Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 April 1945 — Page 20

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 2

DIVORCEE DENIES ‘|granddaughter of the late humorist] The - 18-year-old actress dented |

Irvin 8. Cobb, today held an un-[reports she would marry Ransome Indian Fi MATURE ‘ROMANCE contested divorce from Naval Lt |actor Victor Mature, who has b a m ‘ Epic of Air

LAS VEGAS, Nev, April 26 (U.|Gregson Bautzer, former Hollywood here for several weeks on es P.).—Patricia + Chapman Bautzer,|attorney, on charges of cruelty. from the coast guard. { The pioneer saga of the Flying Tigers, who blazed world war II sky

{trails with machinegun bullets be[fore the U. S. was officially in the ay, is recorded on the Indiana (screen this week. | These boys were hopping moun[tain humps back in the early days when pilots needed more than good ships and aerial skill to survive. | That's why Col. Robert L. Scott ‘called his autobiography * ‘God Is My 'Co-Pilot.” One of the top Tigers,| Merle Oberon plays the strongScott thought his plane was graced| Willed Madame George Sand in with the presence of the Almighty.| the technicolor film, “A Song to And well he might. For in downing | Remember,” at Loew's. 13 Nip ships without a setback, Scott won the title of America’s first ace in world war IL

In Jordan Ballet

GREED, HATE and MURDER hang like an CRN RCL LUIGI swamps of this [CY ETI

Mary Sue McCarty and Joseph Foerderer dance the *“Coppelia Ballet” in Jordan conservatory’s spring concert.

THE “COPPELIA BALLET" will be featured in the annual spring

concert’ of Jordan conservatory at 8:30 p. m. Saturday in Scottish Rite cathedral. Among the principal characters are Joanna Jennings, Kay Kelly, Florence Davis, Joseph Foerderer, Murder in the Blue Room.» wih Sharon Cahill, Jane Sisson, Rob= ott was in this| 1318 2:38 4:30, 7:30 and 10:01. ert Smith, Mary Sue McCarty (injustice. Scot S D INDIANA apd and Shirley Stonebreaker. | category, “God Is My Co-Pilot,” vith ig si Thirty-seven dancers, including

M t 11:45, 1:55, His earlier exploits as an army and "10°10, Lio 4 Miss Eileen Poston of the Jore dan faculty, will participate in

flier and mail pilot are faithfully set “Frisco Sal,’ bl Poster er, ’ {forth, with - Dennis Morgan doing Alan Curtis and Turhan Bey, at the ballet, also called “The Girl {the characterizing. The picture] 12:35 3:44, 8:53 and 10:02. With the Enamel Eyes.” isn’t riddled with love, melodrama ‘The = Great =Flamarion.” - with Directed by Victor Kolar, the Jordan conservatory symphony orchestra will play for the cone

i Erich Strohei d Mary land such,” 16 leaves the simple but rich von roheim an ary Beth cert, which is free to the public.

Hughes, at 11:17, 2:26, 5:35 and 8:44. important message that an aviation INDIANA ov svowi

Times Amusement

The film, adapted from Col. Clock | Scott's best seller, hews closely to i LOEW'S a |the story of how he ‘went to war Merle ob Tan mer as a free-lancer after the air force 11:46, 2:14, 4:42, a 12 and 9:45. [tried to ground htm as an instructor.

fA FRANCHOT THOMAS™ | | | Too old, they said, But every now land then there appears a truly fear-

GLOBIN

Dank Wales

FART EE RU

TTR HORA]

So ELIA

TERN CER REET

KEITH'S Stage, “Hip ip Hooray, ” at 1:38, 3:59, 6:30 and 9

Eve he saturday from ST s most Charles g Laughton and Ella Raines, at 12:40, 3,60, 7 and 10:10.

“She Gets Her Man,” with Joan Davis, at 11:30, 2:35, 5:45 and 8:55,

CIRCLE |career is drama in the raw. “The Suspect.” with And the legend of the Flying Tigers didn’t: require any artificial Hollywood thrills.

It's War, Not Peace in Frisco Sal’

In “Frisco Sal,” Susanna Foster; choir singer who hikes out for the | goes to San Francisco not to make | Barbary ‘Coast. There she learns|

arnson and Marian Cock

MARJORIE elle * CHARLIE id FAY BAINTER « HELEN BRODERICK

ARTHUR LAKE *

HATTIE McDANIEL

and the Sweethearts of “Stage Door Canteen”

LAST DAY! “THE SUSPECT” & “SHE GETS HER MAN”

| peace but to start a private war. | She is hot on the trail of the var- | mint who supposedly murdered her | brother in a poker game, 8 | That's the condition that pre!vails at the Lyric this week. It's | surprising too when you realize Sal is a winsome sort of gal with a real pal in Turhan (The Face) Bey. The two make such a lovely couple, but it all comes out thunder.

how to smoke, dance and do other | things. She is finally reduced to singing such ditties as “Good Lit tle, Bad Little Lady,” and “Be-| loved.” That's California for you.! Major clue in Sal's search for her brother's slayer is a dish composed of roast duck stuffed with oranges. | That, so the script tells us, is what her brother craved. At this point the audience suspects he actually committed suicide instead of gete

l Miss Foster is a New England| ting himself murdered.

~ Howl 000,000 Ex-Servicemen Can Show the San ¥ rancisco Conference The The Way to to Win World Peace:

FOREWORD: Today, the delegates to the World Security Conference are in session at Sam Francisco, in an aliempt to securs ‘peace in our time.” But 90 Svatr decisions or agreements they

may make among themselves, world Wa dhe be cami by factors beyond their contro

Joators Which oe in the hands of the rs

Rr ho Every American owes it to himself 0 read Sha folowing

President, Bowes “Seal Fast” Corporation

Indianapolis 7, Tudiasa, USA.’

E the delegates to the World Security Conference read America’s free press this morning, they must have been handed some surprises.

The war is going well on all fronts—except the American home front, where the war's whole outoome hangs in the "balance.

Management, blinded by being sought after to supply things, is day-dreaming about postwar.

Deliberate and shocking strikes, stoppages and slowdowns have brought into sharp focus the fallacy of the manpower shortage:

The promise of “60 million peace-time Jobs” is shaping up as the political campaign slogan i 1s.

American business and industry are in the nutcracker between Labor and Management, with Government applying the pressure.

Delegates: Please realize, here and now, that world peace and security will not be won—in our time or an any other time—unless American business and industry can squirm out of the vise and go to work.

th Goons Labor versus Stubborn Management, with Government applying the pressure. Is that all there 1s to the 60 million peace-time Jobs the politicians are talking about?

Not by a long shot. Under the American system neither Labor, nor Management, nor Government itself could get anywhere, be anything, without the ingredient that makes every job in America possible: SELLING.

If American business and industry are allowed 0

. * go to work and sell, we'll pull the world out of * the woods—into the sunshine and the clearing,

“If American business and industry do mot or cannot SELL, a world-wide catastroph® 1s in the making,

» . » . WORLD SECURITY DELEGATES PLEASE COPY: Unless

American national income 18 maintained at un-

precedented time levels by unprecedented Ne SELLT ING, America will go broke—

and we will drag the rest of the world down with us.

That's how jinpoptans SELLING is, in the coming worl » . . It is fondly Set only by Washington but by certain highly placed business executives

* who ought to know better—that postwar selling

is going to be a lead-pipe cinch.

Wah bo look, they say: The public now Desde Se rare The publie has soaked awa billions in nds and oth her savings. a fore the public bar rush out automatically, with. out any urging, and spend these billions in one

More: This ds the first of a Frock al new series o diertissmontt a

i erly

ut charge. 1

grand shopping spree, as soon as postwar comes and Management and Labor can make the goods. Returning servicemen? Unemployment relief? Oh, sure. But only temporanly. With all those needs, and all that spending, # million jobs will come as easily as rolling off a log.

Common sense indicates that this kind of fuzzy ‘thinking is likely to be fatal.

In the first place, it is people’s wanis—not their “fieeds”— wants are created only by selling.

In the second place, read this quotation from a

U.S. Chamber of Commerce Bulletin:

“We will have 19 million unemployed persons by 1946, if the war is over and i achieve a level of business activity no higher than in 1940 . . . To provide relief at only $2 per day for this number of unemployed persons would involve a public cost of 14 billion dollars a year—or twice our pre-war national budget for all federal governmental activities, including relief. To provide work relief might cost twice that figure, or 25 to 30 billion dollars a year: Obviously, there is no substitute for employment in private industry.”

Read that last sentence again: “Obviously, there is no substitute for employment in private industry.”

In other words, relief and boondoggling will only put us further in the red.

What about those 60 million jobs now?

How can 60 million jobs be created except by private industry? :

Can they be created by the Government? The Government has not a dollar of its own.

The Government gets all its money from taxes paid by the people—who in turn get their money from jobs in business and industry.

To re-build this war-torn world, to develop new trade routes, new markets, to turn into money the discoveries which float from our laboratories, American business and industry must go pack to work—making goods and SELLING em.

And the selling must be given new life, new snap, new get-up-and-go, by a million or so ex-service-men who come home looking for some of those 60 million fobs that were promised them in Washington.

. . . *

During the war, selling got soft and flabby in the underbelly.

Ww Overstuffed pay envelopes, unsatisfied wants and critical shortages have debased our pre-war “selling game” to an order-taking routine.

Therefore, the challenge of full employment in private industry—of creating those 60 million peace-time jobs with a minimum of Government relief—dethands (1) a let-up in Government pressure on business oy industry; (2) a thorough overhauling of American selling methods.

This means .tratned men. Scientific sales engineering, instead of wasteful hit-or-miss peddling. More orders per selling man hour.

It means hard-hitting, two-fisted salesmen, who can sell at a fair profit—to get a fair price with which to pay fair wages and salaries to Labor and Management, and taxes to Government.

»

rite to Robert M.

»

-

t must be met and satisfied. et

Deiiiis Morgan

DANE CLARK:- RAYMOND MASSEY

She shocked the world's most shameless spot!

SANNA FOSTER

ERICH VON STROHEIM

which is another way of saying that we don’t sell goods because we have national income; we have national income because we sell goods.

This is the basic answer io the whole worldsecurity riddle.

Following World War I, my company devised a plan to train ex-servicemen of that war for peacetime selling jobs.

* They took to itlike ducks to water. No wonder.

They were eager, “snxione--with the burning desire to do things.

Through the years, we added vast improvements to our plan. We incorporated in it the best thinking from other sburces. Today we have a sales training method which works better than any other method we know of. It gives sure, practical results.

We are now devoting this method to ex-service-men of World War 11, who are looking for some of those 60 million jobs.

But eventually we want to place this vastly improved sales training method at the disposal of every employer, every labor or service organization, every ndimdual in America who has the future of our country at heart.

x * $0

In making such an offer now, we believe we will be giving the World Security delegates “‘something to write home about”—a better understanding of what makes America tick, and whot they must help America do, so that America can help the world get back on 118 feet.

So, with the World Security delegates looking, 80 to speak, ‘over our shoulder, here is our offer to ‘every American who reads this advertisement:

1. If you are an employer: Write us, and we will tell you about our sales Jraininglonnals, 80 you can put it to use in your own business

L If you are the mother, father, or friend of a serviceman: Write me where I can reach him, and I will send him full information on how to ualify for a sales job when he returns to civilian life. 3 If youarea leader in business or industry: Send for reprints of this advertisement and. post them on your bulletin boards where everyone in your organization can see them. Mail them to your friends and business assoMall | Help me to give the widest possible circula~ tion to this Great Truth: That peace and security in our time cannot come, until and unless America aoes to work and SELLS.

. * . .

A FINAL WORD TO THE WORLD SECURITY DELEGATES: Today, in San Francisco, you are dealing with the men who are frying to run this country. You are not dealing; directly, with the American public.

But never forget this: American public opinion is still the strongest force in the world today. Stronger than our Congress. Stronger than our Statesmen or our elected Officials. No matter what you decide at your meetings—we the American people will still have a direct voice in world affairs. We intend to see that American business and industry are allowed to build re-employment to an unprecedented peak. Only the selling of ay and services, to your people and to our own people, can possibly do the Job,”

»

ppearing in newspapers and business magazines throughout oes; Bowes “Seal Fast” Corporation, Indianapolis 7, fu,

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z Great Flamarion ENGLISH ™, 5s

MATINEE SAT.

The Celebrated International Star In Her First Local Appearance

Revie

TT LIAL [LT with JOEL ASHLEY and N. Y. Cast

EVES.: $1.20, $1.80, $2.40, $3.00, $3.60 SAT MAT.: $1.20, $1.80, $2.40, $3.00 INCLUDING TAX

SEATS NOW ON SALE

Matinee Dancing

Saturday, April 28, 3 to 3*P. M.

SANDY SANDIFER

ORCHESTRA

No Cover Charge

SAPPHIRE ROOM

ARATE

r * " PETE SMITH SPECIALTY,

“HOLLYWOOD SCOUT”,

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Jum PARADE “> oy LIKE * RAN™ Zo Loris SE EVES Eon FVM o(

DIRECT WIRE ‘ FREM YWIBG ' NEWSROOM 5

Betty Sonny

UPTOWN Ee

HUTTON TUFTS

“HERE COME THE WAVES”

Tito Gulzar “BRAZIL” “HERE COME THE WAVES”

we Plug ee

“Strange Affair”

“BOWERY TO BROADWAY”

ee PIAS wr?

. “The Singing Sheriff”

ADULTS Phu 8:45 Til 8 296 Tas

DEANNA DURBIN

104% VIRGINIA AVE.

Now Thru Wed. ® ROBT. PAIGE

CAN'T HELP SINGING

IN TECHNICOLOR

PLUS JAMES LYDON, “WHEN THE LIGHTS GO ON AGAIN"

Rogers “MEET "MISS BOBBY SOCKS"

\ mor WBRAZILY

“CRY OF WEREWOLF” : SMILEY BURNETYE “CALL OF ROCKIES”

NORTH SIDE

OPEN 10 Tu ELT A ! : 1 wt PALETTE © VERA TIE * SOLEAT LITOY

bier BASILE on me

er Morris—Janls Carter “, ONE MYSTERIO 8 NIGHT" “Brenda, Star Reporter’ —News

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Stratior

CINEMA =» and Open Daily Delaware 1:30 P. M Edw. G. Robinson—Joan Bennett

‘WOMAN IN THE WINDOW’

Tom Conway—Veda Ann Borg

‘FALCON IN HOLLYWOOD’ | TALBOTT nia

Thru Saturday Mickey Rooney—Jackie Jenkins “NATIONAL VELVET” in Color REX no Northwestern Preston Foster “Roger Touhy, Gangster” Rosalind Russell “Take a Letter, Darling”

5th and: Central Rita Hayworth—Gene Kelly “COVER GIRL"

Warner Baxter—Nina Foch “SHADOWS 1 IN 1 THE NIGHT”

VOGUE "Colles at 63rd

Free Parking Lot Van Johnson—Lionel Barrymore “THREE MEN IN WHITE’ Kay Kyser * “CAROL. INA BLUES”

19th & Erie Portman College Ann Dvorak “ESCAPE TO DANGER” Harriett Hilliard “TAKE IT BIG»

Neighborhood Thogtor Directory

EAST SIDE « TUXEDO “ fim ™ Veronica Lake—Fredric March

“I MARRIED A WITCH” Jy KE © OF Wi WEST _POINT”

PARKER 7, Vo a E. 10th 6:45 5200 | Pred MacMurray “DOUBLE INDEMNITY" Betty Huyton ‘Miracle of Morgan's Creek’

30th & Illinois TA-7400

James Hedy STEWART ® LAMARR @ HUNTER “COME LIVE WITH ME” Chas, Joan Chas. BOYER FONTAINE COBURN “THE CONSTANT NYMPH"

THE SHOW YOU'VE DREAMED ABOUT!

ROSS SCOTT {f & GRANT -

THE BURVEDELLS BOB DEARBORN | RENALD & RUDY LES LaMAR {305 & POPPY CY LANDRY . da THE SCREEN

MURDER, m»

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COME EARLY—DOORS OPEN 6: 15 Gary Cooper—Ingrid Bergman

“For Whom the Bell Tolls”

"” Sensational “THE ENEMY STRIKES Color Cartoon—Late News

3155 E. iO + « PARK FREE TONIGHT, 5:45 to 6-—30e¢ rontie @ rrivor @ suimier “MURDER, MY SWEET” Lum ’n’ Abner owns “GOIN' TO TOWN”

Plus! A New and Entirely Different

“CARTOON CARNIVAL”

40 ¢ Revival Minutes of Fun With Donald Duck, Li'l Abner Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig

A —— A EMERSON 5%. J % Rita H th 4 ” ts Hayworth COVER GIRL

Pat 0’ ‘Brien—Carole Landis “SECRET COMMAND?’

Plus! “A CARTOON REVUE" 4 Revival Minutes of Fun With Donald Duck, Pluto, Bugs Bunny, Li'l Abner

SHERIDAN 0%, 2% E. Wash. FIRST IRVINGTON SHOWINGS Humphrey Bogari—Lauren Bacall

“TO HAVE & HAVE NOT”

TX ml wrear nn 1502 Roosevelt Hollywood ne “PORT OF FORTY THIEVES" “A WAC, WAVE AND A MARINE"

WEST SIDE a SPEEDWAY ii hea

“SUNDAY DINNER FOR A SOLDIER” “THE FIGHTING LADY” in Color

DAISY “J Judes

Anne Baxter—John Hodiak “SUNDAY DINNER FOR A SOLDIER” “THE F FIGHTING LADY" in Color

BE-0004 Bob Crosby ‘MEET MISS BOBBY SOCKS’ “LAKE PLACID SERENADE”

ST TE Jas. Mason nen: Carla Lehman “CANDLELIGT IN ALGERIA” Barton Mi MacLane ‘° “THE UNDERDOG"

BELMONT pow, s Woh “LAKE PLACID SERENADE" Elyse Knox “WAC, WAVE & RINE"

SOUTH SIDE 1681 8 Vast

MAaN ENGAGEMENT! , Sereén and Ri

HSTAGE DOOR GANTEEN"

|GARFIELD 7%. = LT

Johnn ” or “FUN TIME Plus! “A CARTOON REVUE" 40 Revival Minutes of Fun With Donald Duck, Goofy, Bugs Bunny, Li'l Abner

PARAMOUNT ;; \i2 es Jas. Dunne—~Wanda McKay

“LEAVE IT TO THE IRISH" “ARE THESE OUR PARENTS?”

Ronald Colman-—Marigne Dietrich “KISMET” in Technicolor Andrews Si Sisters “ “SWINGTIME _ JOHNNY"®

MECC A 733 Joan Fontaine N. Noble Orson Welles “JANE E” Noah Beery, Jr. * "cALABOOSE?

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WHINE

CLAUDETTE PAULETTE SONNY VERONICA

COLBERT-GODDARD-TUFTS-LAKE

HELTAH ~ SUBURBAN ’ oh 1/4 ULI

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