Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 March 1942 — Page 23
» WORKER | IN CAIRO. WILL SPEAK HERE
TOP RACKETS, | COX DEMANS ..
Assails ‘Moochers’ During War Time at Hearnig
WIRE.
On Appeal
“Racketeering under the guise of collecting money for charity and - [patriotic organizations in Indianapolis must be stopped,” Circuit Judge Earl R. Cox warned at a court hearing yesterday,’ “People already are being taxed to the limit and asked to donate to legitimate charities and should not
hour show, Eddi
8:30—Mr. wh Attorney,
9:00—Lord Halifax, WISH. 9:15—~Great Music, WFBM. 10:30—Tune Up, America, WIBC.
JOHN GARFIELD “muscles” in on Eddie Cantor’s “Time to Smile” broadcast tonight at 8 o'clock on WIRE. For his visit to the half-
Hollywood’s tovellest iittlio staris moredelightful than ever in this gay somedy eerles!
#“CRESTFALLEN MANOR”
Sherman and his slap = wacky
be victimized by rackefeers and moochers in times like these,” he
said. Hears Appeal
Judge Cox was hearing arguments on a motion led in Circuit court to dismiss a complaint against Herbert F. Mitchell, 312 Northern ave. charged with soliciting funds for charity without a license. Mitchell was fined $100 and sentenced to 30 days in jail on the charge in Municipal court recently. The verdict was appealed to Circuit court, He was arrested on an affidavit based upon information furnished by the Better Business Bureau. Mitchell was charged with soliciting funds for some veterans organization without a license provided by a city ordinance.
Attacks Law’s Legality
Defense attorneys attacked the ordinance as unconstitutional. “The ordinance may be unconsti=tutional but unauthorized solicitation of money must be stopped,” Judge Cox said. that some of -these solicitors be charged with obtaining money under false pretense.” Judge Cox took the motion under advisement pending the filing of briefs by attorneys.
SAYRE TO VISIT CAPITAL " WASHINGTON, March 18 (U. P.) —President Roosevelt disclosed to a press conference yesterday that the U, S. high commissioner to the Philippines, Francis Sayre, has arrived safely in Hawaii and will come
to Washington for consultation.
“I would suggest|
Garfield studied
sounds like, uy smacking that same &
you didn’t know it, murder, suicide and artistic mayhem are committed these days on the radio—not with the usual weapons of destruction— but with vegetables. For instance, the March of Time could hardly get along without a
and the lowly spud even get to take a part in the sinister effects that are used to- dramatize the news of the world at war. Let: us suppose that the script called for a messy job of stabbing someone. The. sound effects man would, on his cue, promptly plunge a sharp-bladed knife into a potato or cabbage. And if you want to know what a right to the jaw
ripe melon or two. And cabbages|.
“ON THE RADIO TON
If this takes too much time, a rs Tole or oe Tes 19 taking the aforementioned melon and administering it a stern rap
with a wooden mallet. o 8
THIS EVENING Cf JSEIAESDGlS Tumis 18 ub sesuniibia 1 or insccuraeies tn rogram an-
nouncements caused by station changes after
Wr the) Watson
press time).
ballet dancing Mr. Garfield before he got in the movies. . . . A humorous story of an ambitious citizen who has ideas for making a million dollars and who tries to make them work will be told on “Manhattan at Midnight” at 7:30 o'clock tonight on WISH. Walter Kinsella and Tess Sheehan take| the lead roles. Fredric March will take the leading role again tonight in another of the »Treasury Star Parade” series of radio programs on WISH at 9:30 o'clock. He will appear in “Production Now,” the story of prepara- § tions made by a i small Ohio town and’ 16 surroundEt ing communities E during wartime.
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* Mary Jane Walsh, star of the Broad-
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Face It will introduce a new Irving Berlin tune. . . . Shirley Temple stars tonight in another of
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her “Junior Miss” roles on WFBM at 8 o'clock. Her story this week is «Autobiography—=Size 13.” 8 #® 8 HENRIETTA SUMNER = Plume, one of America’s outstanding women in the field of aviation, will be the guest of Betty Rhodes tonight on another of the “Tune Up, America” series at 10:30 o'clock on
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Millersville chapter of the Order of Eastern Star will install the following officers at 8 p. m. tomorrow: Mrs. Blanche O’Brien, worthy matron; Harry Snyder, worthy pa~ tron; Mrs. Emma Mae Roberis, associate matron; Ancil Corn, associate patron; Mrs, Ethel Roberts, secetary: Mrs. Amelia Riggs, treasurer; Mrs. Madalyn Wetherbee, conductress; Mrs. Helen Wood, associate conductress;. Mrs. Ella Crabb, chaplain; Mrs. Ethel Snyder, marshal; Mrs. Hazel Duenweg, organist; Mrs. Marian Moran, Adah; Mrs. Mabel Munn, Ruth; Mrs. Esther Young, Esther; Mrs. Hester Cox, Martha; Mrs, Iva Dalton, Electa: Mrs, Blanche Spilman, warder: Mr. Bill Estridge, sentinel, and Mrs. Katherine Kennedy, stereopticon,
B. C. A. Club. Meets Tomorrow— The B. C. A. club, composed of students of the Indianapolis Academy of Commercial Art, will hold a combined business and social meeting at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in the home of Robert Minges. Newly elected officers of the club are Mr. Minges, president; William Ebert, vice pres-
|ident; John McNeil, secretary; Hu-
bert Kellum, treasurer, and Ferd Burgman, social committee chairman, :
O. E. 8S. to Hold Sale—The ways and means committee of Englewood chapter” 483, O. E. S., will hold a paper sale Priday at the home of Mrs. Ethel Van Sickle, 5088 Crittenden ave. Persons wishing to donate paper for the sale are asked to call Mrs. Opal Shipman, IR-0558, or Mrs. Mary Reynolds, WA-0880. Pythians Meet Tonight—Irvington temple 411, Pythian sisters, will meet at 8 o'clock tonight in the hall at 5420% E., Washington st,
Red Cross Unit to Sew—The
‘| Red Cross unit of Indianapolis
court No. 1, Order of the Amaranth, will meet all day Thursday for sewing and knitting at the home of Mrs. Florence Herrmann, 2415 Shelby st.
WIBC. Another guest will be the pianist-bandleader, Claude Thornhill. . Kay Kyser and his gang
drop in to see the men at March Field, Riverside, Cal, tonight at 9 o'clock on WIRE. . . . And 15 minutes later on WFBM, excerpts from Mascagni’s opera, “Cavalleria
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Music.” se 8 = LORD HALIFAX, British ampassador to the United States, will speak on WISH and the Blue network tonight on “Britain's Total War Effort” His half-hour talk, which begins at 9 o'clock, will cover Britain's two and a half years of war. 8 8 #
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mann here received word today
that he is missing after the naval battle off Java.
S. S. Houston. He was 18 years old when he enlisted in December, 1939.
HOOSIER IS MISSING AFTER JAVA BATTLE
Relatives of James Eugene Ray-
He was a fireman aboard the U.
irsissshein
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