Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 July 1942 — Page 10

; YOUR pee ’ THEATRES -

BUY WAR STAMPS AND BONDS AT YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD THEATER

is i SIDE

BIG FREE PARKING LOT =p T.L a AiR LL visu LL BARI

LI Er & FT. WAYNE DON AMECHE

i ‘The Magnificent Dope’

MAGNIFICENT 00PE | REL

TI “MOONTIDE”

ltl], i 10E MARCH OF TIME—LATE NEWS

20¢ TO 6 * PLUS TAX COLOR CARTOON

Rush Making | ‘Of Records

Wax Music Rapidly AsiE Petrillo Ban Nears.

NEW YORK, July 30 (U. P).— The approaching deadline for the|: manufacture of phonograph rec-|: ords, imposed by James C. Petrillo, American Federation of Musicians|: president, has found recording|: studios throughout the country

feverishly waxing as much popular music as possible before Saturday. Meanwhile, Petrillo maintained today his refusal to disuss his edict. In addition to newspapermen seeking clarification of the order, which affects 140,000 members, and comment on the plea of Elmer Davis, OWI director, that it would injure war morale, the Mutual Broadcasting System tried vainly to obtain from the A. F. M. leader an explanation of a Petrillo- edict which prevented 15 or more dance orchestras from network broadcasts. After Petrillo’s recent edict banning union musicians from making phonograph records after Aug. 1, except for home use, the record companies started to compile a tremendous backlog of records in the event that compromise or injunction efforts should fail. Petrillo’s latest ban on music broadcasts ordered the discontinuance of all remote dance band pickups over the Mutual Broadcasting system, the result of a dispute between the A. F. M. and stations KFRC, San Francisco, and WARM, Scranton, Pa. The dispute involved more than 15 bands, which could broadcast locally from stations originating the pickups, provided the programs were not fed to the network as a whole. Tin Pan Alley reports said the record companies were recording music now which normally would not be waxed until December.

The Army Was Just Practicing

BOSTON, July 30 (U. P).— Two prisoners “escaped” from a Canadian internment camp by airplane yesterday and were “captured” soon afterward, but it was

all make-believe—a false report based on army maneuvers. The report was circulated in New York state and New England by police officials who believed it a genuine alarm. They reported the amphibian plane flying due east from Sherbrooke, Quebec. However, soon after the message had been - canceled, Col. Harold G. Storke, provost marshal of the first service command here, issued this statement: ’ “The report of the escape of two German prisoners by plane from Sherbrooke, Quebec, and their subsequent recapture was carried on police wires in error. “It. was based on a practice message dated July 25, used in connection with army maneuvers, The statements. contained in the message were entirely imaginary.”

TO NIGHT | «

N HU 6046 fe PY | £

19th & Judy Garland Strateor d College Geo. Murphy “LITTLE NELLIE KELLY” Marlene Dietrich “LADY IS WILLING”

© 81st & Plus R E XxX Northwestern 20c¢ Tax “ALWAYS IN MY HEART” “RANGERS OF FORTUNE”

CINEMA }.° COOL

Open Daily 1:30 P. M.—22¢ to 6 Sooneer Tracy “TORTILLA FLAT” |“BASHFUL BACHELOR”

o

Horace Heidt (center) brings his musical knights to the stage of the Circle tomorrow, for a weck’s stand in the series of . great bands appeaving there. "Mimi Cabanne, girl singer (left), and Bernie Maitinson, trapper (right), are two of the attractions.

TIMELY AS TODAY'S HEADLINES

ie Ll MASSEY LL 5 Y 4:8

WILLIAM TRACY—JOE SAWYER “ABOUT FACE”

ENED VOGUE se

FREE P Rita Hayworth “MY GAL SAL” Dorothy Lamour “FLEET'S IN” Talbott at 224 Bing Crosby

TALBOTT Bie’ of

Bob Hope “ROAD TO ZANZIBAR" Fred MacMurray “VIRGINIA” Westinghouse Air Conditioned

Lum ’n Abner

30h& _gaok ILL.

‘| Bob Hope £6 . 9 pant. contara Ghost Breakers Fibber McGee & Molly

rere “This Way Please”

Grable

WHEN DOES IT START?

CIRCLE “Pr. Broadway,” with Macdonald Carey and Jean Phillips, at 11:20, 2:15, 5:10, 8:05 and 0 3vu. On stage, Sammy Kaye and his orchestra, at 12:50, 3:45, 6:40 and, 9:25.

INDIANA

Richard Travis and Julie Bishop plan their getaway in “Escape | From Crime,” fast moving thriller opening at Keith’s tomorrow. On stage is a variety show, “Calling All Stars.”

ASKS READJUSTNENT OF BEEF CEILINGS

OMAHA, Neb., July 30 (1 P,).— The national livestock i dvisory council has warned that rest winter’'s meat supplies will be insufficient to meet the nation’s needs unless price ceilings on beef adjusted. The warning was contadna *d in a brief prepared at Des Moines, Iowa, at a mid-July meeting of: {eeders from 21 states and submitted to the OPA. | Inadequate prices are coripelling farmers to curtail feeding and to slaughter their cattle from ‘eedlots before they reach maturity, the orief asserted. These practices, it said, result in a poorer grade of beef and are threatening ili: country’s meat supply. The brief asked for conf! ete removal of price ceilings on) live animals, for 110 per cent lat parity prices on four recently esizblished grades of beef and for aniiouncement at monthly intervals [1n1at the OPA will support prices 2 AA and A grades of carcases.

TOMORROW—DOOR 5 OPEN 10:30—30¢ Till 1 P. M. “AMERICA’S GREAT) :ST HOUR of ENTERTAIMENT"

VOICE from the Balcony by RICHARD LEWIS

“The Gay Sisters,” with Barbara Stanwyck and George Brent, at 12:15, 3:30, 6:45 and 10. “Spy ‘Ship, ” with Craig Stevens and BY re Manning, at 11:13, 2:28, 5:43 and 8:5 BA et at 1, 4:02, 7:04 and 10: ye; “Spy Ship” at 3, 6:02 and 9:0

HOLD RITES FOR IRA HOWE LAFAYETTE, July 30 (U. P.).— Services were held today for Ira J. Howe, 77, builder of the city’s first theater. Mr. Howe died Tues-

day following a heart attack at his home in Harbor Springs, Mich.

LAST DAY!

Central Ave. at Fall Creek Blvd.

STARTS TODAY

The Thilling Harvest of CECIL B. DE MILLE’S 30 Years of Making Hits..

HARI

GREATEST SPECTACLE

‘REAP THE WILD WIND

IN TECHNICOLOR!' Positively Lowest Price Till 1943 —Admission— Matinee

Plus Plus ne 50¢c Tax 36¢c Tax 13¢

Tax Matinees Saturday and Sunday

Mansions in the Dust I GAINED the impression at the Indiana yesterday that Warner's has done a solid job of transposing Stephen Longstreet’s novel, “The Gay Sisters,” to the screen. I found the novel interesting in an urbane and candid way, but superficial. In these respects, the screen version imitates it faithfully. The story turns about the efforts of the Gaylord heiress to salvage

roe Si onnans tir \y 716 WI) DEPORT ‘EVERY DUTCH JEW’

of litigation, head sister Fiona (Barbara Stanwyck) is compelled LONDON, July 30 (U. P.).—German - authorities have speeded up

to compromise the estate to salvage herself and her sisters. The movie tends to veer away from the .book in spots, especially at the end. Warner's gives you a happy, ending instead of the |the deportation of Duteh Jews to novels a ges to eastern Europe under a plan that breathe some life into the |calls for a purge of every one of haughty, stubborn-prided Fiona, | occupied Holland's 180,000 Jews and persons of Jewish blood within the next 10 months, the Dutch news agency Aneta said yesterday. Aneta said that Reich Commissar Schmidt, aid to the Nazi administrator of Holland, Dr. Arthur von

the novel's outstanding characterization. She is effectively supported by Geraldine Fitzgerald Seyss-Inquart, announced in a speech at Breda that “the Jews cannot stay in Holland and within

as Evelyn, Nancy Coleman as Susanna and George Brent who a short time one of the strongest bastions of the Jews will have been

plays himself as always. Warner's new “find” Gig Young, cleared away.” “The Jews will return to the

who takes this screen name from the neo-Bohemian artist in the place from which they came, just as poor as when they left there,

novel, appears to be a bush league covered with lice,” Schmidt said.

Clark Gable, but with a trimmer mustache. A youngster by the name of Larry Simms is outstanding. “The Gay Sisters” is an unusual mansion-in-the-dust story and it is done well enough to make it interesting seeing. “Those sympathizing with them will be treated in the same way.” The Dutch Nazi stormtroop newspaper, De Storm, added that “henceforth transports will go regularly to the east at such a tempo that not a single Jew will be left in Holland on June 1, 1943.” The deportation of Dutch Jews to German-occupied territory in eastern Europe, mostly Poland, began last Thursday at an’ announced rate of 600 a day.

BOY BURNED BY WIRE UNDER TREATMENT

Nine-year-old Roger Lee Hoppes was being treated at his home, 2175 Kildare ave., today for burns he received yesterday when he touched an uninsulated light wire. The boy was climbing in a tree in the rear of his home at the time of the accident. He hung on the wire for several seconds, unable to loose himself, and then he fell 12 feet to the ground. He was taken to City hospital.

KEITH'S “Escape From Crime,” with Richard Travis and Julie BOD i 12:40, 3:16, 5:52, 8:28 and 10:5 On Stage, * ‘Cailing All All Stars,” % 1:44, 4:20, 6:56 and

LOEW'S

“Mrs. Miniver,’”” with Greer. Garson, Walter Pidgeon, Teresa Wright, Richard Ney, Henry Travers, Dame May Whitty and Jensy Wilcoxon, at 11, 1:40, 4:20, 7 and 9:45.

Banday Mes. Miniver” at 1: 30, 4:15, 7 and 9

LYRIC “Eagle Squadron,” with Diana Barrymore and Robert Stack, at 11, 1:15, 3:35, 5:50, 8 and 10:10. Sunday—*Eagle Squadron” at 1:15, 3:35, 5:50, 8 and 10:10.

are re-

SAILOR WEDS SAILOR ~ PORTLAND, Me, July 30 (U. PJ). —A pair of sailors filed intentions

to wed at city hall. They were U. S. Sailor Marshall D. Hobart and Miss Phyllis E. Sailor, both of Quincy, Ill.

ORCHESTRA

FEATURING HIS FAMOUS RADIO DE SONALTIIEY

PAULETTE

Nights

wn RAYMOND

MASSEY Plus: Merrie Melody and Musical Comedy

rT Ta

| NOW. 2nd SMASH WEEK

NTE TTRYL INE en Macdonald Carey

Jean Phillips ALL SEATS... TAX INCL.

30c to 1 p, m, |55¢ to Closing 40c to 5 p. m,’ [Children 25¢

WEST SIDE

Robt. Paige

STATE ol, Jane Frazee .

] “ALMOST MARRIED” Marlene Dietrich “LADY IS WILLING”

BELMONT Belmont & Wash, §

Brian Donlevy, Miriam Hopkins “GENTLEMAN AFTER DARK” Fred MacMurray “VIRGINIA” Westinghouse Air-Conditioned

Spex 773VAY ALWAYS PLEASANTLY COOL

George Brent “TWIN BEDS" :

Joan Bennett Van Heflin “KID GLOVE KILLER”

D AISY 2540 W. Brian Donley

Michigan Miriam Hopkins “GENTLEMAN AFTER DARK” Barb. Stanwyck “GREAT MAN’S LADY"

SOUTH SIDE x

[= NEAT

EJ = ” . THE INDIANA'S second feature is “Spy Ship,” with Craig Stevens and Irene Manning, a nip-and-tuck spy thriller with several big explosions.

» 'Eagles’ at the Lyric

“EAGLE SQUADRON” carries on for a second week downtown at the Lyric. The film justifies a second week's showing on the basis of its unusually fine theme and its photographic display of combat in the air. The plea for an aerial second front to bomb Germany out of the war is effectively seconded by the film, which is the story of the first Americans who fought Hitler.

SUB TOLL REACHES 438 . By UNITED PRESS Announcement that a Brazilian freighter and a small American merchantman had been sunk brought to at least 438 today the unofficial total of ships lost in the western Atlantic submarine warfare since mid-January.

8 »

IT’S TREMENDOUS! EW SONGS ® NEW STARS Greater Than Ever Before

The Snappiest, Newest Most Colorful Show of His Career!

TONITE THRU , Tonite and nite and Fri. at 6:45 and 0134 SUN. Doors Open at 5:30 PRICES THIS ENGAGEMENT ONLY

KIDS ALL Ae 40¢ Aone 55¢ SHOWS fie en. ONT. MATS

ST MA® eo ADULTS 'TIL SIX—40¢c

1,500 LUXURIOUS CHAIRS ° NO WAITING

ALL-TECHNICOLOR SHOW o o ’OPULAR

nH TA

GREATEST SPECTACLE

‘REAP THE WILD WIND

IN TECHNICOLOK!

LTO DIANA BARRYMORE JON HALL DPIC ae Le: EVELYN ANKERS

ERIKSON JOHN LODER QL OI (SOBEL ELSOM

THE MERRIE MELOD) 8 8 RAVEN" COMIC CARTOON

Add Mailbag

Rushville, Ind. To the Voice in the Balcony: “I , .. feel that you are right. After all, why wear rose colored glasses as one person asked you to just because some movies are ‘green’? “There’s one thing I'd like you to do—give the manager of the Circle a tip to engage Wayne King and his orchestra as a week's feature, . . .” “A fan.” ® 8 = Sorry, but Arthur Baker, the Circle's manager, can’t say at | this time whether it will be possible to.book Wayne King or not.

DIANA BARRYMORE TO BE WED TODAY

HOLLYWOOD, July 30 (U. P.).— Actress Diana Barrymore and Bramwell Fletcher, English-born stage and screen actor, culminate

“SPY SHIP” Craig Stevens Irene Manning

EAGLE SQUADRON

25¢ Till 6 Plus Tax

; PAULETTE

Gdibikol

SEFOUNTAIN SQUARE B&B

Tonite and 7 day i id Nite at 7 P. ee @ Albert De en Joan Davis YOKEL BOY Plus Fay Emerson, Van Johnson “MURDER IN THE BIG HOUSE” Plus “Our Gang” and Pete Smith

With Raymond Massey—Lynne Overman—Robt. Preston

ETL

“CALL OUT THE MARINES” “STRANGE CASE OF DR. RX”

Here is THE great picture born of this war! You will fondly re. . member brave, young Mrs. Miniver forever! Love’in wartime is" a mighty theme — this picture does itxfull justicel

DIA

A

AND THE

AL KNIGHTS

1106 Pro t Sanders respee Tonite

2 All Seats i i e ag aY PRICye | “JAILHOUSE BLUES” 40¢c |

“STAGECOACH BUCKAROO” BUNDAY

c win 2 AFTER

J AFI Proudly We Present > NTR TER The Screens Great Con-

tribution To Our Times

THEATRE

EAST SIDE MECCA , 7, "silo Davie’

“MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER” Marlene Dietrich “LADY IS WILLING” The

coo. EMERSON . iin ¢i5*

EAST SIDE LEADING THEATER

ERAT KEE EF] 5500 F. WASHINGTON PLUS TAX AIR EEE EREE RAY

FONDA 4 BARI2>~AMECHE

" OPEN 12 NOON

CERT

\ Indiana's Home of Vaudeville J THURS. Thru SUN.

*.Y | HW STARS)

Also On Stage In Person! 77 5 LITTLE TOUGH GUYS « ON THE SCREEN = A Social Droma of £sCAPE

he

; RICHARD T \ CR JULIE BISHOP

“West of he Rockies” A Warner arner Bros. Featurette

|

bs

-~

their three-year romance in marriage today. Miss Barrymore, daughter of the latc John Barrymore, and Fletcher have gone together since their appearance in the 1939 stage revival of “Outward Bound.” The Rev. H. Paul Romeis, who married Barbara Hutton and Cary Grant,- will officiate at the wedding in the bride’s home. A reception, presided over by Mrs. Harrison Tweed, New York, the bride’s mother, will follow the ceremony. The couple planned to honeymoon at San Francisco and Del’ Monte, Cal.

a ——

PENDLETON PIKE . Continuous From Dusk A Lave Story of Annapolis

gi STEWART

NAVY "BLUE and GOLD"

PLUS Freddie Martin and His Orch.

“MAYOR OF 44th ST.”

- Geo. Murphy— Mh hirley

suy WAR

SAVINGS STAMPS ond

SONDS AT THIS THEATREL_

is

MOON] i SOUE 1))E

IIriJsg! DENNIS O' peasy I FR V4]

BETTY KEAN EDDIE FOY, JR.

TINT TEI) 11]

JEANGABIN-IOA LUPING

afl aa ns

Paulette Goddard—Fred Astaire “SECOND CHORUS” ‘ Fred Allen—Jack Benny Rochester “LOVE THY NEIGHBOR”

HAMILTON

Hedy Lamarr Michele Morgan—Paul Henreid

“JOAN OF PARIS”

© 2116 E. 10th Free Parking

Spencer Tracy “TORTILLA FLAT”

Irene Dunne—Robt. Monigomery - “UNFINISHED BUSINESS" Wm. Boyd ‘3 MEN FROM TEXAS" y 4

Y 211% Ik

Richard Arlen—J. Carroll Ni “FORCED LANDING”

TACOMA 2, 22¢

Cool

Tonite

Thru Sat. | 20¢

Walt Disney’s Feature Length

§ 9 In ‘F ANTASIA Technicolor .~—Plus 2nd Hit Attraction— HELL BENT FOR ACTION 3 ) HELL BENT FOR ROMANCE (id . THE FIGHTING Er pa »

FORT

hb & Ah

TRY A WANT AD —

Plus Tax

Regis Toomey “BULLET SCARS” Bert Lahr ‘SING YOUR WORRIES AWAY’

8 PARK FREE

Plus Tax 5:45 to 6

he q pit PLL

All PARKER, *", %% sau 110