Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 July 1944 — Page 10
PAGE 10
“The Pirates of of Penzance’ Cast Gives Break to Local Talent.
« All but two of the principal roles
In the Indianapolis Opera theater's production of “The Pirates of Penzance,” opening at the Garfield park open air theater tomorrow night wiil be sung by graduates of local high schools. These people have kept their interest in music and dramatics alive since their graduation and are confident that the operetta. will be successful enough to prove that Indi-
anapolis has sufficient native talent]
and skill to pr tainment. John are the only principals who 2re not | granduates of Indianapolis high schools. Mr. Welch, cast as the | general, came here five years | comptroller at Allisons. Miss |, as one of the major gen-| ghters, is a native of Ft tudying music at the Jor-| nservatory. Four From Technical schnical high school has four) appearing in the cast, (Moke) Davis as the pirate , Marv Guidone as another of the major general's daughters, Fred3. Winter as the sergeant of ice and Carol hator general's oldest daughter. T Thompson, cast as the mai d- of-all-work, and
oduce Its own enter-|
major
5g
le, another addition jor ger eral's bevy, are Shortridge graduates, Fred Koe-: hn “the pirate ‘apprentice, “Is a graduate of Manual Training high p
school.
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Rost Store Hours:
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Indiana's Leading Jewele
for Over 58 Years
i leaders in this convention. has not chosen to play the part to]
| Welch and Mary=Euphrat
Geisler as tholtliat
GET A
By EARL RICHERT Times Stafl Writer
' slight, FP. Schricker, “Schricker role” national convention here.
He's not making any statements,
{he's keeping out of smoke-filled | room deals on the vice presidential situation and he's even keeping his pictures out of the, papers pretty sticcessfully.
If anything happens at the Dem-| ocratic convention which will make campaign fodder, the]
Republican Republicans will have a pretty hard time tving it on to Mr. Schricker. As the only Democratic governor |
of a state in the Republican Mid-| he easily could be one of the] But he|
west,
which us [Position entitles him, “Average Delegate” In ont he is playing the part of |
an average delegate with only one-!
half of one vote.
(The governor is a delegate-at-the eight delegates-at- regardless of whether Dew ey sweeps| that eny Democrat to be elected in
as Henry indiana must get Republican votes. | significant that Mr. McHale an-
large and aree from Indiana have only onebalf of one vote apiece.) He's letting the honors go to the {man he appointed to the United | Stat es senate, Samuel D. Jackson of | "Ft. Wayne Senator Jackson, as permanent | chal recipient of the now-famous letter, from President Roosevelt on Henry
A. Wallace, is now a national char-| while ‘the man who made all
acter,
a ward chairman in Indianapolis, imsofar as national publicity goes. But that's all right with Mr. Schricker, That's the way he wants]
He js running for the United! States “senate. He hgs made it] pretty plain that that's all he!
|wantg and he intends to be. ected. |
Mondays, 12 to 9 — Tuesdays to Fridays, 9 to 5:15 — Saturdays, 9 to I.
NIN
FOR
re
CHICAGO, July 20. — Indiana's 135-pound governor, Henry is playing a typical at the Democratic
*
Indiana. He's runnin |Schricker and not as the man who 'simply happens to be the U. 8: !senate nominee on ticket.
THE IbraxsPOLE TIMES
GRADUATES HERE Schricker Keeps Offstage of Chicago in Bid for GOP Vote HEAD OPERETTA
Seaman 2-C Bill Owens (left) of Bloomington, Ind., and John Rawlings (right), also of Bloomington, introduce a nautical note into the Chicago convention proceedings as they chat with Governor Henry Schricker at Indiana headquarters.
“Most pbservers regarded it as
3 STATES ANNOUNCE
ELECTION RESULTS
B- UNITED PRESS Tate returns from Tuesday's primary elections in three states de-
“lcided all contests today, with all
incumbents renominated in Arizona and Leif Erickson, 38-year-old state supreme court justice conceded the Democratic gubernatorial nomination ii Montana, while in Wyoming, Charles E. Norris, of Laramie, won the Democratic nomination for congress, the ouly contest in the election. Senator Carl Hayden, who has served: in congress ever since Arizona became a state, polled 29,327 votes to the win the renomination by a 2-to-1 margin and Reps. John Murdock and Richard Harless received 29,414 and 26,910 votes respectively to win by a wide margin Governor Sidney P. Osborn polied 34,797 votes to win renomination by a 3-to-1 margin over his nearest opponent. Jerrie Lee won the Republican gubernatorial nomination. Both Austin Middleton and former Governor Roy E. Ayres, con-
The governor obviously is doing nounced that he himself would ceded.the Democratic gubernatorial
| Some one made the rather un-| election.
kind remark that he was w ondering|
‘he was running on the Republican {or Democratic tieket. But that's not the right way to! analyze it. The governor is a bon al
intend to do) his Repub-| their!
ocrat, but he doesn't anything that will keep lican friends from scratching | tickets for him. Some of Senator Jackson's friends are saying that the senator; { who is the Democratic g ubernajorial nominee in Indiana, should be fol-
lowing in the governor s footsteps—|
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This was shown by the re-elec-
naa of 1 1 ctions whethe: rman of the convention and from the governors action Ton here yesterday of Democratic would carry more weight if the { National Committeeman 3 Frank Mc- |
Hale.
While Mr. McHale still is a major | possible might just as well be: fide Democrat, running as a Dem- power im the Democratic party in
Indiana, his enemies are legion and there were several of these on the Indiana delegation who believed that this was the time to “unhorse” Mr, McHale, They went to the> governor with this idea in ‘mind, according to their own reports, and the governor told them in effect that ‘he did not want anything done that would rock the
3 boat. They accepted the governor's
viewpoint and voted for Mr. McHale again. ] One district chairman told news-
papermen that he would resign “if | {the convention.
he ever found Frank McHale run-
ning the Democratic party in Indi- | ana again.”
. Democratic, €verything possible to keep from place in nomination the name of causing any scars before the fall [Paul V. McNutt for the vice presi-
dency. They felt that the nomination
nomination were made by the governor of Mr. McNutt's home state, especially since Mr. Schricker hap. pens to be the chairman of the Indiana delegation. The governor's views on the McNutt candidacy were ‘made obvious by his announcement at the caucus that the delegates under his chairmanship -would vote their own wishes. ‘ The-Schricker-Jackson crowd is known to feel that Mr. McNutt's name on the national ticket would cost the party thousands of votes in
| the state this fall. Mr. McHale intends to nominate | Mr. McNutt at tonight's session of His nominating
| speech is being written by Harold
Brewers’ association,
Feightner, secretary of the Indiana |
{nomination in Montana to Erickson,
perfected, by a dentist, called Sters-Kleen that thoroughly cleans false teeth ithour harmiul brushing! Simply put a little Stera-Kleen Powder in o
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who held a lead of more than 6000 over Middleton, his closest rival, Republican Governor Sam C. Ford won renomination by & 6-to-1 margin. Montana had no senatorial contest this year and both incumbent Democratic congressmen were unopposed for renomination.
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THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1044
ACTRESS GOING .JNDER KNIFE HOLLYWOOD, July 20 (U. Po Actress Anne Shirley today will undergo a serious abdominal operation at Good Samaritan hospital, where
she has been under observation for
20 days.
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