement is truer than ever.

" ” s

THUS HOLLYWOOD has an uncommon advantage of organization and contiguity. But these advantages might easily work the other way. The theater has a comparable concentration. of location, and likewise is banded into unions and organizations which are, for the most part, mutually agreeable. Yet actors, directors, producers and technicians of the living stage never join in annual recognition’ of outstanding achievement and probably never will. Not at any rate until the ever present emotion of jealously and the perennial habit of backbiting are somehow dispelled. Perhaps the most remarkable thing about the Academy Awards has been their fairness. With so many persons voting (there are 12,000 this year) a .generally fair average is bound to be reached. Yet in any such balloting there is always the opportunity for pressure and underhand favoritism. However~a glance through the Academy selections of the past 14 years reveals them to have been extremely fair and judicious. There “is proof enough of this in the fact that the public has accepted the Academy selections as the last word. Usually such awards are made by an art’s professional critics or some other groups who are not active participants. Yet somehow the industry’s own voting has takén away the interest from the various trade-paper polls of “10 bests.” And a national association of film critics formed last year expired quickly, apparently from lack of public interest as much as anything else. And so today the Academy Award stands in the same relation to the movies as the Pulitzer Prize committee and the New York Drama Critics’ Circle do to the theater.

# ” 2

THIS YEAR'S Oscars will go to one in each group of nominees, which are as follows: Best picture: *All This, and Heaven Too,” “Foreign Correspondent,” “The Grapes of Wrath,” “The Great Dictator,” “Kitty Foyle,” “The Long Voyage Home,” “Our Town,” “The Philadelphia Story” and “Rebecca.” Best performance by an actor: Charles Chaplin in “The Great Dictator”; Henry Fonda in “The Grapes of Wrath’; Raymond Massey in “Abe Lincoln in Illinois”; Laurence Olivier in “Rebecca”; James Stewart in “The Philadelphia Story.” Best performance by an actress: Bette Davis in “The Letter”; Katharine Hepburn in “The Philadelphia Story”; Joan Fontaine in “Rebecca”; Ginger Rogers in “Kitty Foyle”: Martha Scott in “Our Town.” (Miss Davis and. Miss Hepburn are former Academy winners.)

» # ”

BEST PERFORMANCE by a supporting actor: Albert Basserman, Walter Brennan, William Gargan, Jack Oakie, James Stephenson. Best performance by a supporting actress: Judith Anderson, Jane Darwell, Ruth Hussey, Barbara O'Neil, Marjorie Rambeau. There will also be awards for “bests” in directing, original screen story, original screen play, songs, short subjects and in numerous technical divisions of cinematography, editing, art direction, sound recording, and so

on. In addition the Academy doubtless will follow its usual practice of making several special awards.

4 §. Reng. St. Open Eves. MA-1431.

A NS i (LITT) /

Lom ROOM

PRESENTING THE

IN

Ana Bo oYsS Featuring

NANCY EVANS VOCALIST

Delicious Seashore Dinners * Charcoal Grilled Steaks

DANCING TILL 1 M. NO COVER CuARGE

TERN

swing.

ending up with an all-out finish. Kirby's idea was to gather a small group of’ the finest musicians to interpret music in a new way. “I went to five boys but they had other commitments and couldn’t afford to take a chance. But they said they'd work with me if I could prove to them that gentle, subtle music could be successful.”

Original Five Return

So Kirby picked up a drummer, a trumpet player, a pianist, a saxophonist and a clarinet player. They rehearsed and played small jobs for six months, but they "weren't good enough, Kirby asked the original five to come back and listen. They came and listened until 4 a. m. ‘Then they sat right down and formed today’s Kirby orchestra. It still plays the same ingenious, sophisticated swing that makes critics call them “the best little band in America.” Unlike Raymond Scott, whose quintet (with six men) .bloonied into a full band, Kirby doesn’t intend to expand the band much further, if at all. “I'd like to have one more woodwind. Maybe a harp. Something like that, but nothing more.”

Went to Work Early *

Mr Kirby, now 32, has had a stormy life. His father died when John was 4 so the lad supported himself by washing cars and cutting lawns. His first instrument was a Second-hand nickel-plated trombone bought for $4 when he was 10. At 16 he went to New York. He didin’t know where to go so he slept in an empty distillery. The next morning his trombone was gone. From a job with the Pennsylvania Railroad he saved $500 and bought a tuba. He figured it would be too tough to steal. In 1928 he switched to a String bass and his reputation grew so that Fletcher Henderson offered him a contract. He was raised from $25 to $85 a week. But the band played

the boys. Henderson tried to get another bass player but failed. Within three weeks Kirby had

NWSNEMARTENS CONCERT, Inc.

America’s Own Singing Star of Metropolitan Opera and Radio

Gladys Swarthout

English Theater Thursday Eve. Feb. 27th $1.10, $2.20, $2.75, $&30. Seats Now! Martens Ticket Office Rm. 201—33 Monument Circle—LI. 8921

Back in 1937 all the big-name bands were playing LOUD and

the Roseland Ballroom in New York City. Kirby stayed with Henderson five years. “It was like spending five years in a musical institution, ” he said. “Fletcher had about the best band

there was. Men with plenty of experience. There I learned you must have good men to work with.” All this while Maxine Sullivan (Mrs. Kirby) had sat alongside Kirby quietly. You can understand her voice better when you learn about her yesterdays. She scrubbed floors, washed windows and did | laundry. She’s never taken singing lessons. She just sings. Outside of two night club appearances this is the first time the Kirbys have appeared together. From here Xirby is scheduled for a new CBS radio show Saturday night.” Miss ‘Sullivan is reading a part for a new Broadway production based on “Uncle Tom’s Cabin.” “It’s a straight legitimate part,” she said, “I might sing ‘Loch Lomond’ just because people expect me to. I'd rather be in the theater, anyway, than singing.”

AURORA WINS TEST HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 24 (U. P.).— Aurora Miranda, sister of the Bra-

caught on and was the featured attraction when the band returned to?

Famed CBS Radio _

MAXINE SULLIVAN JOHN KIRBY +s’

HIS pe

WFBM: HOOSIER TALENT PARADE WINNER

Madeleine ns Fred MacMu:ray,

ya. il BOB CROSBY. “LET'S MAKE MUSIC” J

* with JEAN ROGERS DY, S08 CROSAY'S ORCHESTRA .

zilian singing star, Carmen Miranda, was in Hollywood today for a screen test at Metro-Goldwyn-May-

er studio this week. Openila.m

ten 02.0 TVET YET?

Errol Flynn “SANTA &F TRAIL" Haywo Fc) 3 OVER BROADWAY”

Open 10 2. m. ten 10a... Y WL YY Xo)

15¢ to 6 * First Indianapolis . Johnny Mack Brown “L aw and Order’ Dennis O'Keefe * Girl From Havana’

50 fast Kirby couldn’t keep up with|*

“Mysterious ' Dr. Satan’—Late News

RATS aL

1

CONVOY! "

CLIVE BROOK ~

—PLOS— | “GALLANT SONS” |

pret ee Lo

Ls hill

CI

SOUTH SIDE

NORTH SIDE

EAST SIDE 2116 E. 10th

HAMILTON THRU TUES,

Dick Powell—Ellen Drew “CHRISTMAS IN JULY” Judy Garland “LITTLE NELLJE KELLY” 5507

[IEYILTH - 5%. 20¢ to 6 Clark Gable “COMRADE X*

Hedy Lamarr Margaret Lindsay—Ralph Bellamy “MEET THE WILD CAT”

733 N.

THE MECCA Li: 20c

Lum ’N Abner “DREAMING OUT LOUD” Boris Karloff “THE APE”

PARAMOUNT . a y Hrd

Adufts 15¢ ALWAY S—RKiddies 10c

St

Tyrone Power—Linda Darnell “MARK OF ZORRO” Myrna Loy—Melvyn Douglas “THIRD FINGER, LEFT HAND”

BIGGEST BEST

Tonight

eS Tues.-Wed.

20c to 6 20¢ v . 9” Dark Gable “COMRADE X

Harry Langdon “COLD TURKEY” Ray Whitley & His Band “BAR BUCKAROO”

5:45

4630 5:45

EMERSON ‘0. ..% 20¢

Henry Fonda “CHAD HANNA” Arlen-Devine “DEVIL'S PIPELINE” 6116 E, Washington

SHERIDAN Doors open at 6:43

Alice Faye “TIN PAN ALLEY” Jeffrey Lynn “MONEY & THE WOMAN” 2930 E. Tenth 34

PARKE Doors Open at

Alice Faye ‘TIN PAN a J. Withers “YOUTH WILL BE SERVED”

4020 E. any TUXEDO .Y%%: 20C Tim. Norma Shearer “ESCAPE” Gloria Jean “LITTLE BIT OF HEAVEN”

You'll find the best in Neighborhood Shqws in

this stlumn,

| TD DRAREENTELTE (Ste, |

Errol Flynn “SANTA FE TRAIL” “SANDY GETS HER MAN"

S., “Love Thy Neighbor’ Conte Tacs ., March 8th

“GONE WITH THE WIND" 1105 S. MERIDIAN

NEON | TTS Rf: Liou)

Claudette Colbert “ARISE MY LOVE” J. Withers * ‘YOUTH WILL E BE SERVED” SAN RS 1108 Jas. Cagney ANDE Prospect Pat O’Brien ‘HERF COMES THE NAVY” ‘NO 1 TIME FOR COMEDY”

. ‘WEST SIDE

Open Daily at 1:30 P. M, 6

CINEM 16th and

Delaware Adults, 20c—Children, 10c—Before John Wayne—Thos., Mitchell “LONG VOYAGE HOME” Nan Grey “MARGIE”

NIGHT TRAI

6:45 New Hit—Virginia Gilmore “Jennie

ist & Any

REX Northwestern 20c¢ Time

Geo. Brent “SOUTH OF SUEZ

BELMO NT Belmont & Wash.

Errol Flynn Olivia DeHavilland “SANTA FE TRAIL” Henry Fonds “CHAD HANNA”

D AISY 2540' W. © Judy Garland

Michigan Geo. Murphy

“LITTLE NELLIE KELLY” Henry Fonda “CHAD HANNA" Starts | Mar. 6 “GONE WITH THE W wp» A

SPEEDWAY et benny

Jack ois Fred Allen + “LOVE THY NEIGHBOR “s NIGHT A A SARL CARROLL'S”

Kay Kyser “YOU'LL FIND OUT” " Bobby Jordan “BOYS OF THE CITY

STRAND],

1300 E. Wash. Park Free HELD OVER

"SANTA FE hy VV 8g

Billy Halop at 6 P. M.

Lane Sisters “4 MOTHERS" Marx Bros, “GO WEST”

SKY RAIDERS

hur.,

STATE , " 2 h 20¢c add ue -

Norma Shearer “ESCAPE” THRU WED, Alice * Faye 7

Jack Oakle |

“TIN PAN ALLEY”

Gloria Jean ‘LITTLE BIT OF ATAVEN HEAVEN" T. CAL + X308 > Ft. Wayne & SI. Aa . "J HITS Baby Sandy-Stuart Erwin-Una Merkel

“SANDY GETS HER MAN” Virginia Gilmore “JENNIE”

William Henry

19th and

Stratford College 20¢

Gary Cooper “Northwest Mounted Police” oy 'M N( NOBODY’ 'S SWEETHEART ' NOW”

TALBOTT Talbott at 22nd

John Wayne ! Thos. Mitchell “LONG VOYAGE HOME” “TRAIL OF THE VIGILANTES"

> : lt LT 8 fm 1H tL NY, 6oqs

Tres anon’ ‘LOVE a bh iiRe “TRAIL OF THE LONESOME PINE”

——

College at 63rd Free Parking Lot

“SANTA FE TRAIL" “LITTLE BIT. OF HEAVEN"

Central at Fall Crk. ZARING

- Errol Flynm . Olivia DeHavilland . ‘SANTA FE TRAIL” “MERRIE MELODY JAMBOREE”

It’s a short cut to the best

Neighborhood $ Shows,

Read this column Daily.

+

ps AIR : TW