Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 February 1943 — Page 7

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"An Exits Night|~

current Civic theater production,| “Suspect,” will hold over at the "Alabama st. playhouse tomorrow *" night ‘instead of closing tonight *“‘when its run was to end. &: The show has been sold out nearoly every night. The theater folk {would hold it over longer if it were “not for the fact that Miriam Thomas, one of the key members of the cast, is leaving the city. - Friday morning. Mrs. Thomas ‘plays the part of =“Goudie,” .a Scotch maid in the 4 Tear-haunted house and supplies 1 , good bit of the menace for which

40 enter opera from Hollywood, said B40day that she would make her Metsropolitan opera. debut; at: New York iis fall.

“She is studying the score ‘of : omeo and Juliet,” and will leave for. New York next week for coachBg. Miss MacDonald said she may four with the company before. apring in New York.

nard said.

[lakie Fails: “Reno Nurse|

Offered Her Film Career

While a Captain.

RENO, Nev. Feb. 17 (U, P)— Pretty Barbara Bernhard, 20-year-old dental nurse, ‘said yesterday Pvt. Jacob, L. (Jakie) Webb oflered to get her info the movies during his = week-long inasquerade as an army air corps captain. Webb, playboy grandson of Com‘modore Cornelius Vanderbilt, is believed to be confined in the guardhouse at Reno air base, Where he faces an army court-martial on possible handful of federal charges including imperdonation of an officer. - The five-foot-seven, brown-eyed | nurse said she met Webb in a Reno ‘cocktail lounge. “He gave me a little aid .adss|dressed to a Mr. W. 8. Webb Jr, in Hollywood,” she said. “He told me this Webb was his brother and ‘was one of the ‘big shots’ at Universal Studios.” : (Pvt. Webb has a brother, Ww. Seward Webb Jr., who is an assistant director at Universal Studios.) “He wrote ‘Take care of this girl —J. Webb,” on the card, ” Miss Ber-

-——-

FAB : SEVITZKY : Conducts the INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY #1. . ORCHESTRA fl Saturday, Feb. 20, 8:30 P. M. Sunday, Feb. 21, 3 P. M. "° MURAT THEATER Soloist, Violin ZINO

FRANCESCATTI

Playing

PAGANINI CONCERTO (In D Major)

| Orchestral Wor LISZT; STRAUSS; VALLS;

BOROWSKI; BOCCHERINI

J... GOOD SEATS EITHER CONCERT

$1 10, $1.65, $2.20, $2.75, $3.30 (Tax Included)

DUTCH QUISLING FEARS ASSASSINS

LONDON, Feb. 17 : Dutch Quisling Anton Musert, driven to the verge of panic by avenging patriots who had assassinated three of his most highly prized henchmen and tried to assassinate a fourth, was organizing a “home guard” to protect the lives of his fellow traitors and himself today. Radio Brussels revealed that prominent traitors in Belgium were being assassinated, too. It said that Maurice Dessain; superintend-ent-commissioner of police, had been attacked and died of his wounds. Mussert revealed in a broadcast speech that a band of patriots, sworn to kill the leading members of his party, had “attempted to assassinate” the attorney general of

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RENNION IN FRANCE” *

Plus News & Short Subjects.

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Bea, Lamarr Walter Pidgeon “WHITE CARGO” Jeanette McDonald “CAIRO”

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Ann Miller “PRIORITIES ON PARADE” John ___ John Beal “ATLANTIC CONVOY” (Studer 106 Prospess Final Night East Side Kids “MR. WISE GUY” Brenda Joyce “WHISPERING G GHOSTS”

r SIDE

|Crane still was legally married to

(U. P)—{

_ that music played in - factories

(f INCL 3 eX J | the character of the work and the: time of ‘day all were involved in I - producing the most effective mu- * | sical stimulant.

"My Flying Machine,” while the

. to “Mr. Five by Five” and “Penn- _ sylvania Polka.”

| The ‘Eroica’

By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN United Press Staff Correspondent

HOLLYWOOD, Feb. star Lana Turner was “all right” today and her unborn child was unharmed from the nervous shock

bedside of her former husband, who had taken an overdose of

him again. Stephen Crane, whose marriage to Miss Turner was annulled when he discovered he still was another woman’s husband, was expected to recover. Hardly had the honey-haired Miss Turner seen the semi-con-scious Crane at Cedars of Lebanon hospital than she suffered a nervous attack. Physicians feared for the life of her child, but later Dr. William Branch reported that she was resting at home and that the baby-to-be was unharmed. This rush of events in the ill-

favorite sweater girl began: last summer when she eloped with the young Crawfordsville, Ind., man, after her unsuccessful marriage to Artie Shaw, the band leader, : In . December, Miss Turner learned that their child would be born in May.‘ Then she discovered

Carol Kurtz Crane of Indianapolis. Miss Turner sued immediately for an annulment. Crane’s divorce from his first wife |S!

she suffered after rushing to thei:

tablets when she refused to marry |

starred romance of Hollywood's|

him being in the hospi

Turner to call off the annulment She refused.

scribed in Hollywood as a tobacco heir and in Indiana as the proprietor of a cigar store, sought to remarry her. He wrote her letters, he sent her flowers. It still was no go. “And when Lana found out about ” a friend said, “she disregarded the advice of her mother and rushed to see him. She shouldn’t have done it. She saw Steve and she went all to pieces.

became final on Jan. 19 and Crane immediately tried to persuade Miss

“She's a good kid and gies had a tough break.”

RECORDINGS 5 mesan vox

More on Music in Industry LAST MONTH, we published a

Prof. Burris-Meyer “has found

raised the production rate as much as 11.1 per cent. But like Mr. Kirkpatrick, Prof. BurrisMeyer discovered that only particular types of music acted as stimulants, while other types did not. -For:instance, such factors -as the national origin of the worker,

Foreign-born workers, particularly those of Italian origin, responded best to grand opera excerpts. ‘Older workers liked the old standbys, like “East Side, West Side,” “Bicycle Built. for Two” and “Come, Josephine, in

younger set in the plant revived

All of which indicate that the industrial plant inanager who wires his factory rooms for sound might do well to consider who his workers are and, what kind of music they like best. A number like “Ase’s Death” might put the boys and girls to sleep while “The Jersey Bounce” might burn them out by 3 p. m. » »

Sibelius Seventh

THE SEVENTH symphony of Jan Sibelius should be on deck this week. It is recorded by the St. Louis symphony orchestra Jinder Vladimir Golschmann’s direction for R. C. A. Victor. This the last of the group of Sibelius’

symphonies which some - con-struction-minded musicologist has described as the seven musical pillars of Finland. s The seventh is a lopg single movement, characte by the somber and rugged eur expressed in all of Sibelius’ major works. The St. Louis orchestra’ emphasizes the dynamic quality of the work and the reproduction is clean and elear. . Another nationalistic composer is represented this month in Vie-' tor’s second edition of Smetana’s symphonic cycle, “My Country.” The National symphony orchestra plays it. This is “The Moldau,” in which the composer-patriot of the last century. describes the River Moldau which flows through the most beautiful landscape in Czecho-Slovakia. : Redolent of the intense Czech love of country, the “My Country” cycle is heard today only in the. United Nations. It’s forbidden music in the land of its origin. ® 8 = :

ARTURO TOSCANINI and the N. B. C. symphony orchestra Lave . recorded the Beethoven “Eroita” symphony in E-flat major for Victor and the album: should be available now or in a few weeks. Several historian-critics have la-

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century, a big statement.

beled the “Eroica” as the greatest symphonic Work of the, 19h

The pulitieal story befund the.

“Eroica” is fairly ‘well Beethoven dedicated it to as sd BR as the “Bonaparte” symphony. ~ Like many composers of the day, Beethoven was fundamen~ tally a ‘humanist and at times in his life shared the publican sentiments that

: IRs over Europe and i o

ling hide-bound pr

digest of the researches of Forrest

H. Kirkpatrick, R. C. A. Victor researcher, who concluded that popular music when played under. controlled conditions in industrial plants tends to stimulate industrial production by relieving fatigue and boredom. Now comes Prof. Harold Burris-Meyer, director of sound at Stevens Institue of Technology, who reports further on music in industry.

ostensibly to establish the rule of the common man in Europe. So Beethoven thought as he. worked on the bold, dramatic outlines of the first movement. In this connection, it ought to be remembered that the music of 140 years ago was not composed in a vacuum. There were other composers like Mozart, and later Wagner and Smetana, who hated social-injustice. » ». » THESE MEN were stirred by the implications of the new, democratic philosophies which promised Utopian gains for the common man. They were impressed by the American and French revolutions, and Beethoven and Wagner, particularly, carried over these feelings into their musie, bursting the bounds of conven and the traditional : So Beethoven dedicated his third symphony te Napoleon, who as first ‘consul of the French peoplé was parading himself as the true son of the revolution and the guardian of liberty, equality and ‘fraternity. It: ‘was not until May, 1804, when Napoleon proclaimed himself . Bonaparte - I, Emperor of France, that Beethoven in a wild rage destroyed the dedication, shut continued to write his symphony inbued with the people's struggle against feudal tyranny. A musical expression of the uncontrolled, revolutionary currents of the period, the “Eroica” is a landmark in musical history. Implicit in its construction is the

principle of free, creative ex--

pression and in the traditionbound world of music, it was revolutionary. The third symphony was written for a democratic world for which, today, the opening V for victory chords of Beethoven’s fifth symphony have become the musical symbol.

DENIES WOMEN TOO FLIGHTY FOR JURY

DENVER, Feb. 17 (U. PB.) Eudochia Bell Smith, the only only woman member of the Colo-

rado senate, yesterday won tentative approval of a plan allowing her| sex to serve as jurors after sharply

reminding the senate that women today are not flighty. Senator Smith, a Democrat from Denver, checked masculine opposition ‘to women jurors, whom some

senators grumbled would be too

| flighty, ‘with the comment: women are on every home war “front, turning out weapons, serving in the armed services, doing] their part to help win this war, some senators have the monumental

gall to call them flighty.”

—— nee pt GERMANS HOLD HOOSIER CHURUBUSCO, Ind, Feb. 17 0, P.) —First:- Lieut. Charles

former high-school basketball conch i and instructor here, is a prisoner of |} according

to word ‘re-

ciety i its, Mr. and Mrs. [{ paren li

1 of Claypool. Lieut.

The distraught Crane, 27, de-|

For Legislators Ordered ‘Out of Committee.

hold today on the bill to give all

maintenance. House Fite of the measure

Wayne), co-author of the hill, told the house that there was little

* {logic to voting pay increases to every

other state employee and official “while we earn $610 a session, which won't even pay our expenses.”.

Attacks Low Pay

* “I am surprised,” he said, “that we can maintain the high quality legislaturé that we’ do on the low pay we receive.” In an effort to block passage of the motion Rep. George Henley (R. Bloomington), house majority floor leader, pointed out that the ways and means committee is one of the busiest of the house committees. “If we carry this sort of motion to the extreme,” Rep.. Henley said, “the committee couldn't get these

day. This bill is not important|3 enough for the house to display a lack of confidence in the committee or its chairman.”

Object to Increase

Other representatives insisted that all house members knew what the salary of legislators was when they sought office and declared that for the present general assembly to increase its pay, even under the label of maintenance, would “violate the spirit if not the letter of the constitution.” Rep. Jess Andrew (R. West Point), ways and means chairman, pointed out that the senate already had turned “thumbs down’ on a similar measure. Rep. Frank O'Rourke (R. Hammond), second co-author of the bill, declared that taxpayers groups, chambers of commerce, labor: and civie ps. already had endorsed the bill. “I'm getting tired of having 1obbyists with pitying looks on their faces, offer to buy my dinner,” Rep. O'Rourke said. “Let's be honest with ourselves, especially since we know that the people of the state want us to do Something about this matter.”

BROWN AND WICKARD AGREE ON POWERS

—A new “memorandum of understanding” between Price Administrator Prentiss Brown and Food Ad-| 2 ministrator Claude R. Wickard today was expected to clear up official

tioning responsibilities and prepare for expansion of the list of foods to be rationed. The agreement, dividing authority between * Brown and Wickard on food rationing, was revealed late yesterday. Wickard signed food order No. 3 to seal the agreement. The order delegates:

all rationed foods from the processor to consumer; establish the value of

tem,

termine the need for, the time and extent of civilian food rationing; determine allowances needed because

as a result of the conditions of work, age, health and other factors; au-

terials to be rationed for individual

non-rationed foods to all users,

REPORT CONDITION OF MURPHY BETTER

DALLAS, Tex. Feb. 17 (U. P)— The condition of United States Supreme Court Justice Frank Murphy, who collapsed on a westbound American’ airlines plane and was

treatment, was said today by his attending physician to be “improved.” Dr. E. O. Rushing said ‘Murphy

critical condition.” Murphy was taken from the plane while en route from Washington to San Francisco. .He collapsed near Dallas and when he arrived was

‘|placed in a waiting ambulance and

faken 14 3 hospital.

: Won Tove. faithfully - mgintained our tradifions af fair deal .

ing, uncom " ing ‘standards and friendly service that

ysre established

legislators an extra $5 a day for a

pov a

Rep. Charles Z. Bond (R. Ft.|q

bills out even by working 24 hours a| to

: judicial court ¢

WASHINGTON, Feb. 17 (U. P.).}

and public uncertainties about ra- construction

specific controls over distribution of] coupons in the point rationing sys-|

To the agriculture departments! food administration authority to de-|

of differences betwen various groups|

thority to fix quotas of raw ma-|

processors, and direct distribution of |

taken to a private hospital for|

“was given a sedative and is not in|

148 (Brokenbure)—_Provides for ment, of more lice officers in 8 on basis ratio of Negro to Shire population. 42 ayes,

A 1581 Authorizes state high a. Bash) is ote wit

hat Stes. for ‘services. ‘44 ayes,

Ba , ermillion) —Provides iy costs in A Sia roceedings to be fixed against Bion, 35 ayes, oes. B.

ni 8. 162--(Atherton)—Creates Marion county metropolitan plan commission, merging hy a ahd county plan commissions.

44 ayes, 0 ni 8S. B. 164— (Bates)—Requires ° county auditor to make monthly collection of fees from Justi ces of peace and auditsthe Jatters’ books. 38 ayes, 3 n S. B. 168 — (Chamber: Hay > Eliminate $2400 salary bein to “members of Marion county 1 control board and fixes per diem .wage of $10 for actual sejviess. ~ ayes, 0 n Rees, aa -Protects

ers who are rehired emer-

, Higgs) —Authorizes secretary of state to egrrect mistakes in automobile license Jeas snd make refun ayes, Garrott)—Requires heads of fons to pay funeral nses of inmates if relatives are unable pay segte, 1 Alb 0 noes. . B. 180— (Miller, Vermillion)—Returns vernor the power to appoint chief exer of state accounts Soare and wo chief's sa. t $6000, $600, and 8 for aut now setting $4200. 36 ayes, 9° noes. Ss. T—( Johnson)—Authorizes state superintendent of public instruction recess or delay opening of public schools to permit pupils to uk on farm during war emergency. 6 noes. S. B. 202 (Biddiniger)—Provides for mailing to alien property custodian copies process for notices of proceeding inSolve progeny w where it is required to be made upon or given to a person in an SHemY Sountny or occupied territory. 46 ayes, 8. B. 208—(Biddinger) ~Creates a legis lative council; appropriates $20,000.

ayes, 7 noes. 8. 208—(Free)--Changes requirement of a majority vote of the ee oe of 8 corporation to approve a merger agreement to a two-thirds majority. <4 ayes,

0 Does, S. B. 222 — (Black) — Creates . threeBor comniission study drainage lage, 42 ayes, 0 no Hn . ae of Black =Br0vides for admits tang of policemen to police pension fund in in cities. 45 ayes,

ny

. B. all rules a T boards, commissions, mitted to attorney general and copies must be filed with secretary of state and the legislative bureau. 42 ayes, 1 no. S. 229—(Crook)—Permits use of

44 ayes, 1 n , B. 234 (Beardsley) —Provides that ‘six months after the war all cities and towns must. provide : airplane markings. 41 ayes, 0 noes.

aw Signed by Governor, Feb. 16

28— (Hi 38)--Fixes terms for 73d cuit.

HOUSE

Bills Passed Feb.-16

H. B. 59—(Bond)—Authorizes township trustees 30 increase number of supervisors and inv gators in the administration of poor relief; fixes their salaries upd presciibes 3 gu A pe 3 a

maim cos t per. pean for prisoners in ones rom 38 to 8 Bepuiation of less than on 500.000" and 300,000 from 76 ayes; les. H. B. 200-5 Slenke er) —Fixes circuit Sur s the 9 ves 3 po 0 Ineuiber WS non 8 © avs pez ces S Pease; approprisies a 3500s 75 ayes, 0 n P B. 211—( 3) — Permits city counBoy to employ ci eers in a supervisory or managerial osal lant 0 with any i

waed pnd ted By. those = oid to p: a "compensation in addition to his. a on salary. 76 ayes, 0 n H. a, ‘Hoffman) —Repeals 1937 law prescrib specifications for the of dra ditches, etc.; legalizes those contracts for constriction made after Oct. 1, 1942, not v by the law re-

Ppealed. 0 noes. H. Si (Richards) —Permits state superintendent of public instruction to issue jesmpotary teachers’ contracts, and provides that teachers so hired on a temporary basis receive proper sledis in the retirement fund. 86 ayes, 0 n H. B. (Henley, fire marshal power to seek injunctive relief ageinst anyone violating fire prevention regulations. a ayes, 0 noes.

TIVE CALENDAR = TRUCK Tw

Hoosier Motor Club Head

In he division of labor: 334755. wm.

a of ot d cs teach: on of retire achduring wartime :

a} ase

school busses to transport war workers.’

identification:

ts, and in those

76th Judicial 202 (Long, rg nine-{ = codify

siler) Gives state

the state industrial board

ie employ ees oT earner > a board er 80 ayes, 0 noes. ts es for quart of s§ gree, in come tax ot Tan 3 Apel 30, 31 and Oct. 31. 82 ayes, 0 Senate Bills Passed Feb. 1 ml 8S. B. 36—(Lucas)—Permits real estate {itle changes between civil and school cities in Crown Point. 88 ayes, 0 noes. S. B. Miller, S. Johnson)-Prohibits person not a member of Indiana bar from soliciting employment 28 an attorney.

90 ayes. 0 noes Ss. 60—(H. Johnson)-_Concerns disposition of Sutplus arising fro ments, turning hem back into ditch «| maintenance funds. 85 ayes, 0 noes. « 8, B.. 64—(Vermillion'—Extends from two to four years the time in which the county auditor may list property upon which tax has deen delmiueht for five years. 86 ayes, 1

Bills Defeated Feb. 16

H. B. 250—(Richards)—~Authorizes state board of health to inspect water and sew. lants and to issue certificates of quali tion to Superilitendents aa Dper-

ators of the Janis. Th a ayes, 58 S. B. s3—(L. Th ¥ vides: pen.

ality of $25 ALapen and up to 60 days in jail for Telysing to pay A fare. 26 ayes, 61 noes.

Bill Indefinitely Postponed Feb. 16

H. B. 306—(Slenker)—Provides for the accounting of funds received by county asyiums from the sale of products.

Bills Withdrawn Feb. 16

H. 15) {Preeman) = Changes dates for rly requisitioning of supplies by depaitment heads.

special assessmen rainage improve-

H. 318— (Freeman) —Re-enactment of 1899 2 providing for the letting of contracts, eic.

STATE G. 0. P. TO MEET

EVANSVILLE, Ind, Feb. 17 (U. P.).~A meeting of the state Republican comnittee will be held here Monday preceding a LincolnWashington rally address by Governor Harold E. Stassen of Min-

STOOPS BAC

val

Their Opposition, i Todd Stoops, secrotary-manager

-lof the Hoosier Motor pug: 2 {commercial truckers today for op-

posing new truck taxes despite the fact that their business is now op-

°flerating on a capacity basis.

Commercial trucks have been

“getting by” for two years paying license fees on the basis of carrying capacity only, Mr. Stoops said, and it is now up to the general assembly not only to bolster declining highway revenues but to exact some compensation for size and weight concessions granted the trucking industry in 1941.

Passenger Revenue Drops

“Passenger cars account for the big drop in traffic that will cut total motor revenues from $35,600,000 in 1942 to $23,300,000 this year. “With this serious situation arising it is only fair that the trucks using - the public roads for profitmaking should contribute more to the repair and maintenance of the roa The truck tax bill now pending

to raise $1,500,000 annually for highway use and was recommended by the Indiana highway study commis. sion. In 1941, Mr. Stoops pointed out,

Lthe legislature granted truckers’ re-

quests for increased axle and wheel weight limits to increase carrying capacity. Although a: companion tax bill also was passed, it later was declared unconstitutional because of a faulty title. : “Now,” Mr. Stoops said, “despite the fact that the truckers have the weight increase they sought, they are opposed to paying compensatory

taxes.”

noes, (H. Johnson)—Provides that} =

Rost features Indiana’s largest assortment of emblem rings for all lodges, at budget prices.

PAY WEEKLY OR MONTHLY “No Interest or Carrying Charge Added

MAIL ORDERS FILLED

ughes, Heller) —Specifically

WL that section of the 1937 law == To. OPA authority to establish}

Put your dollars on the firing

Buy Ws S. War Bonds

line! All of us can’t be where the .

fighting is . . . but we can just as surely pump bullets and shells and bombs at the enemy by buying War Bonds. Your dollars enable Uncle Sam to arm the fighting men with the bombers... slips : 3 -tanks and other battle equip: ment they need and must have to fight victoriously. Buy War Bonds and then more War Bonds!

FORT WAYNE, INDIANA

SERGHOFF BREWING CORPORATION

before the legislature is calculated