Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 December 1944 — Page 6

PAGES...

r—DANCE—

Every Tues., Fri, Sat, Sun,

CRYSTAL PALACE

729 N. ILLINOIS ST.

Admission 600 (Inel. Tax)

Dance the Old Year Out The New Year In ~

SUNDAY NIGHT

5 Fk Adm. $150 Inc. Tax—Favors

BILL STAFFORD

and His Orchestra

————

CHICAGO, Dec. 28 (U. P.) ~Ca nation wil face a meat famine like

cattle; The warning was Yoic ed by cat officials.

gan, assistant chief of the food price | division, and Arval Erickson, direc- | tor of .the meat price division They discussed the advisability of | ‘on the hoof” ceilings. I Madigan

“The boys in Europe don’t have to dream of a fight Christmas... it's a reality.”

Incidentally . . . speaking of reality

"The color-tones of the new TRANSPARENT dental materials are so cleverly and artistically treated that the result is one of realism never thought possible in artfficial dentures only a few years ago. So why continue to dream of better appearance, greater personality and a smile of charm. Make it a reality by phoning FR-0135 for an appointment to see what modern dental science can do for

OFFICE HOURS Mondays—12:15 to 8:45 p. m. i

3 n{ Wednesdays— | : 8:30 a. m. to 1 p. m.

Other Days— 8:30 a. m. to 5:30 p. m.

Brod DENTISTS inc.

206 KRESGE BLOC. S.W Cor Pern & Wash. Sts. FRO/3S ~ qRUSTED BY THOUSANDS gg pptipnyy.,

“RAINBOW ISLAND"

refused to discuss the] “lby the OPA reportedly includes a

| meat markets were closed because

| until tomorrow, | meeting at Kansas City today.

| not” proposing any increase in re-

| and that New York butchers would ' be able to “get beef-and sell it with-

| a price ceiling on live cattle would

| Most of them believed any ceiling

{ ASSN, | farmers, | liquidate their | as they did their hogs last year, if a _ | ceiling is put on,

Meat Famine Threat Seen In'Low Ceiling on Live Beef

ttle producers warned today that the | nothing this country has seen before |

tlemen following a ‘meeting of OPA | ‘ | Among them were John J. Madi, results of the meeting, except to|

say that the

[ “some effective control”

| tle prices.

| Hints 17!y-Cent Ceiling

OPA will propose of live cat-

The schedule under consideration

top ceiling of 17; cents per pound | {and an increase from $1.10 to $1.60 ‘on the subsidy paid to packers for fed cattle, The meeting of cattlemen and OPA officials was held several weeks ahead of schedule, as “meat holiday” in|

yesterday,

a result of the New York City. In that city, 34 per cent of the the butchers assertedly cannot get meat for prices that will allow them to operate at a profit. Madigan said the OPA proposal would nat be released to the public following a similar

He said the OPA “definitely Is

tail or wholesale ceiling prices on| cattle but that he believed the meat industry in New York would be “stabilized” by the proposed plan

in ceiling: prices.” But livestock men doubted that

send any more meat into New York.

would reduce beef production. H. M. Conway, research director of the National Livestock Producers which represents 500,000 said producers would half-fed cattle, just!

and that there will be an extreme scarcity of half-

we PLUS ee

“Soul of a Monster”

SRR

. “ARSENIC & OLD LACE”

‘Rainbow Island

Ee

“RAINBOW ISLAND" vee PLUS me “Nine Girls”

“MARINE RAIDERS”

quality beef. Open 10 ” os 22¢ 7 BANS) Plus Tax RAS J ) 4 First Indianapolis Showing Lyle Talhot—Helen Vinson

“ARF THESE OUR PARENTS?” Ann Corio “CALL OF THE JUNGLE”

At Keith's

if the office of price administration clamps a low ceiling price on ive Hw

Z

Frank Parrish (above) will appear with Harry Bason on Keith's stage today through Sunday.

Lyric Star

Alan Ladd plays. the leading role in “And Now .Tomorrow” at the Lyric.

Open 10 THI 2e : ALAMD Plus Tax |

First Indianapolis Showing Tex Ritter, “Gangsters of Frontier” Andrews Sisters “Moonlight & Cactus” “Mystery of the River Boat” News

“Swing in "the Saddle”

108% VIRGINIA AVE

TONITE

aa. ites 266 Tx [| rim win @ 353 ie 6 256 Tax | R Rogers SONNY PAULETTE “SAN FERNANDO TUFTS ® GODDARD ”» 9 VALLEY ‘I Love a Soldier

PLUS M L " ruin Torey “3 Little Sisters

MIDNITE SHOWS

SAT. NITE and NEW YFAR'S EVE

Sewart “THE GREAT MIKE”

#14275 JRAINBOW ISLAND’ “MIDNITE SHOWS

SAT, NITE and NEW YEAR'S FVE

Neighborhood Theater Directory EAST SIDE NORTH SIDE

™ ‘ Holly wood 15% Roosevelt © EMERSON, 7. “uss | Wayne Morris “BROTHER or

Cary Grani—John Garfield Sidney Teler “BLACK MAGIC”

owen Gala New Year's Eve | i

Ih DANCE

. Sun, Eve., Dec. 31 OP. M.tol AL M.with

Swing Music at Its Best Featuring the

HOOSIER SERENADERS

Plus

FLOOR SHOW |

with WIBC JAMBOREE

Tickets Now at Murphy's Advance, $1.00, Tax Ine, At Door, $1.25, Tax Ine.

| TOMLINSON HALL }

id

« | “DESTINATION TOKYO”

Joan Leslie—Dennis Morgan

“THE HARD WAY" DIV BIGGEST BEST

Stratfo Coll. Joel McCrea

“BANTO ON MY KNEE" “MY BEST GAL” Bist & Northwestern Martha Scott “HI DIDDLE DIDDLE" Dead End Kids “GHOSTS on the LOOSE” And "BATTLE OF THE MARIANAS"

(CINEMA 16th and Open Patty

Joyce Reynolds Robt. Hutton

Jane Withers

REX

Delaware 1:30 P.

“JANIE”

Bonita Granville—Kent Smith

“YOUTH RUNS WILD"

“Tonite Thru Sunday

Plus Tax ® 25c¢ 5:45 to 6 Lana James TURNER CRAIG

" “MARRIAGE IS A PRIVATE AFFAIR”

Laraine & Alan Marsha DAY” MARSHALL HUNT

. “BRIDE BY MISTAKE”

SHERIDAN

COME EARLY -— OPEN 6:15 Cary Grant—Prisellla Lane

“ARSENIC & OLD LACE” Laray. “BIG NOISE” IR. Cartoon Riol-News 5000

116 Wash,

19th Barb. Stanwyek |

Ann Sheridan—-Dennis Morgan

“Shine On, Harvest Moon”

Humphrey Bogart—Claude Rains =] | | 1 |

oc %8th and Central

Th HELD OVER . iinay

Laraine Day-—Alan Marshall “BRIDE BY MISTAKE"

“Passage to Marseille”

- ph pe > = i PARKER 0, o% & E. 10th 6:45 6300 Irving Berlin's Technicolor Hit!

“THIS IS THE ARMY"

Robt. Henry—Stuart Erwin “THE GREAT MIKE”

~ TAcoMA Maz E Wash. $4.”

Gene Kelly—Frank Sinatra 30th & Illinois “STEP LIVELY’ TA-7400 Constance Bennett—Roland Young

Ginger Rogers ;..- “TENDER COMRADE"

Eddie Cantor—Geo. Murphy

“SHOW BUSINESS’

“TOPPER TAKES A A TRIP E. Wash, st

Paramount 04h»

Jobn Garficld—Pau) Henrelid “BETWEEN TWO WORLDS"

QUALITY FURS AT LOWER PRICES

Ann Miller “JAM SESSION" 2116

WEST SIDE nial — — STATE ‘I Joi Te “SO PROUDLY WE BAIL" . Plus Selected Short Subjects

|OLD TRAIL™ 7, Tub

- GOODNIGHT, SWEETHEART “OH, WHAT A NIGHT” BELMONT roi we™ Thru Saturday “I LOVE A SOLDIER" “BRIDE BY MISTAKE" "

DAIRY - io W. Michiges DAISY igen Andrews Sisters—Leq Carrillo

TON E 10th PARKING Edw. G. Robinson—Richard Arlen DONC THe Cran ile RVING ECTS (TL TTRACITTT | MARRIAGE privaTe Araig

“TIGER SHARK” 3 EEOO BE WASHINGTON Leraine JAY ALANMARSHALL

“MOONLIGHT & CACTUS" LL FRY 5 Ann Savage “PASSPORT 10 SUEZ” Laraine Day

MECCA . 3 Merle Oberon Speedway Alan M sranant N. Noble Geo. Sandérs “BRIDE BY “MISTAK

“THE LODGER" “MY AL WoL,

Laurel & Hardy “JITTERBUGS" «NO NORTH SIDE _SOUTH SIDE ___ TALBOTT

Talbott at 204 OF TH

“BIRTH E BLUES” “ARSENIC AND "oD “LACE”

Una OC onnor

“Chip Off the Old Block” “Raiders of Sunset Pass”

1531 8. East MA-3252 Fred MacMurray—~Dorothy Lamour “AND THE ANGELS SING" Richard Arlen “TIMBER QUEEN"

VY gy lesa we ara 4

py 5 Co.

(at il] ACA) LR LAI 3 OHIO 51

Rl pte)

Times Amusement

Clock

OPENING TODAY

KEITH'S On stage, “Good News of 1045," at 147 419, 6:51 and 9:23 ' “Sing, Neighber, Sing,” with Roy Acuff, at 12:15, 2°47, 5:19, 7:51 and 10 23% CURRENT FEATURES INDIANA “Winged Victory,” with Lon Me-

Callister and Jeanne Crain, at 11, 1 46, 4:30, 7:10 and 9:50

LYRIC “And Now Tomorrow.” with Alan

Ladd and Loretta Youn at 11:49, 1.43 3.57, 6.01, 8.05 ar Wd 10.09.

LOEW'S “Kismet,” with Ronald Colman and Marlene Dietrich, at 12:40, 3:45° 6:50 and 9:58 “Shadows in the Night,” with Warner Baxter, at 11:30, 2:35, 5:40 and 8.48.

CIRCLE “Tall in the Saddle,’ Wayne and Ella en, 3.55, 7:05 and 10:20 “Atlantie City,” with Constance Moore and Brad Taylor, at 11:15, 2:30, 5:40 and 8:55

with John at 12.45,

Poll Taken on Symphony Lights)

People prefer to listen to the music of the Indianapolis symphony orchestra in darkness.

At least that is the result to date]

{in the poll taken by Fabien Sevit-

Lzky, orchestra conductor, on whether

patrons prefer the auditorium lights on or off during the subscription concerts, So’ far the vote is 39 for “off” and 11 for “on. Mr. Sevitzky will abide by the decision of the majority of votes mailed to him at the Murat and postmarked before noon Wednesday Only season ticket owners are qualified to vote. The next pair of subscription concerts will be Jan. 6 and 7 If there should be a tie in the voting when the polls close, Mr. Sevitzky says he will alternate house lights “on” and “off” for the remainder of the season. Several season ticket owners who voted for lights off said there is too much powdering of noses when the

£ lights are on.

'BLOSSOM TIME' DUE AT ENGLISH'S JAN. 17

Mail orders are now being received a’ the English theater for Franz Schubert's operetta, “Blossom Time,” coming to the theater Jan. 17. Presented by Lee and J. J. Shubert, the operetta will include in its cast Ruth Gillette, Earl Covert, William Marel, Peggy O'Neil, Zella Russell, Harry K. Morton, Edmund Dorsay and | Victor Morley.

SINGERS ° TO FEATURE PROGRAM AT CHURCH

An hour's program of; spirituals, folk music and other songs will be presented by the Southern Harmonizers, a group of Negro singers. at 7:30 p. m, today in the Castleton Methodist church. The program is sponsored by the newly organized men’s group of the church. The Rev, Charles Tyler is pastor,

THURS. THRU SUN. T=

NAPPY NEW YEAR'S SHOW ON THE STAGE

LOODNEWS: QF 1945 ;

FRANK MARRY

PARISH & BASO

LYNDA, PANTO & MEMO 3, The 8 FRANCETTES (3

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMFS "Winged Victory’ at Indiana Tells Story of the Air Force

nS kr

“Winged Victory” is an appealing and intensely human story of . the,

men in the army air forces. It portrays incidents of their training and combat duty with poignant understanding. It opened yesterday at the Indi(ana, | Composed entirely of air force | personnel, the film is based on Moss

Hart's stage success of the same | Neets Hare." |

name. It begins in a small town in Ohio where three plane-struck kids

oa their eyes skyward every time]

{the planes roar by. They remind [you of the kids next door who imitate machine guns, except they're a little older, All the tests, both mental and | physical, that the air forces require of pilots, bombardiers and navigators are passed or flunked by the three pals. They are shown from the day they arrive at their first training camp to the day they graduate and receive their wings. But it isn't all airplanes and aptitude tests, There are the girls they left behind them, but most of all, the wives who came with them and lived in tourist camps and hotels so they could be together four hours a week. After graduation, the crew of the B-24 No. 554 meets their plane, “Winged Victory,” before the takoff from San Francisco for the South Pacific. On Christmas day the Japs bomb their island and one of the hometown boys is wounded. An-

but the third carries on. The cast includes Pvt. Lon McCallister, Jeanne Crain, Sgt. Edmond O'Brien, Jane Ball, Sgt. Mark. Daniels and Barry Nelson.

Chaplin's Blood Tests Pondered

HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 28 (U.P.).— Principals in Charlie Chaplin's paternity trial rested today while the

{jurors pondered the intricacies of { red blood corpuscles. |

They will hear more when the defense calls Dr. V. L. Andrews tomorrow as its final witness. Dr. Andrews will give the jury the third and final version of the blood tests which Chaplin contended proved his innocence of Joan Barry's charges that he is the father of her child. Attorney Joseph E. Scott, representing the plaintiff, said he would

briefly as a rebuttal witness, The jury is due to get the casa next week, after closing arguments Tuesday. Drs. Newton Evans and Roy W. Hammack gave their versions yes-

made last February. They left the

{way, the experts said, the results ruled out Chaplin as the father. When they did it again a differ-

he was. They testified, "however, that they, had full faith in the first method which said he wasn't.

other had been killed in training; .

call Miss Barry back on the stand]

terday of the blood tests which were

Jurors with plenty to ponder over. When they tested the samples one

ent way, the results said maybe,

Hip piers re

: _ THURSDAY, DEC. 28, 1944’

MATINEE DANCING SATURDAY, Dec. 30 — 3 to 5 PP. M.

Sandy Sandifer *° Orchestra

No Cover Charge

SAPPHIRE ROOM — Hotel Washington

The picture lasts about two hours, but so skillfully is it put together that the training scenes, which might be a little tedious, are com- | 'posed of just the right amount of humor and pathos. The time gues

by before you know it, and that's a pretty good indication that a film

has something to it. Bugs Bunny is featured in “Herr |

WEEK.

Pvt. lon McCollister - Jaonne Crain . Sgt. Edmond O'Brien « Jane Balt Sgt. Mark Daniels « Jo-Carroll Dennison Cpl. Don Taylor « Judy Hollidoy Cpl.Lee).Cobb«T/Sgt. Peter lind Hayes Cp. Alan Boxter X .

LORETTA

LADD * YOUNG ORO

Ja

M-G-M's

Thirty SECONDS OVER

Tokyo

A MERVYN LeROY PRODUCTION

with

VAN JOHNSON ROBERT WALKER

SPENCER ly

AS LIEUTENANT COLONEL JAMES H.DOOUTTLE Cor

THE LOVE STORY BEHIND CAPTAIN TED LAWSON'S. TRUE STORY!

PHYLLIS THAXTER « TIM MURDOCK + SCOTT McKAY - GORBON McDONALD - BON DeFORE - ROBERT MITCHUM - JORN R. REILLY HORACE MeNALLY

Screen Play by Dolton Trumbe «Based on the Book and Collier's Story by Captain Ted W. Lawson and Robert Considine A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Fidwte . Directed by MERVYN LeROY . Produced by SAM ZIMBALIST

LAST 2 DAYS. Ronald Colman Marlene Dietrich in "KISMET",

“SHADOWS IN

THE NIGHT” |

STARTS SATURDAY

LOEW'S

BUY ANOTHER WAR BOND AT LOEW'S

\Y

We.

w sh PRE. s/

I%e. RNERS or

" Jon MDGELY + JONN ALEXARDER 7 CRAIG , STEVENS « BARBARA BROWN + ALAN MOWBRAY

Howl-arious}

* JAMES V.

[

Min “Phill Rel Che *Tru Mur Schi Hor Res; Fee Leas Dr." Zon

*Plus Ta

*Plus Ta

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