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The Indianapolis News from Indianapolis, Indiana • 5

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE Music Conservatory Faces Full Week of Recitals, Exercises its Offer Leon Zawisza Named as New Concert Master Sylvia Watson, Paul Krauss, Cecilia Notes and Notices By-Walter WhiticortU LEASUKE and STYLE SHOWING TODAY LYRIC Simone Simon and Don Ameche in "Josette." and Dixie Dunbar and vaudeville on stage. Short subjects. Feature at 11:37 a. m. and 2:25, 5:13, 8:01 and 11:19 p.

m. Stage show starts at 1:10, 3:58, 6:46 and 9:34 p. m. CIRCLE Fred MacMurray and Harriet Hilliard in "Cocoanut Grove," and Mary Carlisle in "HuntPd Men." Short subjects. "Cocoanut Grove" starts at 11 a.

m. and 1:45, 4:35. 7:20 and 10:10 p. m. "Hunted Men" starts at 12:30, 3:15, 6:05 and 8:50 p.

m. LOEWS Margaret Sullavan and Robert? Taylor in "Three Comrades," and Laurel and Hardy in "Swiss Miss." Short subjects. 'erfection in White if If si Distinctively new, Paradise Shoes reflect a unique and alluringly different interpretation of the advanced mode in white footwear. Of exceptional quality and beauty, these shoes also offer amazing comfort. 4 See our complete presentation.

The current youngest generation apparently has the same tastes In reading matter that another youngest generation had when this writer belonged to it. At any rate, the Oz books were popular in those Cays, and the Oz books are still popular at the latest report. L. Frank Baum started them, as you ought to know, and, after his death, Ruth Plumlv Thompson continued them. The thirtieth volume, "The Silver Princess in Oz," has recently been published by Reilly la Lee.

Thirty volumes about a tiny kingdom where magic reigns supreme, where the pleasant folk invariably defeat the unpleasant folk, where adventures lurk around every corner and where every strange happening is plausible; thirty volumes of fantasy are an extraordinary achievement, particularly when one remembers that the quality of the author's imagination has been fine enough to hold the attention of each succeeding youngest generation. As a matter of fact, it isn't only the small reader who looks longingly at each new story. Many an adult reviewer does a bit of wishful thinking when the latest book bobs up on the literary desk, and most of them don't bother to ay they want the book for a small relative or friend: they want it for themselves. Perhaps that proves something. It is needless to tell you about the Silver Princess.

You already know that she encounters dangers and difficulties, and you already know that she marries her prince. Bits of the dialogue may annoy the Today ushers in a busy week among the city's younger musicians who face a crowded schedule of recitals and graduation exercises at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music. Several major recitals will be played by artists as well as students of the Jordan Conservatory this week. Two recitals will be sponsored by the school tonight, one featuring piano students of Marie Zorn in the Odeon, and another featuring piano pupils of Blanche D. Brown, assisted by Carol Trotter, dramatic art student of Bernice Van Sickle, in 3411 North Pennsylvania street.

Pupils of Miss Zorn, who will play tonight at 8 o'clock, include Marian Tlrmenstein, Frances Hills, Wilma Catherine Byfield, Martha Rose Spaulding, Jean Habig, Irene Ulrey, John White, Alma McNeely, Charles Mendenhall, Rosemary Home, Virginia Nigh, Roberta Wilson, Jane Howe, Catherine Minton, Cecilia Klein, Mary Zook, Loydlovclla Cook. Mary Elizabeth Hadley and Mildred Alice Boyl. Mrs. Brown's pupils, to be heard tonight at 7:30 o'clock, include Jimmy Hudson, Marilyn Mitchell, Juanita Trotter, Mary Williams, Patricia Bond, Jane Donham, Ruth Bradley, Don Rogers. Betty Hawkins, Gene McCormick, Mary Ann Compton, Nancy Chatfield.

Charles Wiecking, Nancy Smith, Suzann Horman and Dorothy Yates. Wednesday night the Conservatory Choir, under the direction of Virgil Phemister, will sing its first concert under the baton of its new conductor. The choir, assisted by a trio composed of Mae Engle, piano; Louis Zerbe, violin, and Harry Michels, French horn, will sing the following program: "Sweet Nightingale" (English folksong) "As Torrents In Elgar "Csmptown Races" Foster Mark Walker and Marlon Bruce, soloists. "In Sapphire Seas" (from "The Prlml Horn Trio, Op. 40 Brahms Trio.

"One Winter Nicht" Hunt "I Hear Along Our Street" (English caroD "Come, Soothin Bach Gloria (from "Twelfth Mozart The Conservatory will sponsor a recital of piano students of Leone Rickman Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. in 3411 North Pennsylvania street. Thursday evening advanced vocal students of Glenn Friermood will sing in recital in the Odeon at 8:30 p. m.

Those who will be heard are Joan Ferguson, Evelyn Pearce, Klein, Elizabeth Madison, Louis Armstrong and Margaret James. Friermood will be the accompanist. Mrs. Nora M. Beaver and Miss Mary Inez Beaver will present their pupils in a piano recital in Cropsey auditorium of the Public Library Tuesday at 8 p.

m. The performers will be assisted by dramatic art students of Alberta Speicher, a violin pupil of Edwin Jones, an accordion student of Lepha Wilson and a voice student of Edward LaShelle. The piano pupils who will play include Ruth Wright, Mary Jane Hicks, Patricia Rhodes, Buryle Jean Bayhoff, Betty Barth, Mayna Albert, Harvey Albert, Joyce Cox, Joan Kopp, Norma Schmidt, Mar-jorie Lowe, Mary Karl, Mary Louise Benge, Barbara Rusie, Rosanna Whiteside. Glenda Cox, Doris Cox, Kathryn McCain. Martha Starkey, Mary Rafalco.

Hazel Pitco, John Bumgardner. Betty Brouse. Helen Humphrey, Betty Connell, Kathryn Maple, Marion Maple, Helen Kat-terhenry, Virginia. Kidd, Barbara Rennick, Amelia Rose Moore. Mary Louise McClain and Marilyn Mueller.

Junior pupils from the studios of Sue Carolyn will participate in a diversified program in the auditorium of the Wilkin Music Company Thursday at 8 p. m. Pupils, from the piano, voice and radio departments, who will appear on the program include Jane Lep-pert, Jane Willis, Polly Ann For-cum, Patricia Hoffhein, Nancy Stern, Rebecca Lane, Frank Teskey, Jean Trefry, Melba Cass, Joyce Dunham, John Madden, Betty Shockley, Tommy Overmire, Mary Jo Gray, Harry Shockley, Lois Mary Eltzroth, Jacqueline Kenyon, Patty Joy, Mary Kathryn Waggoner, Marilyn Kimmick, Mary Funk, Georgia Ann Swope, Mary Ellen Baird, Alfred Morley, Mary Jane Cass, Helen Harris, Harriet Billger, LaVerne Lamb, Eleanor Jacoby, Alfred Morley, William Robertson, Patty Frank, Donald Ped-low, Henrietta, Perdew. John Moore, Phyllis Admire and Paul Richard Waggoner. Ushers at the performances will be th Misses Maxie Snyder, Kath-eryn Mavis Partain.

Joan Miller and Mary Jane Depka. George Madden and Pete French will introduce the various $(o) .00 to "Swiss Miss" starts at 11 a. m. and 2:15, 5:30 and 8:45 p. m.

"Three Comrades" starts at 12:20, 3:55, 6:50 and 10 p. m. APOLLO Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland in "The Adventures of Robin Hood," and The March of Time. Short subjects. "The Adventures of Robin Hood" starts at 11 a.

m. and 1:11, 3:22, 5:33, 7:44 and 9:55 p. m. The March of Time starts' at 1:03, 3:14, 5:25, 7:36 and 9:47 p. m.

OHIO George Brent in "Gold Is Where You Find It," and "Bor-dertown." ALAMO Gene Autry. in "The Old Barn Dance," and Spot." AMBASSADOR Gary Cooper in "The Adventures of Marco Polo," and "This Marriage Business." SANDERS Jane Withers In "Checkers," and "Fifty-Second Street." GOLDEN Robert Taylor in "A Yank at Oxford," and "Rose of the Rio Grande." STRATFORD Judy Garland in "Thoroughbreds Don't Cry." and "Mad Holiday." MECCA Eleanor Powell in "Rosalie," and "Beg, Borrow or Steal." GARFIELD George Brent in "Gold Is Where You Find It," and "Start Cheering." PARAMOUNT Bob Burns in "Radio City Revels," and "Penitentiary." CINEMA Constance Bennett in "Merrily We Live," and "Everybody's Doing It." TACOMA Judy Garland in "Everybody Sing," and "Arsene Lupin Returns." RITZ Tyrone Power in "In Old Chicago." and "Accidents Will Happen." UPTOWN Deanna Durbin in "Mad About Music," and "Rebecca." ORIENTAL Walt Disney's "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs." ST. CLAIR Tyrone Power in "In Old Chicago," and "Little Miss Roughneck." STRAND Shirley Temple in "Rebecca" and "The Gaiety Girls." GARRICK William Powell in "Double Wedding," and "Thoroughbreds Don't Cry." ZARING Gary Cooper in "The Adventures of Marco Polo," and "Tip-Off Girls." HAMILTON Bette Davis in "Jezebel," and "Bringing Up Baby." REX Bette Davis in "Jezebel," and "Sally, Irene and Mary." RIVOLI Gary Cooper in "The Adventures of Marco Polo," and "The Gaietv Girls." EMERSON Wallace Bef-ry in "The "Bowery," and "Accidents Will Happen." FOUNTAIN SQUARE Shirley Temple in and "Mr. Moto's Gamble." TUXEDO Deanna Durbin in "Mad About Music," and "Jezebel." Ladies' First Floor POSITIVELY I II I II LEON ZAWISZA From the famed Cleveland Symphony Orchestra comes Leon Zawisza to take over the concert master's chair of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra during the 1938-1939 season. Zawisza replaces Boris Schwartz, who will play with the N.

B. C. Symphony Orchestra next season and this summer will be a faculty member of the National Music Camp, Interlochen, Wis. Zawisza has been a member of the Minneapolis Symphony Orches-. tra, and was concert master of the Philadelphia Chamber Orchestra.

He also played first violin with the Philadelphia Stringart Quartet and has numerous radio broadcasts. adult, for the writing sometimes seems deliberately childish rather than childlike, but the child, himself, won't be bothered by such details. To him, the Silver Princess wil: belong with all the other fascinating inhabitants of Oz. Adventure stori keep to the same paths, diftc in subject-matter rather than in spirit. It was the American Indian who kept this writer awake in his pre-adoles-cent days.

If the boy of today reads "Jorn," by Torry Gredsted, transit ed by Astrid Rosing Sawyer (Reilly Lee), he may be kept awake by the villainy of the man from India. Mr. Gredsted is professor in a boys' school in Denmark. He knows what boys like to read. He is skilled in the business of creating suspense.

In brief, boys should welcome this story. "We Go Exploring," by Mary Lichliter (Hopkins), Is on another plane. It is written for very small children, too young to do their own reading. The first of a projected series, it retells the stories of those early explorers who discovered America, the "sleeping slowly aroused by all the adventurers who gradually opened its territories to development. The stories are short, well-told, informative without being dull.

They serve an admirable purpose without doing it obviously. Viiiiiiir-rmi'T- ni i r'lri L'' it -Li i i MARCH OFTIMEi. fo) fll, Hiiil 25c rirrmnTrrri i A L.i.fcJbiLJi,..Al rtMil' i v. r-iffiT mm- 3 CRIME THRILLER "HUNTED HEH" .11 i 0 MILANO Iflli Night Club fij LAUREL-HARDY balS "Swiss sussw SOO Rots-Armstrong FlxM V. 23X S.

Noble It's Different DINE and DANCE Motorist data- ENTERTAINMENT v. Y.ei EVERY NIGHT r- tires lo-" sn 2 'n i Special FRI. and SAT. I One Mixed Drink With I SPAGHETTI DINNER 12 Scholarships for Art Given Five Indianapolis high school pupils are among twelve in Indiana receiving tuition scholarships at John Herron Art School as a result of the May high school scholarship examinations, it was announced today by Donald M. Mat-tison, director.

The five are Fred Rash, Jane Palmer and Lee Grubaugh, of Short-ridge High School, and Eloise Lin-nemeier and William Burden, of Arsenal Technical High School. Other winners are Violet Carpenter, Columbus; Jane Hewitt, Richmond; Martha L. Payne, Fair-mount; Thelma Lake, Franklin; Joe VanSickle, Anderson; Francis Vie-tor, ReeLsville, and Margie Lee Reeves, Greencastle. Appointment of two new members of the faculty also was announced by Mattison. They are Edmund Bruck-er, instructor at the Cleveland School of Art, who will give classes in first and socond year composition and portrait painting and John M.

King, instructor at the Dayton Art Institute, who will work part time, teaching the class in still life painting. 4 Last Days ImA I I DON AMECHE WESTLAKE -il SIMONE SIMON 01 ROBERT Y0.UNG nn pni i JDSETT oi JUCi TK HIT UHR 1 VH i rtiiTi rum aiar 1 0tt'Peft4Xrtt DIXIE EUBVEiSIDE ALL WEEK RIDES and GAMES HALF PRICE SPONSORED BY SAHARA GROTTO BAND CONCERTS BY 70-PIECE BAND Read Why This ito Kind of Tire Will Give You the Quickest Non-Skid Stops You've Ever Seen wn-m Now 1 5c DTI NBAR Gary Coooer "ADVENTURES OF MARCO POLO'1 Vietor Moore "THIS MARRIAGE BUSINESS" W(T TOMMTJfvONuER HERMAN HYDE lnlri utunl Cfncrfun Th Wftldmau 7 re4aa 25f 5 Nowl5c 1 Gene Antry. "THE OLD BARN DANCE" PARKTAKARKUS. "NIGHT SPOT" Read the Report from America's Largest i. unaeni lestine labcralorn facturera WM.

"scsr tire teTr us to determine "1" "onin.8. NORTH SIDE EAST SIDE wr. with the fiSr" 19th and Cellr AdmisaioB 5 -iTeUfeTrd SUwt" ittan i.I'S re IT'S here to save your life! It's here to give you the greatest protection you've ever had on any road wet or dry, curved or straight! That's because the new Goodrich Safety Sil vertown has the amazing Life-Saver Tread which produces a road-drying action that stops you quicker, safer on wet roads than you've ever stopped before protects you against the "hazard zone" of motoring. It's a life-saver and that "goes double." Because Silvertowns are also the only tires in the world that give you the vital blow-out protection of the famous Golden Ply. Before you hear the ear-splitting BANG! of a dangerous high-speed blow-out before you experience that "pit-of-the-stomach" feeling that comes when a skid zigzag3 your car wildly over a wet, glassy road come in for a set of these long-mileage, life-saving tires.

Treat yourself to Goodrich two-way protection against SKIDS and BLOW-OUTS at no extra cost! Lifm-Sarmr Triad and Sidewall ef the Haw Oooettich Stlvertowti Protected by Dein Patent Number 108,37 and 109,28. nit S15S E. Tenth If IVULiI 5:45 to :00 JSe Gary Cooner Basil Rathbone "The Adventorea Mareo Polo" Fatriria Ellis. "Gaiety Girls" Extra! Popeye Cartoon Edmund tw, Md Halidty" 3, Garland, 'Thrthbrd Don't Cry" tire, listed fron, 70 7oVln CI JtIJ NM1 at Mem. a "1 Admisalon 15o Elar Hsatie" Frank Mercan.

"Bet, Borrow tr Steal" 116 E. Wash. Dinnerware Free Robt. Taylor. "A Yank at Oxford' "Rose of the Bie Grande" Illinois at snth Admkston 15e AH Balr's Theaters Cooled by Deep-Well Washed Air RITZ 34th and Illinois Tyrone Power.

"In Old Chicaro" R. Rearan, "Accidents Will Happen" Adults ISc to 25e Thereafter Show Starts at UPTOWN KZi and Collect Deanna Dnrbin, "Mad Ahont Mnsle" Shirley Temple, "Rebecea" AdnMs 15e :45 to 25e Thereafter Show Starts at ORIENTAL 1103 S. Meridian "SNOW WHITE" TBI Pieinre Only: Adults 15c Children 15e ST. CLAIE St. Clair and Ft.

Wayna Alice Faye, "In Old Chieaao" Edith Fellows, 'Little Miss Bourn Neck Adnlts 15c 5:45 to 25c Thereafter Show Starts at 6:00 STRAND LAST TIMES TONITE! Shlrler Temple "REBECCA" Patricia EIHi "GAIETY GIKLS Adults 35c 5:45 to :00 25 Thereafter Show Start at 6:00 Silvertown gave more non-skid ST the other toes tested in it, own price Zt the wore ACTS LIKE A BATTERY OF WINDSHIELD WIPERS The spiral bars of this new Goodrich Life-Saver Tread act like a battery of windshield wipers, sweep the water right and left force it out through the deep grooves make a dry track lot the rubber to grip. New tork Wis. "Doflhl WeddiHt 1. Garland, "Thfrwoilibred Don't Cry" Deanna Dnrbin. Md About Musie" "Jesebel" vyy 18th at Delaware Kl.

2120 lfllKlif-f 443 E. Washington Jndy Garland, "Kverybody Pint" "Arsene Lupin Returns" tAaoaaroar Tnisiiaia II Matinee Daily. Contin. From 1:30 P. M.

A4alt 13c Children 10c Befora fl Cwnttanee BeWetl Brian Aherne "MerrilT We Preston Fester, "ETerjrhndy'a Defnv It" EfilERSON 5:45 to 6:00 ISc New Showing Wallace Beery George Raft Jarkie Cooper, "The Bowery" Gloria Blondell. "Accidents Will Happen" First East Side Shewing "The Adventures Maree Mary Carlisle. "Tip-Off Girls" 3118 E. Tenth HEX SI st and Northwesters TA. 5038 Bette Davis, "Jezebel" "Sally, Irene and Mary" as Aill Bette Davis Henry Fonda "JEZEBEL" Cary Grant Katharyn Hepburn "BRINGING UP BABY" SHOWING SOUTH SIDE 70 I US Pleasantly Cool Ist.Hf.lUl'l'll 1 1 Double restore Bob Burns.

"Radio Ctty Revels" "Penitentiary" Shirley Teirple, "Rebecca" Peter I-erre Keye Lake "Mr. Moto's Gamble" SOUTH SIDE GOODRICH SILVERTOWN STORES DELAWARE AT NORTH STREET INDIANAPOLIS tin Prnsnert Double restore 2303 Shelby Jsnt "Checkers" "53nd Street" "Gold I Where Tm Find It Jimmy Durante, "Start Cheerio".

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1869-1999