Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 August 1915 — Page 8

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COLORED ODD FELLOW LODGES MINER HERE

Three State'Meeting^ to be Held at Armory Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.

It is expected that more than 200 •/members of the colored Odd Fellows, the Household of Ruth and the Patriarchs Militant will attend the state

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meetings of these orders when they are held for three days beginning Tuesday. It will be the thirty-fifth annual session of the Indiana district grand lodge

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iNo. 22, G. U. O. of -O. P., the nineteenth annual session of the Indiana district, Household of Ruth No. 9, and the ninth annual session of the Fifth Indiana Patriarchy regiment. The three meetin«s will be held at the armory, Sixteenth street and Wabash avenue.

Although the conventions will not -open their meetings until Tuesday morning, a reception will be held .^Monday night for the delegates who arrive early. This part of the program will be given in the armory. Tuesday morning, the Household of Ruth will hold its meeting and Wednesday '.he

Odd Fellows and the Patriarchs Militant will meet. Thursday will be the big day of the lodge session. At 10 o'clock In the morning all of the military organizations will parade through the streets j'of the city. Following the parade com^"petitive drills will be held at the fair grounds. A prize of $50 will be given for the team winning first place and will be awarded the winner of second place. The subordinate lodge hav- ,, Jng the most members in the parade

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^-'will be given $15. 5 A banquet Thursday evening will close the sessions of the three orders.

Joseph Churchill is president of the -Committee on arrangements and Mrs. ^iBertha Mitohell 'is secretary.

X* ASSAULT CASES CONTINUED.

Men Who Fought After Matching Nickels Before Court. Charles of assault and battery on each other against Victor Jones, Mtarion Mulvaney and Leo Mulvaney wen continued in City Court Monday morning until Tuesday afternoon. The men were taken in the Mulvaney saloon, Third street and the Big Four railroad, Saturday night after em argument, said to have started from matching nickels for drinks. Jones entered a plea of guilty to assault on Leo but all other charged bore not guilty pleas. 1

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OPENS

AUGUST 22 ND

Barhydt Playhouse Will Have Five New Orpheum Acts for Inaugural of Season.

When the Hippodrome opens for the season of 1915-16 on Sunday, August 22nd, five vaudeville "acts" will also open for the season, for Terre Haute is one of the flrst cities on the Finn and Heiman circuit to open and the majority of the performers now being booked by Sam Kahl will play the circuit before appearing elsewhere.

Manager T. W. Barhydt, Jr., Is now in Chicago, where he will have headquarters at the Chicago Beaoh hotel until the opening. Finn and Heiman have recently added three Orpheum theatres, those located in Duluth, Des Moines and Sioux City to their chain of theatres. The Sioux City and Des Moines theatres will be operated as popular price theatres, prices ranging from 16 cents to 35 cents, with ten and twenty cent matinees. The Duluth house managed last season by Ross Garver will be closed temporarily for repairs.

When the "Hip" reopens the line up in charge of various departments will be practically the same as last season except that Ross Garyin will be business manager in place of Otto Meyer. Shannon Katzenbach will be in charge of the box office. Carl Brentllnger, stage manager, will have for associates George Vosges, Tuck Haggard and Forest Manlow. Will H. Bryant will again direct the orchestra with Leo Baxter, Billy Joyce, C. Conrad and Ora Davis in the pit. Walter Nesbit will be in the film operator's booth and Harry Hayden will preside at the door. There is to be no change in the oharacter of the entertainment offered, which will consist of five acts of vaudeville with motion pictures.

With the acquirement of more Orpheum theatres, however, and the assurance that Orpheum acts will be regularly booked over the Finn and Heiman circuit it is certain tbat better programs will be offered. l"lve of the acts now being booked for the opening week in Terre Haute and at the American theatre, Chicago, will be sent direct to Terre Haute, the other five go to Chicago and then come here.

Men and women who are big meat eaters and drink much coffee, usually have coarse, florid skins—your stomach needs extra help you've got to clean the bowels, purify the blood or your complexion gets bad—Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea once a week will do it. 35c. Tea or Tablets. Gillis* Terminal Pharmacy.

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Parade of the Dixie Boosters Lined Up in Sullivan

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DIXIE HUB LINE BOOSTERS GATHEHED IX FRONT OF DAVIS HOTEL AT Sl'LLIVAN, WEDNESDAY,

The acts presented at the Hippodrome the last hs^lf of the week of August 22nd go from here to Evansville where Finn and Heiman open their season on August 29th. Two of the Orpheum theatres, the Bvansville and the Madison, Wis., houses, which were losing propositions as conducted by the Orpheum people are now consistent money makers. Finn and Heiman now have vaudeville theatres in Chicago, Champaign, Lteoatur, Rockford, EvanBville, South Bend, Michigan City, Gory, Davenport, Madison, Green Bay, Sioux City, Duluth and Des Moines which are operated in affiliation with the Hippodrome owned by Mr. Barhydt and Finn and Heiman.

WHISTLES FOE ALAEOSI CLOCKS.

Whit Gets the Girls Up at Wood* pecker Haunt Camp. Five o'clock is the rising hour at the T. W. C. A. camp—Woodpecker Haunt —at Ferguson Hill. And this rule was •till In force Monday at the opening of the fifth week of the camp. "There's only one oall to breakfast," Milan Emma Moore, general secretary of the T. W_, said, "and nobody wants to miss breakfast. That's the reason the girl* get up so early, although they get so thoroughly aroused by the loud, shrill mine whistles over there I suppose they couldn't go back to sleep anyhow. Five o'clock is a splendid time at the camp, too, because the mosquitoes have all disappeared by that time."

A number of girls whose work requires them at 7 o'clock have been taking an outing at the camp, and come in on the early morning cars.

The camp is now open to any girls who want to go out to spend one or several nights.

INSTRUCTIONS FOR CONVICT.

Skilled Union Men to Teach Prisoners Trades. NEW YORK, Auar. 2.—With the approval of Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, representatives of labor organisations have volunteered to send instructors to Sing Sing prison to teach the prisoners modern methods of manufacturing. The move is, in part, the outcome of a visit which Mr. Gompers paid to the prison yesterday. Mr. Gompers conferred with the warden, Thomas M. Osborne, and members of the national committee of prisons and prison labor. He was accompanied by Homer B. Call, president of the New York Federation of Labor, and by several other labor leaders.

A beginning in training the prisoners in the trades will be made in the garment and shoe shops, where skilled workmen of the united garment workers and international boot and shoemakers" oinion will give the first les-

HAVE YOU ANYTHING FOR SALE? If you have anything to sell the Sunday Tribune will sell it Twelve worda, one time, 12c: three times. 80c.

3"2"9 "The Soft Water Laundry"

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TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE

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At the Movies

/By MIquc O'Brien.

The line, "terltten and produced by Hal Reid," is hardly necessary in exploiting "Prohibition," the six-reel photoplay now being shown at the Grand. No writer of thrillers except Mr. Reid could possibly crowd mo, much excitement, so many melodramatic situations into an hour and a half of action on the screen. Taking his cue from the familiar line in Milton Noble's "And the Villian Still Pursued Her," Mr. Reid keeps his vlllians on the job all the while. The principal villian in "Prohibition" appears in human form but his actions are very MehistOphellan. This villian, wishing to win his sister-in-law, seeks to make a drunkard out of his younger brother and in other ways get him "In bad." He is always armed with half pint flasks which he places within easy reach of the younger brother, who it appears has inherited an abnormal thirst for liquor. In one Instance the youngster consumes a flask, falls into a drunken stupor and wakes up with a three-days' growth of whiskers. Some fertiliser, that red llckert Th«re are three very exciting rough and tumble fights during the action of the film. Everyone of them is a humdinger. Qhairs, tables, and windows are smashed during the action. There's no faking in these fights. Some of our professional fighters would know how to act if called upon to appear In "Prohibition." They would be shocked and pained at the demands of the director which would call for real fighting.

Two devils are shown In "Prohibition" from time to time, one a fat person, representing Demon Rum, the other is a regular devil with the little goatee and the prominent eye, brows that you see in grand opera devils. In the end His Satanic majesty and his fat friend who, by the way, looks like Joe Sedletseck, are routed by the Angel of Prohibition who appears as a sort of perfect woman in silken tights. "Prohibition" will be repeated today a a

The Sellg production of the late Charles H. Hoyt'a comedy, "A Texas Steer," shown at the Varieties yesterday, is decidedly the most ambitious film so far turned out by this company. Tyrone Power, who has been known as an actor of Shakespearean or classic roles and strong "character" parts, but never as a comedian shows what a real artist can do by giving as fine an impersonation of the role of Maverick,Brander as we might expect from Tom Murphy or any other

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comedian who has played It on the stars of the spoken drama that will make the regular screen actors work hard to retain their supremacy. There are other big features coming^ to the Varieties including "The Rosary," booked for Thursday And Friday of this week. "The Right of Way," with William Faversham, "The White Sister," with Viola Allen, "Crooksy," a comedy with the comic opera star, Frank Daniels, and "The Second in Command," with Francis X. Bushman and Marguerite Snow.

stage. Mr. Powers is another of the

Gaby Deslys and her American dancing partner, Harry Pllcer, in the made-in-Paris photoplay, "Her Triumph were the film stars at the American Sunday. The real feature of the entertainment Is the Apache dance, well executed by Mile. Gaby and her associate in art. The French dancer films well. She wears some wonderful gowns and one bonnet that covers a lot of territory. It haB feathers apparently several feet high and very wide. "Her Triumph" ought to repeat at the American. The bill for today and- Tuesday Is the Paramount production of William Hamilton Osborne's story, "the Run-

'THEY surely are the rage this summer. Everybody's wearing them, but to look right in a Palm

Beach Suit they must be laundered properly. We have just installed a new pressing device, and are prepared to launder your Palm Beach Suits that prove such a comfort these hot days. As usual, keeping abreast of the times, we are prepared to launder these suits in the most sanitary, up-to-the-minute modern method, finishing the fabric with a softness that has comfort. No hot irons come in contact to bake the soft material. Instead, your suits are gently pressed on a soft padded surface with hot steam forced through them that has a tendency to sterilize as well as soften the goods—and only 75c a suit. Ladies' Palm Beach Suits $1.00 up. ...

THE COLUMBIAN LAUNDRY w.'iSS

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ning Fight," with Violet Heming, Robert Cummlngs, William T. Carleton and Thurlow Berger in the cast. Miss Heming is the young English actress who has been featured In several Liebler productions. She appeared at the Grand several years ago sis Chevalier's engenue In "Daddy Dufour." Miss Heming followed Catherine Calvert as the big blue eyed innocent In "The Deep Purple." "The Melting Pot'* which comes to the Grand Wednesday, with Walker Whiteside In his original role is still being shown to capacity audiences at the Fine Arts theatre In Chicago. The Chicogo critics have been devoting a lot of space to this picture. Indeed It appears to be running a very olose second to "The Birth of a Nation."

The flrst episode of the new Universal serial, "The Broken Coin," will be shown at the Princess Tuesday and Wednesday. Grace Cunard and Francis Ford are the stars in this picture and between them they wrote and produced It .taking for the basis the powerful story by Emerson Hough. The scenes are laid In an Imaginary kingdom. Miss Cunard plays the part of an American newspaper reporter who has many thrilling adventures.

Joseph Smiley and Ltllle Leslie are the stars in "Whom the Gods Would Destroy," the three-part Lubin drama at the Crescent today.

Dorothy Glsh, Fay Tincher and Ralph Lewis are some of the stars In Orpheum pictures announced for today. "Sins of the Parents," the flve-reel film feature that will be shown at the Savoy today and Tuesday was produced by the Ivan Production company, an independent organization and was released to Manager Borssum for this territory at a figure much above that exacted for the ordinary film. The story is very dramatic and touches on the white Slave traffic. In one scene a cadet is killed while trying to sell

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PeactesEUMAPeadics

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From the|highland&,oftArkansas will be cheapest ttiis week .for |^canning. Ask fork

1. heavy pack. I Our peaches are larger and very finest flavored

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his own half sister. Neither knows the relationship that exists between them. Madame Sarah Adler is the star,,

The dramatic stars oontlnue to flop to the movieB. It is now announced that Nat C. Goodwin will fcancel all his dates for "Never Say Die" to remain in Los Angeles working for the Universal people.

IOSS CUBBY PRIZE WINKER.

Terre Haute Girl Honored by Faculty of Chicago University. ,1,, Miss Harriet Curry was greatly "surprised Monday morning upon receiving a communication from the dean of Chicago university informing her that she had won the Lillian Gertrude Selv scholarship and a cash prize of $80. Miss Curry did the work in the freshman class last year, but had not expected to win the scholarship. In

NEW YORK

MONDAY, AUGUST 2, 181 i.

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fact, she had been making prepara^ tlons to enter Wisconsin university instead of, Chicago,, this fall.

Miss Curry Is the daughter of Pro£ and Mrs. C. M. Curry, Mr. Curry be^ lng at the head of the literature partment of the Normal school.

She Is a graduate of the Normal. Her sister, Miss Margaret Currg, graduated from Wisconsin university in June and won a teaching fellolri* Bhip. 'I w-

THAW IN SOUTH BENS.

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SOUTH? BEND, Ind., Aug. 2.—Harrf K. Thaw, accompanied by P. E. Pern* bleton, of Concord, N. H., and F. f. Johnston, of New York city, arHve|i here today in an automobile, enroutf to the Paciflo coast. He left for Chicago shortly before noon.

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