Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 October 1948 — Page 5
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‘That Certain Party’ Takes Over
Song Features Mixtures of Novelty Tune,
Vaudeville Skit . . . . You're Forewarned By DONNA MIKELS That certain song that’s been taking over the turn tables and Juke boxes around town lately is “That Certain Party.” It is a cross between a novelty and a vaudeville skit.
The Capitol version by Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis boasts a 3
patter section with such vaudevillian:gems as: “Can you stand on your head?” “No, it’s too high” Forewarned is forearmed. Other new JTeleases include:
voice shining through. Second side is a bilingual version of “The . Matador.” COLUMBIA—The Modernaires| Buddy Clark, whose records
.iare never less than marvelous, pole b up Ah ols Mosiean stand sutdoes himself on a ballad from
Kurt Weill's score from the Holley Suikig ne 2 Dummy musical “Love Life It's titled Song,” a souped up “Paper Doll. AL ‘Here I'll Stay,” and if you're a *
[Clark fan there you'll ‘stay, by What Dinah Shore did when ne record player, playing it over she cut “What Did I Do” makes |anq over. for good listening. It's a slow| (jark never has gathered any novelty number with the Shore great following but he manages |to be consistently listenable. In|cidentally, I wish Columbia would {re-release one of his oldest and best numbers, a ballad called [“I'd Know You Anywhere.” English“ vocalist Cyril Shane |falls in with the current western |trend by recording “Hair of Gold, Eyes of Blue.” Second side is
5 Tunes Light Up Local Jyke Boxes
The five top tunes on Indianapolis juke boxes this week are:
vc RCA VICTOR Hit of the Week!
The Maharajoh of oo.
TE wei P Be ONE: “Siow Boat+to- China,” Vout rar , ary Clinton. i. TWO: “You Were Only FoolOpen Evenings Unlil 9 P.M. "in" Kay starr. : THREE: “You've Come a Long
OUNTAIN SQUARE [2x From St. Louis,” by Ray MAR | FOUR: “Bluebird of Happl3 HELBY ST | FIVE:
ness,” by Art Mooney. “That Certain Party,” by Dean Martin-Jerry Lewis.
NIT of the Week Harlem Woliday................ Stan Kenfon [J That Certain Bpril............ Martha Tillen My Name........... Jimmy Wakely [IBop...... ibaras even rian iss Red Nove 0 low........ visa uiyd Ruel wt []Meadowland.................... [Cj Back In Your Own Back Yard. . a Trio [Every Day | Love You........ Vaughn Monroe [1 East of fhe Sun... .... eees.. lester Young [11's Too Soon fo Know........ Ela Fitzgerald [JTea For Two... ... cregerel a Bon Light [CJ Life Gels Too-Jus........... Carson Robinson [Missouri Waltz................. Ken Griffin [1Dream On Little Plowboy.. ...... Gene [My BestToYou......... Sons. of the Pioneers [Opus No. 1.......... Fragaes Tommy Dorsey [J Just A Little love. ............ Eddy Arnold [112th Street Rag. ............. Pee Wee Hunt ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL PURCHASE OF ALBUMS 166 N. lilinois St. LL 1030 Open Until Midaigh
¢ Dally sad Sunday
Monroe, the man. with a baton in his hand and a clothes pin on his nose, warbles the ballad, "In My Dreams," on his latest
“Time Alo Will Tell,” with a small com backing the Shane vocal. - . ”
RCA VICTOR—The man who plays pretty for the people, Louis Prima, teams a platter vocal of “Lillian,” with a straight“ballad, “Love Phat Boy,” by. Cathy. Allen. Eve Young and the Drugstore Cowboys sing “Cuanto Le Gusta,” and “Say Something Sweet to |Your Sweetheart.”
The accordion fans will like
Old Mill © Stream,” with the maestro on the accordion lead.
After just waving the baton
officers tomorrow. | side at the ceremony
"| Viola Reifeis, president; NASAL.TALGIC — Vaughn (bara Smith, vice president, and
Henri Rene and his Musettes on|"“Estrellifa” and “Down By the
School News—
The Girls League of Manual
president, and Eve
mony are headed by Juanita Graves, president; Barbara Gritton, vice president, and Mary Pate, secretary-treasurer. English II officers: are Patsy Gruner, president; Phyllis Gootee, vice president, and Donna Frutchey, secretary-treasurer. Officers for ‘the sophomore groups are Rose Reifels, president; Betty Jean Holbrook, vice president, and Marion Morrell, tary-treasurer, and Pat Denneman, president; Shirley Richardson, vice president, and Tommielou Hamil-
““ |ton, secretary-treaSurer, for Eng-
lish IV. Selected. to head the English V group are Anna Harvey, president; Ann Henselmeier, vice president and Alberta Schwomeyer, secretary - treasurer. Juniors elected as officers for English VI are Murlene Capps, president; Marjorie Stone, vice president; PatriciasCummins, secretary, and Eleanor Hendricks treasurer. Bar-
Dorothy Steele, secretary-treas-urer, are English VIII officers.
The Shortridge High School
|SPQR Latin Club recently elected
|John Finley as preceps, Mary Ann
RCA Victor release. {Smith as pro-preceps, and John
Axline, scriba. Judy Studebaker, a Shortridge graduate, was recently voted a class beauty by her Alabama College classmates. Majoring in public . speaking she will appear {soon in the college production of “Midsummer Night's Dream.” The following seniors in Shortridge High. School were, recently elected to senior homeroom’ pos! lin council elections. They are: Marilyn Alexander, Patricia Bray, Marga Carter, Jane Cook-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ts] Catherine
““|lins, Beverly Schoentrup
Manual High Girls League
Installs Officers Tomorrow
Judy Studebaker, Shortridge High Graduate, [go Wins Class Beauty Honor at Alabama College "
High School will install its new|
Joanne Angell, English vi president, will pre-| Other officers in the Rugiish VII group are Marion Sexton, vice Phillip Irwin and Willilami Chaplyn «treasurer, pe English I girls to become GLM members in a candlelight cere- |
sey, Robert Crist, Weber Donaldson, William Fleming; Betsy Foltz, Ann Fuller, Alice Goldthe waite, Margaret Faye Hannon, Thomas Kelly, Alison Mead, Jane Nickell, Daniel Nyhart, Donald Ogle, Delores Peterson, Barbara
, Barbara Ping, Lavell M Betty Knight, Patricia Davis and Ber
tha Crawley. drivers in Warren oe High School are Kenneth Tatum, Theodore Bade, James Proctor and Willlam Pedi-
Other drivers are Dale Roney, Edwin Wiese, Dushan Stiko, Al-
bert Kleine, William Bowman,|
Glen White, Alfred Muesing, Carl Wiese, George and Ed Askren,
WCTU Grovp fo Meet
Elizabeth Stanley WCTU will
the home of Mrs. C. E. Vollmer, 914 N. Ritter Ave. Mrs. E. 8B. Stewart, vice president, will preside,
Redding, Gerald Shellert, Douglass Shortridge, Robert Stith, Joan Warrender, Florence Waterman and Martha Ann York. The first meeting of the new council was to be held today in the teachers’ cafeteria.
Don Jackson, a junior in Warren Central High School, wrote the ritual for the induction of officers and members for the Marion. County District HI-Y Council at Southport Nov. 3: The Warren Owl, Warren Centrla’s bi-weekly newspaper, was awarded first place gold cup at the Wabash- Valley Press Conference at Terre Haute Oct. 9. Sylvia Merrill, senior at Warren Central, won first place in a sports writing contest: The conference was sponsored by the In. diana . State Teachers Conference. Alpha Phi Gamma Jour. nalism Society was the host organization, Library science students acting as library assistants are: Sue Ann Blackwell, Teny Rose Bader, Barbara Campbell, Betty Robertson, Wanda Waterman, June Bloom, Rena Essick, Joan Featherstone, Dorothy Harper, Patricia Lemieux, Sally Dill, Joyce Hudson, Theresa Modlin, Greta Wayman, Marybelle Gilstra, Florence McClellan, Sharon McDonald, Marjorle, Perkins, ‘Schackel,® “Eiiémae Bottema, Marilyn en Shirley
Dickerson, Patricia {Norma McQueen, Catherine Col-
Hawkins, | _
"DO THE COMMUNITY FUND DIRECTORS GET PAID FOR |
THEIR SERVICES?
Missionary to Speak
Miss Helen Fehr, m
meet at 1:30 p. m. Thursday in|.
Nol No! NOI The campaign chairman, other campaign leaders, Directors, budget committees and sub-commit-tees, the 7,000 persons who solicit Fund ¢ontributions . . . ALL serve without any pay whatever! And all compaign lunches and dinners are strictly Dutch Treat!
THE COMMUNITY Sow: |
“29th ANNUAL CAMPAIGN
October 25 to November 15
“i ndianopelis ond. Macion County iE
(J -
236 Ee NEW YORK ST.
. NU-WA HOME SUPPLY CO.
A
R lass
and letting Ziggy Talent de the !singing on' the last couple re-| leases, Vaughn Monroe is back] at vocals on “In My. Dreams,” a nostalgic melody which comes out-nasal-talgic. ~ Second side is Vaughn with his best bedside
| Choo-Choo. »
Artie Dunn on vocals of “I Geo in When the Moon Comes Out.”
{manner for tots on “Chocolate |
THE THREE Buns feature |
{
The flip, (an instrumental of the organ,
(guitar and accordion.
Ray Nance, a bright spot in
cert here, is as irrepressible on|
Jlrecords as on the concert stage.
He sings “My ‘Honey's Lovin Arms,” second side on the frenzied instrumental, “Suddenly It Jumped.” English Importee Beryl Davis (has faded from the spotlight but {she keeps on singing. Her latest wax is “Down the Stairs and Out (the Door,” and “Just Once More,” | {both sad stories about broken |
“| hearts and such:
There's some of that old- fash-|
PHONE YOUR ORDER TO US MAIL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION Please Send O. O. D. Records Checked on Enclosed Ad.
MURAT THEATRE THURS., OCT. 21ST
on these superb RCA VICTOR RECORDS
| 20- 3112— "The Man | Love” Pr
-:20-2956~""Hankerin’ " “| Don’t Care If It Rains All Night” 20-2837. Ramblin’. Around” “A Lovely Rainy Afternoon” 20-2722— "St. Louis Blues March” “Cherckee Canyon" 20-2898— Meadowlands’ " "Makin' Love Mountain Style”
SEE and MEET
TEX BENEKE Thurs., 4:00 PP. M..
Pearson’s = Record Shop
"Poinciana” it i 1
wax by ‘the Six Fat Dutchmen “Woodchoppers Song.”
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CITIZENS 2
they haven't a thing on Indianapolis in speed when it growth. This fine Hoosier city of ours has broken a lot of records in the past few years . . . and it is hard for those of us who have lived here right along to fully appreciate what has happened. Since 1935, the population of Indianapolis has ' increased over 63,000 . . . that’s the size of Terre Haute, Indiana. Imagine adding a city the size of | Terre Haute to the Indianapolis of 1935, and you have a pretty good picture of what’s happened the past few years. This growth has been important to | all of us. It meant more industries, more payrolls, more people, more business and more profit for everybody. It has been a healthy growth that all of us want to foster and encourage. It means progress. This rapid incréase in the size of Indianapolis brought with it a huge increase in the demand for gas. Not just for home use, but. in industries that use gas for heat-treating, metal cutting, glass-mak-ing, tempering steel and dozens of other industrial applications. To satisfy this ever-increasing de-
/ | o Sure, Olympic cham-
pions are fast... but
comes to
meant a continual expansion program that hasn't let up for thirteen years. Since ‘ 1936 the Gas Utility has spent over 1234 million. dollars in gross additions to its plant, mains-and equipment . . . 12}4 million dollars that has helped to make the growth of Indianapolis possible. On top of this expansion program, the Gas Utility has been able—up to now—to absorb huge in-
HAVEN'T A THING ON INDIANAPOLIS.
of 0 our city may continue.
creases in its ‘cost of living” expenses, increases in payroll, coal costs and oil costs. Today you are enjoying the same general gas rate that went into effect in 1936 with two rate reductions, rate redugtions that have meant a saving of 154 million dollars on the gas bills of Indianapolis gas users. Yes, Indianapolis has grown, and we're all proud. of it. And Indianapolis will continue to grow this year and next year and the year after that. With this growth will come an ever-increasing demand for gas for home use and indiistrial ‘applications: ..This demand must be met either by the addition pe iil natural. gas, if available, or by increasing gas i ec § making facilities Ch #0 that the healthy progress
pe
_GAS & COKE UTILITY
Operoted by the Board of Directors for Ubiltos os © Public Choriable That
