Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 108, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 August 1926 — Page 7

AUG. 11, 1926

HEADQUARTERS OF LODGE IS SOUGHT Hoosiers Ask K. of P. Offices Be Located Here. Efforts to secure establishment of permanent headquarters of the Knights of Pythias supreme lodge in Indianapolis were made by five Hoosiers at the order’s biennial convention in Chicago today. Washington, Minneapolis and Chicago lodges, also are fighting for establishment of the headquarters in their cities. Indiana delegates to the convention are Thomas L. Neal, and Harvey Thompson, Indianapolis; Elmer Basset, Shelbyville; Ralph W. Gaylor, Mishawaka, and Dr. Frank Priest, Marion. The lodge’s insurance department is located here, in owned by the order at Massachusetts Ave. and Pennsylvania St., and Meridian and St. Joseph Sts. Ttfe fraternal headquarters are in Minneapolis. If Chicago or Washington wins the headquarters the lodge will construct a $2,000,000 building for them, it is understood, whereas if Indianapolis or Minneapolis win, the permanent headquarters will be established in buildings already owned by the lodge. The insurance department occupies •tty a few rooms of the eleven* ory building at Massachusetts Ave. and Pennsylvania St. PLAN PILOTS’ DINNER Citizens to Witness Arrival of Reliability Planes. Invitations to citizens to attend a banquet in honor of the pilots and passengers in the second airplane reliability tour for tlie Edsel B. Ford trophy, at the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, Tuesday night, following the the arrival of the planes here were being prepared by the chamber and real eastate board officers today. The banquet is one of four major events the organizations have planned. A reception committee of more than 100 members will great the fliers at the Indianapolis Motor j Speedway at 12:30, where the planes will be parked for public inspection until 10 a. m. Wednesday, when I they leave for Cincinnati. ~A luncheon will be accorded the | guests at the Prest-O-Lite factory I near by. Wednesday morning the J fiiers*will have breakfast at the j Chamber of Commerce. Marriage Licenses Earl Adams Clark. 34. Fountain City. Indiana; Helen A. Alexander. 34. 2104 X. ■Meridian Britt Wood. 42. Xashrille, Tenn.; Ethel Ma" Bushomr. 30. 603 E. Merrill. Frank Tutterow 44. Route A. 286: Ariali Tutfernie. 46. 830 Wondlawn. Ralph Heath. 21 1126 Finley; Rena i Marie Warren. iB. 42.1 W. MeCartv Phil F. R.van Jr . 27. 1727 Ashland: j Oates. 2X. 2456 N. Meridian Francis Lloyd O’Brien, 28, 738 v Ban ft: Margaret Caroline Sutter. 21. 301 N State Wtllard H. Smith. 20. 230 X. Alabama: Jennie Gertrud'- Mvers 32. 320 X East. Charlie Reynolds <2l 831 Muskingum Mattie Wilkes. 19. 1110 Fayette. Alvin Albert Zeunik. 22 1029 X. Holmes; Mary Margit Sinke. 21. 048 X. Holmes __ _, . Jene Moms Rethmever. 20. Richmond. Ind : Ruth Marie Jefferson. 24. 329 E Thirty-Sixth. Robert Paul Laranohy 23. Castlftton, Ind: Elizabeth Frances Ward. 20. 2/60 Ashland. _ _ , _ ... Cecil R Sparks. 20 R. 4. Box 666: Harriet Josephine Amaden. 18. 2011 Roosevelt. Ralph Gordon Springer. 32. Greenwood InL* Frances Pauline McAlpln. 25, Southport, Ind. _ „ Edward Joseph McCann. 27. 2215 X. Pennsylvania. Mary Agnes Lyons. 22. 031 S. West,

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POLICE RAID TWO TIGERS Make Nine Arrests in Clean-Up of Beer Joints. ' Police liquor squads made nine arrests in connection with raids on two blind tigers Tuesday night. Miss Betty Cox, alias Fox, 36, of 20 N. Oriental St„ Apt. 17, and Earl Sample. 27, a roomer, were charged with operating a blind tiger when several quarts of home brew were found in the apartment. Butler Smear, 138 N. Highland Ave., and M. B. Hoffman, 38 S. Oriental St., also were arrested. Bert Grimes, 26, and Carl Bowman, 33, both of 109 W. St. Clair St., and Albert Hunt, 34, of 1220 N. Illinois St., Apt. 30, were charged wlth\operating a blind tiger, and C. W. Douglass. 38, of 71 X. Warman Ave., and Robert Reidy, 22. of 308 Hotel Puritan, / were charged with vagrancy when police raided Hunt’s apartment. AIMEE CASE DROPPED EOS ANGELES. A'ug. 11.—The Los Angeles County grand jury adHas No Sigir of Asthma Now Says Wheeze and Cough Entirely Gone. Tells What Did It. For the benefit sufferers, Mr. Charles Dean, 910% Virginia avenue, Indianapolis, Ind., tells how he got entirely rid of this stubborn disease. Mr. Dean says: "I began having asthma in 1012. Kept getting worse, an/l couldn’t do a day’s work. I would wheeze and choke and if I walked n square. I had to lean against a post and rest. In October. 1023. I began taking Naeor. Relief came very promptly, and I continued to improve, gaining 13 ; pounds In weight. I feed perfectly well I again and ean say that Nacßt is the : only medicine that ever brought me relief.” Hundred* of other sufferers from psthma, bronchitis and severe chronic coughs have reported their recovery, after years of affliction. Their letters and a* booklet full of valuable informs tlon about these stubborn diseases will he sent free by Xacor Medicine Cos., 413 State Life Bldg . Indianapolis, Ind. No matter how serious your ease seems, eall or write for this free booklet today. It may give your whole life anew meaning.—Advertisement.

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BROAD RIPPLE PARK AND ZOO All Week In Open Air Theater at 8:45 HELLO GIRLS REVUE[ 21 PEOPLE | A Breezy Musical Show With a Bevy of Pretty Girls “FROM BROADWAY TO BROAD RIPPLE” QIAfIU In th7Big Pool vfTMf pyre Filtered Water National A. A. U. Bwlmmlng Meet, Aug. 17-18-19 Thur., Aug. 19, Bathlog Beauty Contest and Fashlcn Parade.

Jaurned today without taking action on the theft of evidence in the Aimee Semple McPherson investigation. tellsHrotary Ideals Carrying of Public Burden Urged by Fred Hoke. Rotary Club members admonishes one to get under civic burdens and carry them for benefit of the public, , Fred Hoke, education chairman, said at luncheon Tuesday at the Claypool. “Fundamentals of the Rotary Club make Up the serious problems of life. The Rotary Club is striving \ for a high ideal that the member-

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ship may have high ideals and train itself in service,’’ ho said* GLACIERS SHRINK MOSCOW —Glaciers on the slopes of Mt. Elbrus in the Caucasus have receded more than 300 yards from where their edges were fifteen years ago. An investigation is planned by the Geophysical Laboratory of Leningrad to determine the effect of this shrinkage on the climate.

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I Wanted Adventure"

The Story of a Girl Who Craved. Thrills MEG was dissatisfied and restless. Adventurel That was the thing •he wanted. If only something would happen! Then •omething did. Betty, a former school-girl friend, returned from Florida. I “It’s frightfully thrilling down there,” she told Meg. “Come back Vith me. You’ll have the time of your life.” Today, Meg wishes she had listened to the sober advice of her parents and friends. If anyone had foretold the terrible cyclone of events that was to sweep her into its clutches in Florida, she would have blazed with incredulous fury and scorn. Starting with what seemed a perfectly

•innocent friendship with a man she ttiought was the soul of honor, she soon found herself confronted by one of the most hideous situations a girl was ever compelled to face. Except for a disguising of names, Meg gives a vividly frank account of her dreadful experience under the title, “I Wanted Adventure,” in the September issue of True Story Magazine. It is a thrilling, startling, neart-throbbing narrative. And it drives home a powerful lesson that no reader will ever forget. Other Thrilling Features in September True Story Are: ‘“l'zr'* Grace loved David madly, though ha waa engaged to another girl. But in her determination to win him, he overlooked the iact that ona cannot trample on the hearts of other* and win happiness. Read what happened as a result. 'The Unguided Girt**—To be singled out by a famous doctor as his special friend seemed very romantic and ezcitir.g to Helen. But this friendship was to involve her in a tangled skain of events that was to completely alter her Ufa.

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