Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 November 1944 — Page 27

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PRAYER

THURSDAY, NOV. 23

E11

LENSES REPLAGED BRING IV

QR. JO E. KERNEL

TRACTION TERMINAL BLDG.

Graham’s Old Inn

BEECH GROVE

DANCE

SATURDAY NIGHT to the Music of

GHARLEY SPOON

and His Orchestra

Admission 65¢ (Tax Ine.) Reservations, GA-0062—GA-5061 UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

z

, 1944 Brookside Club

Sponsoring Dance A CHRYSANTHEMUM DANCE

for high school boys and girls at |.

8 p. m. tomorrow at the Brookside park community center is being sponsored by the Brookside Mothers’ club. One of the features of the dance will be the choosing of the most popular “wall flower.” Music will be by Bob Baker's orchestra, The high school committee in charge includes, Norma Jane Roberts, Rose Lee Miles, Peggy Jo Beanblossom, Tom Payne, Jack Hereth and Tom Pollom.

STARTS TODAY!

IF.A GIRL WINKS—SHE, KISSES!

That's Gus Parkington's code BA “until he meets Susie! |”

GREER.

GARSON

6TH WAR LG nl

3 WALTER

PIDGEON

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EDWARD

ARNOLD

AGNES

MOOREHEAD

CECIL:

KELLAWAY

M-G-M PICTURE

Based on the novel by Louis Bromfield

Plus

Tete Smigp, Safety Sleuth»

May "cation “The B Bodyguarg»

Loew’ Ss News

BUY AN EXTRA BOND!

RAY MILLAND . LAST WR 8 A BRITTON 7#(

DANGEROUS MEN ...COME TOGETHER FROM THE ENDS OF, THE EARTH!

CORN LOANS SET “AT 90% PARITY

Schedule Expected to Range From 87 Cents to $1.12 A Bushel.

WASHINGTON, Nov. 23 (U. P.). —Economic Stabilization Director Fred M. Vinson yesterday directed the war food administration to establish a loan program on the 1944 corn crop at 90 per cent of parity in accord with recent legislative provisions. WFA is expected to announce a loan schedule by counties ranging from 87 cents to $1.12 a bushel, compared with a range on the 1943 crop of 81 cents to $101 a bushel, The national average will be 98 cents a bushel. Loans will be made by the Commodity Credit Corp. fyom Dec, 1 through May 31, 1945 to producers for corn stored on farms. Loan rates average lower in corn belt counties and higher at points outside the principal producing . area. The higher 1944 rates are the | result of a provision in the sta- | bilization extension act increasing government loans from 85 to 90 per cent of parity. Other details of the 1944 program are similar to the one in effect last year.

POLICE: UNIT TO MEET

The Ladies auxiliary to the Indianapolis police department will | meet at 2 p. m. Monday in rl auditorium of the L. S. Ayres & Co. store. Mrs. Donald Bushong, | president, will » Will preside.

Reserved Seats at $1.20

For the Remaining 4 Performances of

SONJA HENIE

In Person With Her Entirely New

HOLLYWOOD

ICE REVUE - TONITE Thru Nov, 26 at 8:30

NOW ON SALE COLISEUM BOX OFFICE Open Daily 10 A, M.-10 P. M, L. STRAUSS & 00. Box Office Open Weekdays During Store Hrs, }

Other Seats $3.00-$2.40-§1.80 Tax Included

COLISEUM-Indpls.

"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

~ Frolicsome Sa commis

Mrs. Ralph Carr and Miss Pat Carson are two members of the cast of the St. Philip “Minstrel Frolics” to be presented in the parish auditorium, 545 Eastern ave, at 8 p. m. next Wednesday, The November Circle of the Altar society is sponsoring the presentation.

BOND QUOTA TOPPED AT CURTISS-WRIGHT

Another large war plant, CurtissWright's propeller factory at 1231 W. Morris st.,, which has exceeded

every previous bond quota, has gone “over the top” again with 1128 per cent of its Sixth War Loan quota, campaign officials announced today. “The enthusiasm which workers show for the Sixth War Loan demonstrates clearly their realization that the materials of war must be -kept rolling to the battlefronts so long as the enemy continues to resist the forces of freedom,” J. Perry Meek, Marion county chairman of the war finance committee's payroll savirigs division, said. Mrs. I. Irving Newman, county chalrman of bond booth sales, said many of the women at downtown booths reported increased sales yesterday as pre-Thanksgiving shoppers stopped to make extra purchases of war bonds. Marion county's quota is $67,250,000.

PULITZER RELATIVE |

UTILITIES MERGER APPROVED BY PSC

Merger of Indiana & Michigan Electric Co. and Indiana General Service Co. was approved yesterday by the state public service commission, It must be approved also by the Michigan public service commission, securities and exchange Sompistion and the federal power commission. | Under the merger, Indiana &| Miehigan Electric Co., which serves | the South Bend- Elkhart area and Southern Michigan, takes over Indiana General Service Co, which has | headquarters at Muncie and Alex- | andria and serves northeastern Ini

diana with electricity and steam heat,

CLAIM THOUSANDS DIE IN VIENNA EPIDEMIC

ANKARA, Nov. 21 (Delayed) w.| P) Travelers reaching ho from the Balkans said today that mysterious epidemic has broken out in Vienna, killing thousands of persons in the refiigee:jammed Austrian capital and forcing the authorities to quarantine the entire city.

KILLED IN ACTION ©

NEW YORK, Nov. 23 (U. P)—| Pvt. William S. Moore Jr, of New York and Bar Harbor, Me, a nephew of Joseph Pulitzer, ae of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, was killed in action in France Nov. 11.| Mrs. William 8S. Moore, his mother, received war department notice of his death yesterday. Moore had been overseas since August. He had been in the army two years. He is survived by four brothers, Flight Officer Adrian K. Moore, Pvt. Richard Moore, Lt. David E. Moore and Clement OC. Moore of Greenwich, Conn.

XE THANKSGIVING GREETINGS TO YOU! LM) eT V | eZ

HR GIT RIF DARLING"

THEY SHARED A SECRET TOO, DANGEROUS TO

KNOW... A L

OVE

TOO EXN@ITING

TO LASTL

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Chorines in Paris Theater Strike

PARIS, Nov. 23 (U, P.).—Shivering and shaking in their scanties, Paris chorus girls yesterday threatened to strike—or put on more clotheg—unless the city's music halls turn on the heat, In some theaters there is heat for the stars but the rest of the dressing rooms, and the theaters themselves, are somewhere around freezing. “We have to work for 150 francs ($3) in these conditions and if we catch cold and miss work we get fired,” said a saucy little chorine spokesman, As an alternative to strike, the

chorines said they'd put on mare | clothes for their acts, a. thought which horrified the theater man- |

agers, who invisioned icicles forming on box office windows,

-— (Gu wm ew S—

A IFIRST ON OF A.

oor

Cold) Preparations asidirecied

VETERANS’ GROUP SETS [INSTALLATION

Newly elé¢cted officers of the Lukas-Harold Ex-Service Men's association will be installed at the Antlers hotel Dec. 11. They are: E. E. Denari, commander; Charles Kirkpatrick, first vice commander; E. L. Beard, second vice commander; W. K. Brown, treasurer; Patrick J, O'Neill, secretary; Grantly Manual, judge advo-

|cate; Ray Wall, quartermaster; Lt,

Cmdr. M. K. Coleman, chaplain;

500 other MONAROW Foods~—all Just as Good!

PAGE 27 | Barney McCoy and M. A. Pastry, rustees. Elected for anidbhes rm - trustees were Cecil Thomas, Ray Spreckelsen

| Von and Ralph Whit ake,

QUALITY FURS, AT LOWER PRICES>

STYLED 1945

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