Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 77, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 August 1928 — Page 9
ATJG. 20, 1928
D. OF A„ORDER OF MECHANICS TO MEET HERE Orders Will Hold Sessions Jointly Wednesday at Denison. Sessions of the thirty-second annual State convention of the Daughters of America will be held Tuesday and Wednesday, and the thirtyseventh annual State sessions of the Junior Order of United American Mechanics will be held Thursday and Friday at the Denison, with more than 400 members and delegates attending. The first meeting of the D. of A. opens at 9 a. m. with Bertha Seal, Brookville, State councillor, presiding. Several closed meetings will be held during the day with nominations of State officers in the afternoon. Degree work will be conducted by past State councillors in the evening after a closed meeting. Closed meetings Wednesday morning will end with ejection and installation of offi^c-rs. Program Arranged The Jr. O. U. R. M. convention will open at 8 p. m. Wednesday in a joint meeting with the D. of A. R. S. Cox, Millersburg, Ohio, national organizer, will preside. The invocation will be pronounced by the Rev. H. A. Hadley, Louisville, Ky., Indiana State chaplain. A musical program and other enshort speeches by E. A. Llewelyn, Cincinnati, Ohio, national councilor, and, Carrie R. Faulkner, Xenia, Ohio, D. of A. national councilor. Dancing will close the program for members of both groups and their friends. The Junior O. U. A. M. convention will be called to order at 9 a. m. Thursday by J. Frank Genung, New Albany, State councilor. Nominations of State officers will be made in the afternoon, and the State bylaws will be revised at a closed meeting in the evening. Closed meetings will end Friday afternoon with the election and intallation of officers. Degree work that night will be under the direction of Cox. First degree will be given by Capital City council of Indianapolis, second degree by Elwood council and the third degree by Richmond council. Train to Home All members taken into the organization since June 1, 1928, will be persented by Genung to Charles Kelley, Maywood, State councilor. There are nine councils in Indianapolis, and one of the features preceding the convention will be the installation of anew council Monday night. Cox will be in charge of the work. ' • Cox is chairman of the men’s committee, and Mrs. Elva Mcyay, past State councilor, is chairman of the woman’s committee. William Underwood, district deputy of the eighth district, and H. L. Young also are members of the committee. A special train will leave Indianapolis at 12:30 a. m. Sunday for the national home at Tiffin, Ohio, and will return to this city the same day, giving members attending the convention an opportunity to visit the home. The train also will go through Anderson, Muncie, Winchester and Union City.
RED MEN HOLD PICNICS Henry, Wayne Counties Hold Joint Fete at Cambridge City. Three picnics were held last week by tribes of Red Men in Indiana. The twenty-ninth annual Whitestown picnic, held Saturday, was sponsored by MerriiAas Tribe of that city. Arch H. Hobbs, Indianapolis, great chief of records, and John Sedwick, Martinsville, past great incohortee, were guests of honor. Henry and Wayne Counties held a picnic Sunday at Cambridge City of Red Men and members of the Pocahontas. Albert Hausman, great sachem; Raymond Whitton, great junior sagamore, and Hobbs, spoke. Delaware County tribes met at Muncie Thursday with Hausman, and W. H. La Rue, Anderson, past great sachem, as principal speakers. Woodmen Attend Outing Several hundred members of the Modern Woodmen of America attended the Marion County M. W. A. Association picnic Sunday at McCords park. M. T. Wright, district deputy, was in charge.
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On Red Men Program
Lelt to Right—Buffalo Horn, Chief Hailstorm and Princess Hailstorm. Papoose Starlight is standing in front.
A troupe of real Indians from Pueblo, N. M., will lecture and give their native dance Friday and Saturday night at the powwow of Zecana Wigdam of Red Men at Zionsville, Ind. Members of the tribe are Chief Hailstorm, Princess Hailstorm, Buffalo Horn, Gray
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Regular meeting of the Merrymaker’s Club will be held Tuesday night at the home of Dorothy Cravens, 2Q5 S. Holmes Ave., according BLUE LODGES PLANOUTING Committees at*Work for Picnic Labor Day. By Times ‘Special* SEYMOUR, Ind., Aug. 20.—Committees have been appointed to arrange the Masonic picnic Labor Day at Shields Park of this city, and preparations are being made to entertain more than 5,000 Blue Lodge Masons. Arthur R. Robinson, United States Senator from Indiana, will be the principal speaker, it was announced. W. W. Suckow, Franklin, Ind., grand comminder of the Knights Templar of Indiana, also will speak. The boys’ band from the Masonic Home at Franklin will give a concert. Committees: Program—N. J. Lasher. Floyd Beldon. Dr. B. B. Shiness, Rev. C. J. Moeller. John H. Conner. Entertainment—Wayne Baxter. Walter Voss, Claude Carter. Noble Gresham. W. L. Clark. H. C. Henderson, H. R. Noe. Decorations—C. H. Wiethoff, George A. Clark. Maurice Taylor. Registration—C. A. Jackson, H. C. Wools. Norman Barnes, Clifford Hartwell, Tevis Carter. Publicity—Ralph Thompson. C. E. Loertz, Dewey Young. Reception—Nathan Kaufman, Edwarfi Massman Jr., Travis Carter, T. H. Montgomery. H. Lett. Oscar B. Abel, C. D. Billings. S, B, JUNITIATES 4 Security Benefit Members to Visit Washington, Ind. Marion council of the Security Benefit Association initiated four new members and reinstated one at the meeting Wednesday night, according to H. V. T. Hobbs, publicity director. New members were: John Kiefer, John R. Thompson, Mary Kimmaman and Catherine Hancock. Dr. Donald McGregor was reinstated. Robert Green has 175 points in the membership drive, and Mrs. Joseph Gufke has 125. Captain Green received another award from C. T. McKee, district manager. A number of the local members will make the trip today to Washington (Ind.), council for the twentieth anniversary celebration tonight. Futher plans will be made at the Wednesday night meeting at 116 E. Maryland St. for the election of officers Sept. 5, according to Isabelle Kiefer, president. RED MEN TO PICNIC Keesling Reunion Will Be Held Sunday. By Times Special MIDDLETOWN, Ind., Aug. 20— The twenty-seventh annual Keesling reunion will be held Sunday at the fairgrounds by the Red Men of that vicinity. Arch H. Hobbs, Indianapolis, great chief of records, will be the principal speaker, and a musical program and picnic dinner are also planned. Jasper Keesling and D. W. Keesling will assist in planning the outing.
New Manager John H. Frank, president of the board of trustees of the grand lodge of the Knights of Pythias, has been placed in charge of the Indiana Pythian Bldg., Pennsylvania and Ohio Sts., as temporary manager, succeeding Asolph Niccard who died suddenly Aug. 16 in New York while on his vacation. Frank will be in charge until after the annual convention of the grand lodge of Indiana, Oct. 2 and 3, in Indianapolis. Frank’s home is in Lebanon. Ind., and he has teen a member of the board of trustees -for thirty-five years.
Horse and the papoose, Starlight. Among the other attractions of the two-day meeting will be a hogcalling contest, awards for the oldest Red Men couple and other contests. The meeting will be handled by Thomas E. Shelburn, keeper of records.
to announcement from Lottie Davis, club president. The Moose will have a strong bowling team on the alleys tills coming season, promises Fred Kinnan, in charge of this activity. The season opens Sept. 15. William A. Mackey has been designated delegate to the Indiana State Moose conclave at Gary, Ind., Aug. 30-Sept. 3. Mackey was unopposed for the honor. Indianapolis council, Knights of Columbus Bowling League perfected plans for the coming season at a recent meeting, adopting a number of regulations to govern its pennant season and appointing a schedule committee. “There has not been a member of the Indianapolis council, Knights of Columbus, sick or injured for the last fifteen days, said a report from George Rice, chairman of the visiting committee, Aug. 13. Chapel Rebekah lodge is making arrangements to hold a “cfounty fair’’ at Red Men’s Hall, TwentyNinth and Clifton Sts., next month, according to officials of the lodge. FLAN GROTTO DAY 10,000 Expected to Attend Franklin Gathering. More than 10,000 members of the Grotto in Indiana are expecteed to attend the annual Grotto day ceremonies at the Masonic Home at Franklin, Ind., Sunday. Raymond W. Murray, president of the Indiana State Grotto Association, arid the Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkel, pastor of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, will ba the principal speakers. The program will open at 2:30 p. m. with a concert by the Sahara Grotto Pirate Band. Fletcher W. Boyd, home superintendent, will give the address of welcome. Murray and Rev. Dunkel will respond. A parade of all uniformed bodies of the Grotto will be held at 3:30 p. m., followed by exhibition drills by patrols and drum corps. Fred Jewell, director of Masonic Home Band, will lead a massed band concert. Capt. H. Weir Cook of the 113th Air Squadron of the National Guard, will close the day’s events with an aerial show.
URGE PENSION LAW Eagles Cite Editorial in State Campaign. Continuing its campaign for passr.ge of an old-age pension law for Indiana by the 1929 General Assembly, the old-age pension commission of the Indiana Aerie, Fraternal Order of Eagles, brings to attention the following editorial from the South Bend (Ind.) NewsTimes: “Comfortable age has no terrors for men and women. Uncomfortable or dependent age must have tremendous fear, so that those who propose this plan of State insurance have in mind the thought of taking fear from the hearts of men and women. “Will there be less incentive to save? Certainly not. For under the proposals, the income of those whc receive such pensions must b$ less than S3OO a year; certainly a small sum. not large enough to prove a temptation to waste on reckless living, but large enough to insure against the heartbreak, the suicide, the unhappiness that faces those no longer able to earn enough. “The word almshouse has a sinister echo. It sends a shudder. It is the antithesis of home.’* DeMolay Plans Card Party The DeMolay drill corps is to give a eucher and bunco party Aug. 29 at 8:15 p. m. at the K. of P. Hall, 32(4 Audubon Rd. Urban Tucker is in charge ofc arrangements. DeMolay membera Mg the public is invited, t
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
RECORD SESSION ! MELD BY 0. E, S, GRANDJHAPTER Golden Jubilee Meeting at Denver Transacts Much Vital Business. “The golden jubilee General Grand Chapter meeting, Order of Eastern Star, held in Denver, Colo., I recently, was the largest attended and transacted more vital business than any meeting in the history of \ the order,” declared Mrs. Blanche j Reggett, past worthy grand matron and grand secretary of the Eastern Star in Indiana, on her return from the sessions. In opening the General Grand Chapter, Mrs. Emma P. Chadwick, Seattle, Wash., acting most worthy grand matron, due to the death of Mrs. Clara Heinrich, Newport, Ky., | declared the Eastern Star to be a ! potential force in the promotion of Deace, as evidenced by the fact that Germany, France and other European nations, as well as countries of South and Central America, have petitioned for membership and the establishment of chapters. Mrs. Reggett said more than 4,000 delegates were present from all sections of the United States, Mexico, Canada, Porto Rico, China, Alaska, Panama, Australia and Cuba. Matron Given Gavel A unique gift to the most: worthy grand matron was a gavel made from pieces of wood obtained I : from fifty-five grand jurisdictions of | the order and representing 1,000 hours of labor. A similar gavel was presented the General Grand Chapter, In the hollow end of each gavel was placed a scroll showing j where it had come from, a copy of the minutes of the first meeting and a copy of the presentation which covers the history and symbolism of the gavel. A resolution adopted placed the Grand Chapters of New York and New Jersey on the same footing with! respect to honors, courtesies and privileges as other grand bodies The resolution, according to Mrs. Reggett, is the result of twenty years’ work to bring the New York and New Jersey chapters to a point where they are recognized as fraternal bodies and grants their members and officers the privilege of visiting all other grand chapters. Ritual Revision Urged The most worthy grand matron pointed to the necessity of a revision of the ritual in order to protect the copyright, which is about to expire. A committee was appointed to supervise this work Mrs. Reggett, in speaking of the, changes in the ritual, stated the; general chapter created anew office in subordinate chapters. In the fu- j ture chapters will elect an associate worthy patron in addition to the other officers. The report of the secretary showed ] $300,000 had been collected toward j a fund which was expected to reach j $2,000,000, for the erection of an international temple in Washington, j D. C. Mrs. Emma P. Chadwick was elected most worthy grand matron. The session selected Dallas, Tex., for the next triennial meeting In 1931.
LODGE OUTING SET I. 0. 0. F., Rebekahs Arrange Fete at Greensburg. • Fifth annual homecoming of the Marion County Association of Odd Fellows and Rebekahs will be held Sunday at the I. O. O. F. home at Greensburg, Ind. More than 5,000 members are expected to attend, says H. G. Schc-nk, publicity chairman. Accessories to a chicken dinner will be served free to members from the fifty-one lodges in the county, Frank Houston, grand master, and Mrs. Ura Lee, Rebekah president, will speak at 11 a. m. Four orchestras and eight drill teams will play and give exhibitions. Those making the trip by automobile are asked to communicate with their lodge secretary. Special rates are being offered on railroads and traction lines. CITY GETS^CONVENTION Royal Orange Institution Coming Here for 1930 Meeting. The 1930 convention of the Royal Orange Institution of the U. S., a fraternal order for American Protestants’, will be held in .Indianapolis, according to word received by Henry T. Davis, Indianapolis convention bureau manager. About 500 delegates will attend. The 1928 convention has just closed at Cleveland, Ohio. John M. Hoy, Lebanon, is the State grand organizer. K. OF C. TO INITIATE Degree Work for Class of 20 Is Laid Out. James E. Deery, grand knight, announced that Knights of Columbus will conduct a First Degree exemplification Sept. 17, preparatory to higher degree initiation. More than twenty are in the class awaiting formal introduction into the order, Deery said. Second and Third degree classes are to be formed late in September. DRILL~~WORK PLANNED Columbus Team Will Take Part in Fall Meetings. if.V Times Special COLUMBUS, Ind., Aug. 20.—The Columbus Eagles drill team is expected to exemplify lodge rituals and initiate classes of candidates at a number of special meetings to be called in this district this fall, George E. Mitchell announced. Madison, Coulmbus, Jeffersonville, Seymour and New Albany are in the district, „.
Work 25 Years for Pythian Sisters
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Dr. Frank A. Priest
“Twenty-flve years of loyal work in the Pythian Sisters’* will "ring recognition to five members of Myrtle temple tonight when officials present “twenty-five-year membership pins." Those receiving the honor are Mrs. Edna Pauley,
Officers of 89 Benefit Lodges Meet at Toronto Convention
GARY WAITS TO WELCOME ELKS Preparations Are Made for State Meeting. By Times Special GARY, Ind., Aug. 20.—1n gala attire, Gary is ready to welcome the annual State convention of the Benevolent . and Protective Order of Elks Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. All merchants of the city have cooperated in decorating their places of business and the downtown streets in purple and white, the official colors of Elkdom. Gary's advantages as a vacation center were stressed in invitations ;ent to thirty-one sister organizations in the State. Most of the visitors will be accompanied by their wives and families. The Vivian Society, auxiliary to the local lodge, has assumed responsibility for the ladies’ entertainment program. Convention headquarters will be established in the Hotel Gary and the Elks’ Heme, at Eighth St. and Broadway. John A. Smith, housing committee chairman, announced that a sufficient number of rooms in private homes have been listed to take care of the overflow from the hotels.
MOOSE CALENDARS OUT Program for Fall and Winter Meetings Announced. Calendar of fall and winter regular meetings of the Loyal Order of Moose was announced today by lodge officials as follows: Loyal Order of Moose, every Tuesday night. Woman’s Mooseheart Legion, every Thursday night. Hocsier Heart Legion, first Tuesday in each month. Junior Order of Moose, first and third Wednesday nights of each month. House committee, tenth of each month and on call. Wile i Company A, second and fourt) Sunday mornings and second a id fourth Wednesday evenings Dri m corps, first and third Sunday mornings.
It May Be W lii When Children Ciy for It Castoria is a comfort when Baby is fretful. No sooner taken than the little one is at ease. If restless, a few drops soon bring contentment. No harm done, for Castoria is a baby remedy, meant for babies. Perfectly safe to give the youngest infant; you have the doctor’s word for that! It is a vegetable product and you could use it every day. But it’s in an emergency that Castoria means most. Some night when constipation must be relieved —or colic pains—or other suffering. Never be without it; some mothers keep an extra bottle, unopened, to make sure there will always be Castoria in the house. It is effective for older children, too; read the book that comes with it.
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Mrs. May M. Parish, Albert L. Pauley, Capt. T. W. Demmerly and Mrs. Minnie Taylor. There also will be initiatory work followed by a social hour at the temple, 119 E. Ohio St., according to Ethel Willis, press correspondent.
More than 400 national officers of the eighty-nine fraternal benefit societies affiliated with the Fraternal Congress of Amerloa met today at the opening of the six-day annual convention at Toronto, Canada. Sidney H. Pipe, Toronto, president of the Congress, is the third Canadian in fifty years to hold the office.
and the gathering at Toronto is a compliment to his leadership. He is a representative of the Independent Order of Foresters. E. J. Dunn, Chi c a go, 111., president of the Loyal American Life Association, is vice president of the congress, and pro bably will be advanced to the presi-
Sidney H. ripe
dency this week. Today's session was divided into several sectional meetings of the presidents, secretaries, editors, medical directors, lawyers and actuaries. The executive committee also convened. Mayor Samuel Mcßride of Toronto will give the address of welcome Tuesday, and R. Leighton Foster, superintendent of insurance for the province of Ontario, also will speak. Laws and policies to make fraternal insurance sound and depend-
a,ble will be the major items of business before the congress. Assets of member societies are more than $600,000,000, it is sail An exhibition is being given of welfare activities of several societies which, in addition to an active lodge system and insurance protection, teach fraternity, care for
the sick, supervise members’ health, build homes for aged members and orphans and sanitorlums for the tubercular, and give hospital and nurses care to the needy.
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RED MEN HONOR ARGHjUiORBS Named to Speak at Great Council Convention. Arch H. Hobbs, Indianapolis, great chief of records of Indiana, has been named to give the annual memorial day address at the annual convention of the great council of Red Men in Richmond, Va„ Sept. 10. Hobbs also is candidate for the office of great junior sagamore, the start of the Red Men line of officers governing the wigwams in the United States. A special Pullman will leave Indianapolis at 7:15 p. m., Sept. 8, for the convention and will arrive in Richmond at 3:30 p. m. Sunday. The Indiana delegation will vote as a unit for Hobbs and will assist in the campaign for election. Among those who will make the trip are: Mr. and Mrs. William Morris, Frankfort; Mr. and Mrs. Hobbs; James R. Stocksdale, New Albany; Fred E. Hines, Noblesville; James Lamkin and Michael Finn, Indianapolis; P. C. O’Connor, Jasonville; Lewis W. Otto, Crawfordsville; Frank McConaughy, Franklin; Mr. and Mrs. George I. Kismer, Terre Haute, and Jessie M. Raub, Lafayette, past great Pocahontus. Moose Arrange Initiation Moose are making elaborate plans for Past Dictator and Homecoming night, Aug. 28, when a large class will be initiated. A varied program of entertainment is being arranged for the event.
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LODGES MEET i WITH V. F. W. TO: PLAN PARADE - f Final Details to Be Mad£ Tonight for March of 15,000 Persons. •4s>v A meeting of fraternal organlza-.' tions planning to have a company; in the parade of the Veterans of Foreign Wars during the twenty"-' ninth annual national convention in Indianapolis Aug. 26 to Sept., 1, will be held at 7:30 tonight at t-h* V. F. W. headquarters In the Claypool, according to Harry Franklin, parade marshal. Many lodges already have entered the special division of the paradft devoted to fraternal groups, and many others are planning to enter! Franklin says. Among those who will march arft the Shrine, Knights of Columbia Knights of Pythias, Modern Woods. men of America, Improved of Red Men, Caroline Scott rison chapter of the D. A. R. and Grand Army of the Republic. Decide Parade Details Among the major issues to be decided are the exact time of the parade, line of march, location for formation of companies and order of march, says Frank T. Strayer, na* tional commander of the V. F. W. Civic organizations and business houses who will be represented also will meet at the same time with Franklin and Strayer. It is expected . that more than 15.000 persons will participate in the parade. The 11th Infantry Band from Ft. Benjamin Harrison will head tho parade as the official national band. The V. F. W. Post Band from Hammond, Ind., ’’•ill head the division as the official Hoosier band’. Hammond Sends Band The seventy-five men in the band and marching company f om HairifJ" mond will be sent to Indianapolis through a special fund subscribed by the Hammond Chamber of Commerce and business men of that citjfi A special bus will bring them herSi Civic organizations and fraternal, bodies are asked to take part in tins parade and to communicate with’ Strayer at V. F. W. headquarters to the Claypool. Those who intend to" enter but have not yet made finer arrangements are invited to attend tonight’s meeting, when full plans will be outlined. BEN-HURS HOLD PICNIC Central Indiana Courts Sponsor Outing. Contests and a basket dinner featured the outing attended by several hundred members of Ben Hur, their families and friends in the chsy park of Noblesville, Ind., Sunday. The outing was sponsored by courts of central Indiana, Louis H. Mills being general chairman. On the games committee were O. H. Blackford. E. Carmichael and Clifford Southard. Banquet committee members were: Bert hi* Whitehead, Mrs. G. H. Blackford and Zona Mills. .
