Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 February 1943 — Page 6

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Tyrone Power—Maureen O’Hars

“THE BLACK SWAN”

Rich ' pene ll Fountain Sq. yn John Sutton—Gene Tierney

“THUNDER BIRDS”

Warren William “Counter Espionage”

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Tonight & Tomorrow

Kent Taylor ‘MISSISSIPPI GAMBLER’

HURRY! HURRY! POSITIVELY LAST 2 DAYS

NOEL COWARD “IN WHICH WE SERVE”

Selected Short Subjects 250 to 6 (Plus Tax)

M.G.M. CARTOON “SUFFERIN’ OATS”

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THE MONSTER WHO BECAME

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VAUDEVILLE

i» I +1 Driscoll, 5:15, = § 7:35 and 10:25. 3 LOEW'S | Which We Serve,” the Noel Cone account of Britain at war, - at 11:50; 2:20, 4:50, 7:18 and 9:47. INDIANA : surg with Marlene Diet rich, John Wa, a ndo) Booth, at 13:40, 3:50, 7:02 and { “When Johnny Comes Marching Home,” with Allan Jones and Jane - Frazee, at 11:26, 2:37, 5:48 and { | LYRIC | *Casablanca,” with Humphrey art, In Pergman and Paul - Retreid nerd 1:85, 4:60, 1:48 and : “Behind the Eight Ball,” with ¢ 2 the Ritz Bros. at 12:55, 3:50, 6:48 and 9:45.

LIONS CLUB TO MEET E The Rev. Thomas Finneran will i speak to members of the Lions club i at their noon luncheon tomorrow | [Rall in the Claypool hotel. He will speak on “Why Religion in Education.”

Bob Hope conceives of a new naval defense against air raids in Paramount’s all-star spectacle, “Star Spangled Rhythm,” which opens tomorrow at the Indiana. Lan ;

FDR BOLSTERS

“My Heart Belongs CIO FET: "A

RICHARD CARLSON MARTHA O'DRISCOLL

PROBE PUPILS’ SMOKING

BOSTON, Feb. 9 (U. P.).—The a state educational department was| SEs J EE asked today to make a com-| WNNENTIRN ULE <i ants | prehensive survey to determine how na SCP SPTALNY ws TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. many Massachusetts school chil- MLL IT WILL GET QUICK RESULTS.

3 dren use tobacco and alcohol. Designed to Stabilize Living Cost, Wages, Despite Labor, Farm Attack.

Times Special WASHINGTON, Feb. 9—A program which the administration hopes. will save its plan to stabilize wartime prices and wages, now under increasingly menacing attacks by labor unions and farm organizations, was taking shape today. The program calls for:

1. Refusal by the national war labor board to exceed the “little steel” wage formula in the pending west coast aircraft and meat-pack-ing werkers’ cases. This is intended to serve as notice that the board will stand firmly against demands for large wage increases. 2. More “incentive payments” to farmers from the federal treasury, intended to encourage them to produce more food and to be satisfied without further increases of agricultural prices. The administration hopes this will stop the rise of living costs and quiet demands for industrial wage increases. 3. A drive to lengthen the industrial work week to 48-hours—but with continued payment of time-and-a-half wages for all hours in excess of 40 a week. :

{ Trouble Expected

The program, which may be publicly unveiled this week, will face trouble from many sides. The Big Four farm organizations, which maintain one of the most potent lobbies in Washington, are’ violently opposed to “incentive pay= ments.” So are many farm bloc congressmen, whose number has increased in the present session. They argue that farmers must have more money if they dare to employ enough workers to produce the food needed to win the war, but should get it in “honest price increases” and not in subsidies. “Incentive payments,” they contend, are actually only thinly disguised subsidies; would cost billions if] they gave the farmers any real re-| lief; would merely pass on increased living costs to present and future taxpayers. Secretary Wickard’s authority to promise $100,000,000 in “incentive payments” to growers of sweet potatoes, soy beans, grain sorghums, peanuts, dried peas and flax, and smaller amounts to producers of other crops, is already being challenged in both the house and senate. If the rise in living costs is not stopped by -that method or some other, however, the WLB may be wrecked by a labor rebellion against its refusal to exceed the “little steel” formula. John L. Lewis, who is keynoting the present drive for higher wages, has made it plain ©. that he cannot be appeased by 2 : promises that the prices of food and : | other necessities will be held to a slow, gradual rise.

DE GAULLE EMISSARY MEETS WITH GIRAUD

ALGIERS, Feb. 9 (U. P.).~Gen. Georges Catroux, representing Gen. Charles de Gaulle, arrived here yesterday to confer with Gen. Henri Honore Giraud on means of fur-| thering collaboration between the Fighting French and French North | Africa. dn RD It was expected the conversations| would be extensive, lasting probably three or four weeks. :

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RAY MILLAND VICTOR MOORE

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