Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 265, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 March 1930 — Page 9

MARCH 17, 1930.

LOCAL EAGLES DRILL TEAM TO GIVE DEGREES City Members Will Attend Initiation to Be Held by Wayne Aerie. Indiana's largest Eagles lodge will honor the state’s outstanding drill team Sunday afternoon when Wayne aerie of Richmond will initiate candidates as an Indianapolis team class. The team, composed of sixteen men directed by Wilbur H. Miller, will be assisted in the ritualistic work by four men occupying the officers’ stations. In the thirty-one years since founding of the order, the record of the Indianapolis team has not been

equaled, it having won first place in national competition three consecutive years. Trip Arraneed It is expected that at least fifty local Eagles, headed by President Joseph F. Beatty, will make the trip to Richmond. final plans for which will be made at the weekly meeting tonight.

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Other events on the aerie program include a family night program to be given in mid-spring and a Mothers' day initiation. The local aerie was represented at Crawfordsville aerie’s celebration of its twenty-fifth anniversary. Mayor Present The delegation included Otto P. Deluse, past national president; Beatty and Miller; John J. Pfarr, inside guard; Frank Rees, who instituted the hast aerie; Dr. Robert Dwyer. Clarence Yates, Wiiiiam Staihart, John P. Pyle. William Murray, Bert Conden and W. O. Camden. State officers were represented by Mayor John B. Hudson, Lafayette, vice-president. Anderson aerie, oldest in Indiana, is making plans for entertaining the state convention June 11 and 12. At a preliminary meeting guests included Deluse: William A. Stoehr, Connersville, state president; Joseph Humbert. Kokomo, past state president; Ernest E. Cloe. Noblesville, secretary: Charles Stewart, Kokomo, inside guard, and Wesley Browning, trustee. Preparations are being made to entertain 1,000 visitors. R. M. Vasbinder is president of the aerie. FOUR TO GET DEGREES Masonic Group to Hear Address at Dinner Friday Evening. Master Mason degree will be conferred on four candidates by Calvin W. Prather lodge. No. 717, F. & A. M., College avenue and Forty-second street, Friday afternoon and night, beginning at 1 p. m. Dinner will be served in the dining room at 6:30 p. m. Music and entertainment will be provided. After the dinner the Rev. Thomas R. White, pastor of Meridian Heights church and chaplain of Prather lodge, will speak on “The Heart of a Mason.’’ LODGE CHAPTER MOVES Pythian Sisters No. 411 Located in New Headquarters. ■ Pythian Sisters chapter No. 411 of Indianapolis have moved into new lodge headquarters at Washington and Whittier streets. The chapter will hold regular meetings there at 7:30 p. m. on every first, and third "Wednesday of the month. Mrs. Beth Abbett is mistress of the chapter and Mrs. Christiee Holland is most excellent chief.

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New officers to be installed by Indianapolis lodge No. 13, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, April 4, are shown above. Top Row (left to right)—W. G. Taylor, secretary, and V. M. Armstrong, retiring exalted ruler, delegates to grand lodge. Below (left to right)—Carl W. Steinhauer, esteemed leading knight; Earl Wolf, newly elected exalted ruler, and J. C. Gribben, esteemed loyal knight. Other officers are Dr. Thomas E. Quill, esteemed lecturing knight; Fred L. Bodemiller. tiler; John J. Minta, trustee for five years, and George W. June, alternate grand lodge delegate.

‘K. P. Day ’ to Be Held by Knightstown Lodge

LODGE PLANS HOME New Building to Be Ready for Use Next Fall. Bp Times Special SOUTH BEND, March 17.—A new lodge home is to be erected here by the Z. B. Polish Falcons lodge No. 1. Construction will begin immediately in order to complete the building by Oct. 1. Plans call for a threestory structure of brick, concrete and steel, to contain a gymnasium, bowling alleys, ballroom, lodge meeting hall, reception room and officials’ rooms. The building committee includes John P. Rozplochowski, chairman; Alfred Zawisza, Valentine M. Sparazynski. Blase Krupa and Frank Kominowski.

21 FRESHMEN AT I. U. CHOSEN BY BLUE KEY Outstanding Group Eligible for Hon-1 or Society Membership. Bv Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind.. March 17. —Sidney Kauffman, Indianapolis, is one of twenty-one Indiana university freshmen chosen by the honorary men's society of the Blue Key making up the group oi outstanding freshmen for this year. These students will be eligible for membership in the Freshmen Honor Society which will petition Phi Eta Sigma, national honor scholastic society. In addition to Kauffman, the following were chosen by Blue Key: Wllllarm H. Andrews Jr. and Robert M. Hallstead, Bloomington; Fred C. Baker, Evansville: Lowell F. Beggs. Scottsburg; Donald R. Conrad, Kewanna: Edward N. Delaney, Veedersburg: Frank K. Edmondson. Seymour: Richard E. Estlick, Larwill; Howard W. Hamilton. Oakiandon; Harley R Ireland 111. Braril; Abraham Jackson, Paterson. N. J.: Jetho Meek Jr., Greensburg: Wendell P. Metzner, Bryant; Stanley A. Pressler. Columbia City; Amos M. Robb. Ossian: Mever P. Shipman. Paterson. N. J.; Harry W. Sommers, Gary: James H. Stewart. Marlon; John F. Wiseman. Chesterton, and Ralph E. Blacktord, Middletown, O. . Richard Jones, Shelbyville, is Blue Key president. GRAND ARMY RETIRES Franklin Post Passes Memorial Day Work to Younger Men. Bv Times Special FRANKLIN. Ind.. March 17.—For fifty years the Grand Army post here has been an-anging the city's Memorial day observance, but this vear younger men will be in charge. The post, with only eight members left cn its roll, has turned the task over to the American Legion and Spanish-American war veterans. Decision to place the burden on other shoulders was reached at a meeting of the post attended by only four members. Three others are too feeble to leave their home*, and the one remaining of the eight is in the south where he spent the winter. Social to Be Held Catherine Merrill tent No. 9. Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War. will hold a pie social at Ft. Friendly tonight for benefit of a memorial to G. A. R. veterans at the Wabash convention in June. Lodge to Practice Craft practice will be held tonight by Indianapolis lodge No. 665, F. <fc A. M., at the temple, Blaine avenue and Morris street. Dwight Priest is president and Paul Sortman, master of craft. Indiana Banks Merged By Times Special GREEN S FORK. Ind. March 17. —The First National bank here has I been merged with the First National bank of Williamsburg. *

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Similar Meetings Will Be Held During Week in Other Cities. Bu Times Special KNIGHTSTOWN. Ind., March 17. —An all-day session “Knights of Pythias day" will be sponsored here Wednesday by Knightstown lodge, No. 226. Ritualistic work, a basketball tournament, banquet and public session are on the program. Games between teams from lodges in Knightstown, Straughn, Martinsville, Greenfield and other cities 'will be played at 10 and 11 a. rn. A class of seventy-five candidates will receive Knight rank degree work in the afternoon. Following a banquet at 6 p. m., winners of the morning net games will play final contests. Mitchell to Speak G. L. Dalrvmple of Knightstown is in charge of arrangements. Grand lodge officers will attend and Carl R. Mitchell of Indianapolis, keeper of records and seal, will speak. Other meetings to be held by the order in Indiana this week include a Page rank meeting at Lake Mill, Spencer county, tonight, with District Deputy John J. Stuehrik of Tell City, in charge; a meeting at Evansville Tuesday night, Edward Johnson, district deputy: at Cortland Wednesday night, Cash Kern, Brownstown, district deputy, and at Salem Thursday night, Aivin Coiglazier, district deputy. Loy Will Preside Ninety-six lantern slides of the Lafayette Pythian home will be shown at each of these meetings, which are a part of the order’s “March 30" sessions being held in connection with a membership drive windup. Charles S. Loy, grand chancellor, will preside at a similar meeting in Montpelier Tuesday night, and August M. Maick of Muncie will direct a session at Attica Thursday night. Other meetings will be held in Kokomo, Logansport, Noblesville, Thorntown, Greenwood, Indianapolis, Orleans, Morocco, Lowell, Rensselaer and Hammond. LODGE DANCE IS HELD Annual St. Patrick's Day Event of Elks Attended by 800. Annual St. Patrick's day dance of the Indianapolis Elks lodge was attended by 800 persons at the club home Saturday night. The Elks orchestra, directed by Tom Lanahan, furnished music. Courtland C. Cohee was chairman of arrangements. Turners to Hold Dance Ladies' classes of South Side Turners will sponsor a hardtime dance at Turners’ hall, 306 Prospect street at 9 tonight. Mrs. Marie Baukat is dance chairman. Music will be furnished by Pretzel's orchestra.

Wins Honor Bv Times Special PORTLAND, Ind., March 17. —Tribute was paid George Washington Thursday by Jay chapter No. 107, Royal Arch Masons of this city, when a floral wreath from the chapter was placed on his sarcophagus at Mt. Vernon. The wreath was placed by Clyde Ruley, high priest of Jay chapter. It was an unusual honor for a member of a fraternal organization, as placing tributes upon the sarcophagus is reserved almost exclusively for high officials of state and foreign dignitaries,

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

GRAND CONCERT WILL FEATURE GROTTO SESSION All Parts of U. S., Canada to Be Represented at Convention. An international band contest that will attract musicians from Grotto chapters in all parts of the United States and Canada will be held in connection with the fortyfirst supreme council session of Grotto which is to convene in Indianapolis June 17. 18, 19. Arrangements for the contest were announced this veek following a meeting of the international band committee of the order with Sahara Grotto offici~)s. Edward JSmith, chief justice of the municipal court, New York, headed the committee. Major Attraction The contest is one of the major attractions being planned by the local Grotto in connection with the entertainment of the supreme council session. Clyde E. Robinson, Sahara Grotto monarch, and Raymond F. Murray, general chairman, are supervising plans. Arrangements for the contest to be held June ’lB call for a division of the contesting bands into two sections. This is expected to be necessary because of the large number of competing organizations. Name Judges Soon Rules governing the band contest, and selections to be played were considered by the committee and contest judges are to be announced soon. Other members of the visiting international committee were Frederick P. Cree, newspaper editor of Kansas City, and Hurd J. Miller, steel company president of Ft. Smith, Kan. The Sahara Grotto band will enter the contest. Herschel Tebey, chairman of the Sahara Grotto band contest committee, and Carl B. Shey, chief justice of Sahara Grotto, will aid the general convention chairman in plans for convention music.

ODD FELLOWS’ HEADS IN TRI-STATE SESSION State Grand Master Has Honor Guard at Chicago Meeting. Odd Fellows grand lodge officials in Indiana were back at their official duties today following return from Chicago where they attended a tri-state meeting of the order Saturday. W. W. Zimmerman of Rochester, grand master, was accompanied on the trip by a guard of honor of seventy-five Odd Fellows from Cass, Miami and Fulton counties. Other grand lodge officers who attended the meeting were Harry C. Rockwood, deputy grand master, and George R. Bomwasser, grand secretary, both of Indianapolis; W. H. Jones, grand instructor, Logansport; Arthur E. Miller, grand marshal, Rochester, and J. F. Robertson, grand guardian, Peru. SCIOTO TRIBE TO MEET Crawfordsville Red Men to Hear Talk by County Auditor. Bv Times Special CRAWFORDSVILLE, March 17Two local councils of the Degree of Pocahontas will assist in entertainment at a meeting of Sicoto tribe No. 100, Improved Order of Red Men, Tuesday night. Russell Evans, Spencer, county auditor of Owen county, will be the principal speaker. Evans is prominent in Red Men circles, holding the office of great senior sagamore. Following a program of recitations and music, the Pocahontas councils will serve luncheon. LODGE WILL INITIATE 3 Degree Work Will Be Conferred by West Side Masons. Three candidates will receive degree work at meetings of West Side chapter No. 138, Royal Arch Masons. Tire most excellent degree will be conferred Wednesday night, this week, and the Royal Arch degree on Wednesday night, March 26. Both ceremonies will be open for visitors. Presiding officers of the lodge are Fred E. Newhouse, high priest; Edward Unversaw, senior warden, and Emily Hadley, junior warden. POCAHONTAS~IN SESSION Twenty-Five Lodges to Send Delegates to Meeting at Columbus. COLUMBUS. Ind., March 17. The local order, Degree of Pocahontas, is planning to attend a district meeting to be held at Franklin, April 14. Twenty-five lodges from this district will send delegations. A school of instruction will be held in the afternoon, followed by degree work at night. Mrs. Josephine Casada of Anderson, great Pocahontas. will direct the school.

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Entertainment at the annual fellowship party of the Marion County Association I. O. O. F., at the D|nison, March 29, will be enlivened by the orchestra of Philoxenian lodge No. 44, oldest Odd Fellows’ lodge in the city. This group of musicians who are members of

Woodmen Circle Will Hold District Session

MASONIC LODGE IN HOME-COMING Fayette County Groups Are Invited to Connersville. By Times Special CONNERSVILLE, Ind., March 17. —Masons of Warren lodge No. 15, F & A. M„ this city, are looking forward to their annual home-coming at the Masonic temple here on March 27. Members from this city and neighboring lodges of Fayette county have been invited. A special anniversary program is being arranged, one feature of which will be conferring of the Master Mason degree. Past masters of the lodge in this city will have charge of the meeting. Arrangements are under auspices of present officers of Warren lodge. At an inspection meeting of Maxwell chapter No. 18, Royal Arch Masons of Connersville this week, the most excellent master degree was conferred upon Andrew Dorris and Hassel J. Sweet. Harry L. Grussinger received the council degree. Herbert Graham of Elkhart, grand inspector, was present at a supper served to several hundred members. DEGREE CONFERRED ON ZIONSVILLE MAN Representatives of 28 Lodges in Five States Take Part. nv Times Special ZIONSVILLE, Ind., March 17. Representatives from twenty-eight lodges in five states were present at conferring of the Master Mason degree on Harry Klingler here recently. Several employes of the Fair-banks-Morse Company were present and gave Klingler a diamond pin. States represented were Kansas, Ohio, Michigan, Washington and Indiana. Degree work was supervised by Pentalpha lodge, No. 564, of Indianapolis. A social hour followed the ceremony. LABOR TALK IS SLATED Fred S. Gallovrav to Address Mechanics’ Meeting. Fred S. Galloway will speak on “America’s Menace to Labor,” tonight at a meeting in the Beech Grove I. O. O. F. hall, under auspices of the Junior Order of American Mechanics. Other speakers will be the Rev. R. E. Davidson and Mrs. Anna Malcolm. The meetihg will begin at 7:30. DEGREE WORK SLATED Three to Be Raised at Broad Ripple Lodge. Three candidates will receive Master Mason degree Friday night, at a meeting of Broad Ripple lodge No. 643, F. & A. M. Oliver P. Throckmorton is master of the Broad Ripple lodge. His immediate assistants are David Clark, senior warden, and Charles Van Meter, junior warden.

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Philoxenian lodge, located at 1336 North Delaware street, specialize in music suitable for fraternal gatherings. Members of the orchestra are (left to right) Di rector H. N. Ludington, drums; Ray Clair, piano; Leroy Micks, banjo; Leonard Cook and Howard Hunt, saxaphones, and Harold Abden, trombone.

Delegations From Six Indiana Cities to Take Part in Program Here. Fraternal delegations from six Indiana cities will convene in Indianapolis Wedensday for the first district session of the Supreme Forest Woodmen Circle, in the Red Men’s hall, North street and Capitol avenue. Two national and several state and district officers will attend. A class initiation will be conducted by the order. Grove 63 Host Assistants in initiatory ceremonies will include Captain Walter E. Roberts and the Ruth Meadows’ guards of Walnut grove No. 11, of Frankfort. Ramona grove No. 63 of Indianapolis will be host to groves from the following cities: Lafayette, Frankfort, Elwood, Anderson, Terre Haute, Logansport and other groves of this city. Officers of Ramona, grove are Mrs. Clovie Nicholas, president and special deputy; Miss Anna Head, secretary; Mrs. Ruth Potter, assistant attendant, and Mrs. Alvina Duvall, junior supervisor. Home Maintained A junior graduation ceremony and a display of twenty-five-year-old robes will be program features. Certificates of proficiency will, be awarded to grove officers. Mrs. Meadows, the principal speaker, will explain work of the order in connection with the home for aged and orphans at Sherman, Tex. The Woodmen circle owns and operates a 214-acre home and estate there, which w-as dedicated formally last June.

PYTHIANS TO GATHER IN MONTPELIER MEETING All Lodges in Ninth District Are ■ Asked to Session. Bp Times Special MONTPELIER, Ind., March ITNinth district Knights of Pythias members will gather here Tuesday night for a meeting in the local temple. The district Includes four counties with fifteen lodges. Approximately 300 are expected from Daleville, Muncie. Oakville, Albany, Parker, Portland, Red Key, Pennville, Winchester, Spartanburg, Union City and Roll. Page rank will be conferred on a class of candidates from attending lodges. Grand Chancellor Charles S. Loy of Swayzee and August Maick, district deputy, will be present. W. R. C. Will Meet Anderson chapter No. 44, W. R. C., will meet at 1:30 p. m. Tuesday at Ft. Friendly, 512 North Illinois street. A St. Patrick’s program will be given under direction of Mrs. Jennie Mulligan. Mrs. Nettie Harmon is president of the chapter.

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CLASS DEGREES ARE CONFERRED Scottish Rite Sections to Continue Work. Candidates seeking Scottish Rite degrees in the first section of the spring convocation class will continue through the fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth degrees this week. William E. Gentry will preside at conferring of the fifteenth degree Wednesday night. A prologue for each degree will be given by Ernest H. Niebrand. The sixteenth will be given under direction of Clarence R. Martin, On Friday night Indianapolis chapter of Rose Croix will confer the next two degrees, with William H. Morrison, most worshipful master, presiding at the eighteenth and Henry C. Thornton, roost worshipful master, presiding at the seventeenth. Impressive ceremonies were held at the cathedral Friday night, when the fourteenth degree was conferred on the first section of the “Dr. Gaylor M. Leslie class.” Tine P. Dickinson, thrice potent master, presided. Those assisting in ceremonies this week will include: Wednesday Night-Otls Gray. Clarence Greene, Paul A. Hancock, Frank Hazelrlgg. Charles Howard, Hal E. Howe ,Guy K. Jeffries. Thomas Kercheval. Murray H. Morris and Bloomfield H. Moore. Friday NighL-WllUam Billings. A. Boss Manly, Jesse H. Marshall. Clarence R. Martin. David McCormick, Henry McMichael, Theophilus J. Moll, John W. Murray, David h. NeaXus, Albert H. Off and Oscar Pond.

HONOR ST, PATRICK Knights of Columbus Will Hold Open Meeting. At an open meeting tonight members of the Indianapolis council, Knights of Columbus, will pay tribute to St. Patrick at the council’s auditorium, Thirteenth and North Delaware streets. Russell Wood, council lecturer announced an extensive celebration program. Members and families will attend. An attractive decoration of Irish and American flags will adorn the stage and form a background for ceremonies. Captain P. J. Kelleher of the Indiana national guard and veteran member of the order, will speak. A program of Irish and American songs will be given. August F. Krieg will recite “The Exile of Erin,” and Miss Cecilia O’Mahony will provide Irish song numbers. Circle to Meet Tonight Maple circle. United Order of Druids, will meet at 29 North Delaware street at 8 tonight. Mrs. Beulah Breeding, grand arch druidess, and other grand lodge officers will be present. Officers and members are urged to attend.

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RED MEN WILL 1 HOLD SERIES OF STATE SESSIONS Shelby Meeting Wednesday to Draw Delegates From District. Indiana Red Men will hold a series of meetings, in all parts of the state this month, starting with a session at Shelbyville Wednesday night that will attract large delegations from tribes in Shelby and surrounding counties. Tribes of Shelby, Johnson, Bartholomew, Decatur, Rush, Fayette. Marion. Hancock, Morgan and Hendricks counties have arranged to attend the initial session. Estie Lightfoot. chairman, assisted by Ottis House, past great sachem, and Frank Breeding, all of Kiowa tribe of Shelbyville, will direct the session. Reports will be received from each attending tribe immediately following assembly of delegates at 7 p. m. Candidates from all tribes will comprise a class to receive the adoption degree. State offices of the order will be represented at all the “revival” conclaves by Eli G. Lee. Terre Haute, great sachem, and Arch H. Hobbs, Indianapolis, great chief of records and seal. Meet at Muncie Fifty-one tribes in the district surrounding Muncie will meet there for the second meeting of the series Thursday night. Charles Boyd has been appointed chairman of arrangements. Indian tribe No. 1 of Muncie, of which Hobbs is a member, will be host at the session, and will honor Hobbs with a reception. Luncheon will be served to ‘ all members who attend. Tribes in the following counties are included in the Muncie district; Delaware, Jay. Henry, Blackford. Randolph, Wayne. Madison, Grant, Tipton and Hamilton. Attendance of 1,000 is expected at each of the “revivals.” Prominent members of the order who will attend the Muncie meeting will be W. H. La Rue, past great sachem ol Anderson: W. H. Eichhorn, past great sachem of Bluffton, and Judge Fred E. Hines of Noblesville. Guests of Wabash Members of Tippecanoe county and nearby Red Men tribes will be guests of Wabash tribe No. 11 of this city at a district meeting at Lafayette Tuesday night. Tribes from Klondike, Battle Ground, Burlington have been invited by Alvin D. Morrow, district deputy. Ten candidates will take work of the adoption degree, to be conferred by the Wabash tribe degree team. Arch H. Hobbs, Indianapolis, will speak. Wabash tribe is the oldest tribe of Red Men in the state and has been active more than fifty-five years. The meeting Tuesday will be held in their newly leased lodge hall at Fourth and Ferry streets. Hold Benefit Card Party A benefit card party will be held at Woodmen’s hall, 322 East New York street, Friday night by Capital City circle No. 176, Protected Home Circle. How Do Yon Feel on Arising? Very likely your kidneys control the answer. Fine to awake with a lively, healthy, energetic body. Miserable to drag an aching, tired, weary body from a restless, sleepless bed. Mrs. Jos. Fancher, Little Rock, Ark.; “One bottle of Foley Pills diuretic gave me almost Immediate relief, when I was miserable from disturbed kidney action, backache and dull headaches." Endorsed by men and women everywhere. Try them. Sold everywhere.—Advertisement.

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