Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 25, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 June 1930 — Page 8
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P. E. 0. ORDER PLANS SESSION AT NEWCASTLE Editor of Magazine to Be Principal Speaker at Two-Day Session. Bv Times dor-rial NEWCASTLE. June 9.—Plans have been completed by the Newcastle chapter, P. E. O. Sisterhood, for entertaining the annual state convention of the organization here, June 17 to 19. Mrs. Wiona Evans Reeves, Chicago. past supreme president and editor of the P. E. O. Record, will be the principal speaker. The program will include sessions devoted to matters of education and business, as well as an arrangement of entertainment. Sessions at Church Principal sessions will be held in the First Presbyterian church. Delegates and visitors will be enrolled at 2 p. m. Tuesday, June 17, following which the executive board meeting will be held. Mrs. Pauline McQuinn, president of the Newcastle chapter, will preside at an open meeting Tuesday night. State officers will make their annual reports Wednesday morning and memorial services will be observed in the afternoon. Officers to Attend Officers expected to attend are: Mrs. Margaret Van Nuys, Newcastle, state president: Mrs. Fern Spurgeon, Terre Haute, first vice-presi-dent; Mrs. Portia Baggy. Indianapolis, ■' second vice-president: Mrs Mayme Hunt, Kokomo, organizer; Miss Grace Furlong, Indianapolis, recording secretary, and Mrs. Inez Hughes, Valapariso, treasurer. Mrs. Baggy. Indianapolis, will direct the educational hour Wednesday, at which session Mrs. Reeves will address the convention on “The Purchasing Power of the P. E. O. Dollar.” Officers will be elected at the closing session Wednesday night.
DENNIS DE HAVEN IS CHOSEN COUNCILLOR Elected by Richmond Junior Order of American Mechanics. Bv Timr t Soeeial RICHMOND. June 9.—Dennis de Haven was chosen councillor of Richmond Council 18. Junior Order, of American Mechanics, at the annual election here. Other officers are Francis Richardson. vice-councillor; Elmer Wolfal, recording secretary: John Arnold, assistant recording secretary; Roy Clark, conductor; John Holcomb, warden; Ross Land, inside sentinel; George Wilson, outside sentinel; Carl Miller, trustee; Harry Thomas, chaplain, and Carl Miller, degree captain. Representatives to the state council meeting will be John Hensley, Carl Miller, Wayne Morris, J. C. Yearyean with Joe Clark, J. Elmer Stevenson, Charles B. Hoos and Jesse L. Hoos, alternates. MANITOU TRIBE WILL BE HOST AT MEETING Red Men to Gather at Fortville; Degrees to Be Conferred. Bv TiMr* Soc ial FORTVILLE, Ind.. June 9.—Manitou Tribe 53, Improved Order of Red Men, will be host to several hundred members at a county meeting Tuesday night. J. H. Cunningham of New Palestine, county chairman, will have chargp of the session to be attended by tribes from Mohawk, Greenfield. New Palestine and Fortville. Great Sachem Eli G. Lee, Terre Haute, and Arch H. Hobbs, Indianapolis, great chief of records, will be among state officers present. Degree work in the first degree will be conferred. The local tribe will entertain with a social session. OFFICERS tITbeTsEATED Installation Ceremony Arranged by Columbus Pocahontas Lodge. r.’i Timex Soeeial COLUMBUS. Ind.. June 9.—Newly elected officers of the local Pocahontas lodge will be in stalled in July. Officers are Mrs. Flossie Horn, pccahontas; Mrs. Della Geilker, prophetess; Mrs. Vivian Beatty, winono; John Cathers, powhatan; Elmer Lambert, degree master, and Edgar Hendrickson, musician.
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Eagle §4 nnual State Convention to Be Held at Anderson This Week
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Above (left to right)—Ciir.rltc J chenu, Frank E. Hering and Otto P. Bslcse. Below—John B. Hudson, William A. Stoehr and Ernest E. Cloe.
| Program Announced for Two-Day Session of Indiana Lodge. Bv Timex Soeeial ANDERSON, June 9.—The annual state convention of the Fraternal Order of Eagles will open here Wednesday, to continue through Thursday. Sessions will be held in the $150,C9O home of Anderson aerie, oldest in the state. Speakers will include Charles J. Chenu, Sacramento, Cal., national president of the order, and two former national leaders, Frank E. Hering, South Bend, and Otto P. Deluse, Indianapolis. Among state leaders who will have an active part in the sessions will be William A. Stoehr, Connersville, president; John B. Hudson, Lafayette, vicepresident, and Ernest E. Cloe, Noblesville, secretary. From 10 to 12 Wednesday morning. delegates will register. The convention proper will open at 1 p. m., and welcoming addresses will be made by Mayor J. H. Mellett, Anderson, and Glenn W. Gates, Chamber of Commerce president. The response will be by Charles Stewart, Kokomo, state inside guard. President Stoehr will announce committee appointments and will present his report with those of Cloe and Dan Gutgsell. Michigan City, treasurer. An address by Chenu will follows: State officers will be nominated. An address by Wallace J. Dillingham. Warsaw, deputy national auditor, will follow, and Harry Kuhlman, Connersville aerie secretary, will also speak. There will be a parade of drill and degree teams and marching clubs at 6 p. m. State officers will be elected Thursday. A memorial to deceased Eagles will be the subject of the Rev. J. I. Lothamer, Columbia City. Deluse and Hering will speak.
300 to Attend Yeoman Session at Logansport
Ft. Wayne Degree Team to Confer Work on 50 Candidates. Bu Times Bocrial LOGANSPORT. June 9.—Three hundred officers will attend the annual state meeting of the Brotherhood of American Yeoman here June 14. Conferring of degrees on a class of more than fifty candidates by the Ft. Wayne special degree team will be a feature of the session. Major part of the program will take place in Firemen’s hall. At a dinner in the banquet rooms of the Hotel Barnes in the evening, Ray McAdams. Ft. Wayne attorney, will be toastmaster, and national officers from Des Moines, la., will be guests. Among state officers who will attend will be Norman E. Carter, Indianapolis, president; G. D. Griffith, Marion, vice-president; Mrs. Emma Parker, Ft. Wayne, chaplain; Mrs. Elizabeth Wirick, Logansport, secretary, and John L. Rohm, Carthage, treasurer. The local entertainment committee members are: Mrs. Elizabeth Wirick, chairman; Mrs. Jennie Young. Mrs. William Benson. Mrs. Nellie Baer and F. M. Boatman. NEW TEMPLE FORMED Pythian Sisters Organize Lodge Branch at Centerville. Bu Times Bpecial CENTERVILLE. Ind., June 9.—A Pythian Sisters' temple was instituted here recently by Mrs. Emma Schaitcl. Sixth district deputy, assisted by members of the Richmond j temple. Charter members total thirty-one. Mrs. Daisy Duvall. Richmond, chief state executive of Pythian Sisters, was present at the organization
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Howard Armstrong Is New Centre Lodge Head
Fellow Craft Degree to Be Conferred on June 18. Centre Lodge 23, F. & A. M., of Indianapolis, will install Howard Armstrong as worshipful master at installation services June 18. He is the seventy-fifth persons to serve in this capacity during the 103 years of the lodge’s existence. This lodge is the oldest Masonic lodge in the Indianapolis jurisdiction and is said to be one of the largest Masonic lodges in the country. Ancient Craft Masonry was first established in Indianapolis March 27, 1822, when Centre lodge was organized by authority of the Indiana grand lodge. Armstrong served as senior warden during the last year. The Fellow Craft degree will be conferred on a class following installation, June 18. Other officers are Charles E. Sink, senior warden; Russell Richwine, junior warden; William H. Williams, senior deacon; Herschel Ax, junior deacon; Emil V. Schaad, senior steward; Henry Stipher, junior steward; Fred M. Bauer, tyler; Frank Sink, treasurer, and Charles E. Jones, secretary. COUNCIL WILL GATHER Woman’s Auxiliary to Entertain 1,000 Visitors This Month. The woman's auxiliary of Sahara Grotto plans to entertain more than one thousand women visitors who will be in Indianapolis June 17 to 19 in connection with the supreme council meeting of Grotto. Arrangements are under direction of Mrs. John C. Riddle, auxiliary president, and Mrs. Ralph O. Tindel, general chairman.
K. OF P. IN SESSION Hundreds Are Expected at District Roundup. Bu Times Special MARTINSVILLE. June 9.—Hundreds of lodge members are expected here Wednesday for the first district round-up of Knights of Pythias lodges. The general committee is headed by Albert Tousey, chairman, and includes O. O. Pierce, Hugh Wooden, Ernest Allen and Mark Myers. Pierce is arranging for a parade of members and visitors. The Pythian home bar and will play at the meeting and in the parade. The new Highland sanitarium will be headquarters for visitors, where Dr. S. P. Scherer, reception chairman. will receive them. A tour of the Grassyfork fisheries, sanitariums and other points of interest is being arranged. Page rank work will be given at 4 in the afternoon and at 7:30 at night. The Pythian Sisters will conduct degree ceremonies at 2:30 o’clock. HOLD MEMORIAL RITES Odd Fellows. Rebekahs Honor Past Members at Services. Marion county members of I. O. O. F. and Rebekah lodges who died during the last year were remembered at memorial services held Sunday by the Marion County Association of Odd Fellow and Rebekah lodges. The services, which were held in the assembly room of the I. O. O. F. building. Pennsylvania and Washington streets, were attended by about five hundred persons. The Rev. Fred A. Line. Central Universrlist church pastor, gave the memorial address.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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Howard Armstrong
FUNERAL RITES SET FOR BUSINESS MAN Services for John G. Ohleyer to Be Conducted Wednesday. Funeral services will be held at 8:30 Wednesday at the home and at 9 in Sacred Heart Catholic church for John G. Ohleyer, secretary of the E. C. Dolmetsch Company and former member of the city council, who died Sunday at his home, 2217 East Garfield drive. Mr. Ohleyer was bom in Cincinnati in 1859. He was active all his life in Democratic politics. He came to this city in 1862 when a boy and in 19(3 was made secretary of the Dolmetsch company, holding that position until his death. He was married to Miss Catherine Marshall, Evansville, in 1882. Survivors are the widow, four sons, the Rev. Leo Ohleyer, Quincy, 111.; George J. Francis R. and John E. Ohleyer, Indianapolis, and four daughters. Sisters Margaret and Clotilda of St. Louis, Mo.; Sister Mariodo of Peoria, 111., and Mrs. Helen Ohleyer of this city.
PRINCES OF SYRACUSE ORDERS ORGANIZED Pythians. Auxiliary Are Establishing Boys’ Chapters in City. Indianapolis Pythian and Pythian Sisters’ lodges are aiding in establishing local chapters of the Princes of Syracuse, boys organization of the order. Initial plans of organization were drawn up at a meeting in Castle hall Thursday night by representatives from the Indianapolis lodges. Another meeting will be held Thursday, June 19, at the hall, 230 East Ohio street, when officers will be elected. Boys from 14 to 18 are eligible to join. The order is a recognized auxiliary of the K. of P. and is supervised by the supreme lodge and gTand lodge. CITY MAN HEAD OF RAINBOW VETERANS John M. Caylor Elected President at Convention Sunday. John M, Caylor, Indianapolis, heads new officers of the Indiana Rainbow Division Veterans’ Association elected at the twelfth annual convention which closed here Sunday night. Other officers are William M. Taylor, Lafayette, vice-president; R. E. Murphy, Indianapolis, treasurer and a secretary to be appointed by Caylor. Ralph W. Miley, Shelbyville. is retiring president. An air show presented by the Indiana national guard observation squadron at Mars Hill airport and the anti-aircraft exhibition at the World War Memorial plaza Sunday night were among closing convention activities.
K. OF P. LODGE WILL STAGE 15 JUNESESSIONS Roundups Are Scheduled at Central Points of State. Starting Wednesday, 400 Knights of Pythias lodges in Indiana embracing a total membership of more than 50,000, will participate in fifteen district gatherings during June. These meetings to be known as K. of P. “roundups” will be held at central points in the state under direction of Charles S. Loy, Swayzee, grand chancellor, and other state officials. Schedule Announced The schedule is as follows: June 11, Martinsville; June 20, Geneva; June 16, Michigan City and Butler; June 23, Darlington; June 17, New Castle and Brookston; June 24, Elkhart; June 18, Evansville; June 25, Peru; June 19, Greensburg; June 26, Salem and Petersburg, and June 27, Terre Haute. The rank of Knight, the third and final step in the order's initiatory ceremonies, will be conferred at all of these meetings. Degree teams which have won competitive honors in district and state contests will supervise the ritualistic work. Closing Campaign Knights of Pythias in the state are closing a nine months’ statewide selective membership campaign inaugurated and directed by the grand, chancellor. More than one hundred district meetings were held during the campaign. Among attractions at the meetings will be basket dinners, band concerts, parades and other entertainment. Much interest will center around the appearance of the boys’ and girls’ band from the Indiana Pythian home at Lafayette. This band is composed of twentyfive boys and girls who live at the home, directed by Louis B. Elmore, former grand chancellor of the order in this state.
PYTHIAN GROUPS TO HOLD HITES L ✓ Memorial Services Slated at •Hall Next Sunday. Joint memorial services will be held Sunday by Knights of Pythias and Pythian Sisters’ lodges and auxiliaries at 2:30 p. m. in Castle hall, 230 East Ohio street. The Rev. J. G. Moore, Capitol Avenue M. E. church pastor, will speak. Officers of the various lodges will participate in the ritualistic observance. Special committees will distribute flowers to members confined in hospitals and at homes because of illness. Pythian Sisters will be represented by the following officers; Mrs. Sophia Tucker, Temple 411; Mrs. Elizabeth Bell, Temple v 7; Mrs. Katherine Perry, Temple 37; Mrs. Hattie Wahl, Temple 244; Mrs. Amelia Mason, Temple 7; Mrs. Elsie Stone, Temple 411; Miss Jessie Hawkins, Temple 37; Mrs. Mary Kaltwasser, Temple 411, and Mrs. Gertrude Bryant, Temple 244. Harry South is general memorial chairman assisted by Mrs. Anna Belford, vice-chairman, and Mrs. Elsie Stone, secretary.
UNGER m HEADS Officers in First Session With City Eagles. Tonight’s meeting of Indianapolis Eagles will be the first conducted by newly installed officers, headed by J. Pierce Cummings, president. Matters related to the state convention which will be held at Anderson Wednesday and Thursday will be discussed. Delegates to the convention are Joseph F. Beatty, the retiring president; Wilbur H. Miller, secretary; Jacob L. Smith, treasurer; Frank H. Rhees, trustee; James J. Ross, chaplain; Edward Kegeris, conductor; William O. Camden, William Beswick, Dr. E. S. Cornell and Phillip Harris. New committees chosen by President include finance, Otto P. Deluse, Harry Moore and Clarence Currens; auditing, Dr. Cornell, H. E. Grismer and Grover Gobin; entertainment, Frank H. Evans, and publicity, Charles C. Stone.
CLOE IS EAGLE ENVOY Stale Secretary Named to Attend Two National Sessions. Bu Times S Denial NOBLESVTLLE, June 9.—Ernest E. Cloe, state secretary of the Indiana Eagles, has been commissioned by the grand aerie to represent it at a meeting in Hampton Roads, Va., June 17 to 18. He also has been commissioned to attend a meeting of *he national committee on grievances and appeals to be held in San Francisco, Aug. 6 to 17. Cloe will make the western trip by automobile and will be accompanied by Mrs. Cloe and Professor John Hussey, Indianapolis, who is connected with the state department of public instruction.
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Compete at Convention
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Een the old Egyptian Cheops might envy the fast work of these modern pyramid builders who are members of the famous Murat Temple Gun Club of Indianapolis, which will be among uniformed organizations competing at the Shrine convention in Toronto this week. It is the only organization of its kind in Shrinedom. Harry Pell is kneeling in front.
ENTRY IN V. F. W: BEAUTY CONTEST
Miss Eloise Sheets Among 30 Competing for Championship. Miss Eloise Sheets is one of thirty entrants in the Veterans of Foreign Wars bathing beauty contest, a feature of the sports carnival for benefit of the V. F. W. drum and bugle corps, which will be staged in July at Broad Ripple park. The bathing beauty contest will be held at the swimming pool, with judging on the stage above the pool. The V. F. W. drum and bugle corps will use funds raised by the sports carnival to finance a trip to the national drum and bugle corps competition at Baltimore, Md., during the summer. The corps holds the Indiana state championship and will carry Indianapolis’ colors in the national competition. Following the contests at Baltimore, the Indianapolis corps will tour the east, visiting Washington, D. C., and New York and will return by way of Detroit and Chicago with appearances at each place. COLUMBUS PYTHIANS ACQUIRE LODGE HOME Purchase Rebenack Building for Remodeling This Fall. Bv Times Special COLUMBUS, June 9.—Acquirement of the Rebenack building here for anew lodge home is announced by officials of the Columbus Knights of Pythias lodge. The lodge will take possession in the fall as soon as the eight rooms on the second floor of the building can be remodeled into lodge quarters. A bakery which was operated in the Rebenack building for thirtyfive years was one of the oldest business concerns in the city. The lodge will rent the, lower floor of the structure to a business concern. MONEY MADE ON PLAY
Elwood Moose Degree Team to Be Entered in Competition. Bu Times Special ELWOOD, Ind., June 9.—The degree team of the Loyal Order of Moose here is to be entered in national competition with funds secured by presentation of a threeact comedy, “Millionaire’s Son,” recently. On two occasions the Elwood staff has carried off honors. Member of the cast that took part in the play included James Carlson, Charles Sauer, Dick Carlson, Charles Helping, Jerry Spinks, Joe 8011, John Holton, Francis Hoose. Jimmy Jones, Arthur Ormsby and John Stout. HURT IN 30-FOOT FALL Carnival Worker Injured Seriously When He Slips From Ladder. Taking an unadvertised high dive while dismantling the sixty-foot high dive ladder at the carnival grounds at Northwestern avenue and Fall creek Sunday afternoon, Arthur Frames. 66, of Covington, Ky., carnival worker, was injured seriously. He slipped while thirty feet from the ground. He was taken to city hospital.
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SEEK PAR WITH MISSINGFONDS Promoters of Moose Show Under Suspicion. Bu Times Special ALEXANDRIA, June 9.—Police and officials of the Mcose lodge here are seeking a woman, who gave her name as Mrs. Grayce Marshall, and a man, represented as her husband, who vanished with all profits from a show venture here, staged under auspicies of the Moose organization. Following a conference with the pair, the .odge permitted them to put on a play in the high school gymnasium on a joint profit basis, with the lodge advancing $35 to rent the auditorium for the performance. Two nights of the show is supposed to have netted over SIOO in receipts. This amount plus a SSO board bill and other expenses amounting to $75 set the lodge officials on trail of the pair when they left. Club Will Hold Meeting The Merry Makers’ Club will meet at 8 Tuesday night at the home of George Haught, 1038 Hosbrook street. Mrs. Lottie Davis, president, will preside.
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SI.OO $3.00 Round Trip Round Trip SPECIAL TRAIN to BLOOMINGTON via ILLINOIS CENTRAL JUNE 10th Account graduating exercises of Medical and Dental Students and Nurses, Indiana University Tickets good on special train only. No baggage checked. Half fare for children. Lv. Indianapolis 10:30A.M, Lv. Bloomington... 8:45P.M. Ar. Bloomington. .42:00Noon Ar, Indianapolis... 10:15P.M Alumni members contemplating attending the Alumni LuncMgn at noon will find this fast train very convenient. Tickets on sale City Ticket Office. 11l Monument Circle (LI. 6101) or Lnion Station <HI. 3355>. F. VV. STEPHKXSON, P. P. P... 313 Merchants Bank Bldg
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SAHARA GROTTO WILL BE HOST FORjWHETS Supreme Council Meeting of Order Scheduled in City June 17. Sahara Grotto will be host to 20,000 members of the Mystic Order of Vei’ed Prophets of the Enchanted Realm, who will gacher here from parts of the country for the supreme council meeting of the order, June 17 to 19. Registration is scheduled for Monday, June 16. Pre-convention social events will include the grand monarch’s banquet to be held in the Indianapolis Athletic Club at 6:30 Monday night and the grand monarch’s ball in the Indiana ballroom at 9 p. m. Parade on Program An outstanding event will be the Veiled Prophets’ parade at 8 p. m. Wednesday, June 18. Plans are to have a large number of fraternal, civic and business organizations represented with floats, for which prizes will be awarded. Pageant decorations are being perfected under direction of a New York company. Tlie supreme council will go into session at the Claypool at 9 Tuesday, June 17, and guests and delegates will enjoy a water carnival at Broad Ripple park in the afternoon. International choral clubs will compete for honors at the Indiana Pythian building, Pennsylvania street and Massachusetts avenue, Tuesday night. Drill Contest Feature Other features will be the International band and drill oontests at the Indiana national guard armory. The public will hear the bands in a massed concert on the north plaza of the Indiana World war memorial shrine Wednesday afternoon. The closing session will be held at the Claypool Thursday morning, to be followed by presentation of prizes and trophies at the Soldiers and Sailors monument at 11. Exhibition races for delegates will be staged at the Indianapolis Speedway in .the afternoon by noted race drivers. CRACK DRUM CORPS TO ATTEND SESSION Little Rock Grotto to Send Band to Prophets’ Convention. B.u Times Special LITTLE ROCK, Ark, June 9. Supreme council session of the Mystic Order of Veiled Prophets of the Echanted Realm at Indianapolis, June 17 to 19, will be attended by the Bendemeer Grotto band and drum corps from this city. This band won three cups at the last supreme session held at Rock Island, 111. Abou one hundred persons will make up the Little Rock Grotto delegation, of which about sixty-five will be band and drum corps members. They will leave here at 5 p. m. Sunday, June 13, and arrive in Indianapolis at 7:30 a. m. the next day. Headquarters will be at Lockerbie. The band will participate in the Class A band contest and will give several concerts during its four-day stay in Indianapolis.
DEPUTY TO OFFICIATE Richmond Man Aids Installation of K. of C. June 17. E,u Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., June 9.—Jerry Kitchen, Richmond, district deputy, will officiate at the installation of newly elected officers of Anderson council, Knights of Columbus, J-.ne 17. Officers are T. F. Casey, grand knight; Leo Michaels, vice-grand knight; Robert Aylward, chancellor; Robert Michaels, recorder; Thomas Roche, treasurer; Patrick Casey, advocate; Charles Reddington, warden; the Rev. Thomas Travers, chaplain; George West, financial secretary, and Clarence Richwine, lecturer. EXCURSION CINCINNATI $ 2.75 -r ;i To Shelbyville $ .75 To Greensburg t. 25 SUNDAY, JUNE 15 Leave Indianapolis 7:30 a. m., returning leave Cincinnati 6:30 p. in. or 10:i3 p. in. (Eastern Time), same date. Tickets good in coaches only. Half fare for children. Visit Zoological Gardens. One of tho finest, animal collections in America. Dancing and other amusements. Tickets and full information at City Ticket Office. 112 Monument Circle, phone Tt I ley 3322, and Union Station, phone Rllev 3353. BIG FOUR ROUTE ,
