Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 43, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 June 1930 — Page 5

JUNE 30,1930.

50 CITY MOOSE ARE ATTENDING ' GIANT SESSION Past Dictator of Post 18 Official Delegate of Local Aerie. Nearly fifty members of Indianapolis lodge 18, Loyal Order of Moose, form the delegation from this city to the national convention of the order which opened at the order’s home in Mooseheart, 111., today. John S. Newbaur, past dictator of Lodge 18, is the official delegate from here. Most of the delegates motored through to Mooseheart. James J. Davis. United States secretary of labor and director general of Moose, will preside at the convention at which general welfare of 1,700 lodges will be considered. 4,000 Added to Rolls Among reports to be received at the convention today was one on membership by Supreme Dictator Albert H. Ladner Jr., announcing that the order has had a bona fide increase of 4,000 new members during the year. In view of unemployment in the country, this increase is considered good by those familiar with fraternal conditions. Many fraternities have reported their membership at a standstill. The Moose now reports more than 700,000 members in lodges in the United States, Canada, England, Wales, South Africa, the Canal Zone and Hawaii. Inspection of the Moose home is to be a feature of the convention. 672 Get Diplomas Commencement exercises of Mooseheart high school, when sixtyseven graduates w'ill receive diplomas from Davis, are scheduled on the convention program. Friday, July 4, will be given over to patriotic exercises and athletic events at Mooseheart and a final supreme council session which will close the convention. William Anderson, secretary of Indianapolis lodge, No. 17, and national councilman of the order, has announced that ten of the graduates are from Indiana. They are: Orville Johnson, Gary; Jesse Hendrix, Bloomington: Verabelle Adams, Anderson: Harry Godlove, Portland; Harry and Eileen Nelson, East Chicago; Will Harper, East Chicago; Henry Erickson and Dean O. Sowers, both of Goshen, and Kenneth Stephenson, Bluffton.

ODD FELLOW LODGES IN MEETING SERIES initiatory Work Features Sessions Held in Miami County. Bu Time s Special PERU, Ind., June o.—Six Odd Fellow lodges of Miami county are holding a series of county meetings 'at which initiatory work is a feature. First meeting was held here Wednesday and a second is scheduled to be held here this week. Eight candidates were initiated at the first session. George P. Bornwasser, grand secretary, and H. C. Rockwood. deputy grand master, both of Indianapolis, spoke. Other meetings, to be held at Amboy and Converse, are being arranged. Lodges taking part are from Amboy. Macy, Converse, Bunker Hill. Deedsville and Peru. WRIGHT IS NAMED BY MODERN WOODMEN Veteran Official Supervisor of Ninth, Eleventh Districts. M. T. Wright, Eleventh district deputy, Modern Woodmen of America, comprising Hancock, Marion and Hendricks counties, has been appointed supervisor of the Ninth and Eleventh districts. The Ninth district includes Jefferson, Ripley, Ohio, Switzerland and Dearborn counties. Wright’s headquarters for the southern district will be at Madison, Ind. He will continue to maintain his local office in the Board of Trade building. Wright has been in the service of the Modern Woodmen of America as a district supervisor for more than twelve years and has served all Indiana districts.

ARCH H. HOBBS NAMED JASONVILLE SPEAKER State Officer to Address Red Men at July 4 Program. Arch H. Hobbs, Indianapolis, state keeper of records, Indiana Order of Red Men, will give a patriotic address at a celebration in Jasonville, July 4. Various fraternal orders will be represented and will participate in a parade to be supervised by churches and Sunday schools of that city. The Worthington high school band of seventy-five pie< es will be an attraction. Hobbs will speak on “Americanism." The Jasonville chapter of Triad is sponsoring platform entertainment. WOMEN OF SAHARA GROTTO PLAN PICNIC Committee Named to T*.ke Charge of Garfield Park Event. Ladies auxiliary of Sahara Grotto will hold its annual picnic at Garfield park Tuesday. Members of the auxiliary's entertainment committee have charge of arrangements. Mabel L. Dobbins is chairman. Other members of the committee are: Mrs. Gladys Young, Mrs. Lillian Holle, Mrs. Catherine Long. Mrs. Eleanor Saunders, Mrs. Ruth Kersting, Mrs. Mary Richardson. Mrs. Annabel Dean, Mrs. Ruth Moon, Mrs. Margaret Schneider, Mrs. Ruby Pettigrew and Miss Margaret Boydon. 20® Members Eagles Goal ITimet Special CKAWFORDSVILLE, Ind., June 23.—Minimum of 200 new members has been set as a gain for Crawfords vtlle aerie, Fraternal Order of Eagles, during the fiscal year ending May 31, 1331. Edward McKeown Is aerie president. J _

Farm Provides Food for Home

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Farming and fraternal matters go hand in hand at the state Odd Fellows’ home at Greensburg. The 160 acres of land adjoining the home provides most of the food for the 300 children and old folk who reside there. Above are shown barns on the farm and part of the home’s fine herd of Holsteins.

ALL OF US CAN LEAVE FOR THE SOUTH POLE Just Get Into Your Movie Seat and You Are All Set to Go With Byrd on His Greatest Adventure to Date. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN YOU do not even have to get out your furs and long boots to go to the south pole. Not since the movie camera men went with Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd to the Antarctic regions. Just imagine what it would mean today if we had movies of Columbus discovering America or George Washington crossing the Delaware. The only pictures we seem to have of those two great events are the conceptions of famous painters. Not so with Commander Byrd flying over the south pole and his years of preparing every detail for this great adventure.

Now we have the actual movies taken of Byrd and his men in “Little America,” and his actual experi-

ences in the air while flying toward the pole. This movie probably has the strangest and the most distant location that any movie has ever had. Here is no faking, just the natural recording of what Byrd and his men actually did in the antarctic region. Here is no dramatic writing but drama itself as the men

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Byrd

fight to conquer every obstacle that cunning nature plans in that region. As I sat in the cool theater looking at Byrd, his men and his dogs stage the greatest natural adventure ever recorded in films, I appreciated more than ever the real value of the movie screen. Here is drama but not drama of the stage. As Byrd and his men cut off from the world with the exception of radio communication; suffer cold weather which taxed the endurance of his many dogs trained to weather such conditions, I realize more than ever what this hero of the hour has accomplished. “With Byrd at the South Pole,” a Paramount movie, has brought romance to the screen just as Dick Halliburton has given us pleasing and comfortable adventure on the printed page. ”’ou first hear Commander Byrd tel ’ you bout his plans and how the,) ere accomplished. Then we see the City of New York leaving New York and we travel on that boat until it reaches the ice barrier, that terrible challenge to man to conquer the South Pole. Then we see the dangerous and trickey job of unloading the cargo which must feed and shelter the party of forty-two men, I think that I am right in this, for at least two years. I got an awful kick of seeing the men unload the great airship which w T as used in the actual flying over the pole. Then we see the actual building of “Little America,” a city in the snow and the base of all of Byrd’s operations. Then after months of continual night, we see spring come and Byrd starts actual work for his greatest adventure—that of being the first man to fly over the South Pole. And when Byrd. Bemt Balchen at the controls, and Harold June start out in the big plane for the pole, Floyd Gibbons starts talking at a rate of speed to match the speed of the. airplane. And then we see the accomplishment of the great journey, the sudden leaving for the United States and the partial abandonment of “Little America” with the two planes still there. Whatever you _ do, men and women, mothers and fathers, see that every boy and girl in your home and neighborhood actually sees “With Byrd at the South Pole,” now at the Circle. I am going to start the week right by borrowing four youngsters and send them to the Circle. See this one. Don’t miss it. Byrd at the South Pole”

Free Tickets Manager Collins of the Apollo has great faith in the mother theme of “Courage,” now on view at his theater. Belle Bennett is the mother of seven children in this story. That gave Collins an idea. The Apollo theater wants the mothers of seven children in real life to be the guests of the theater during the showing of “Courage.’’ All such mothers have to do is to write to the Movie Editor of The Times admitting that iiigh honor and giving the names of the children. Then a pair of tickets will be sent at once.

is on view for the week at the Circle. a tt n SEEING PRISON LIFE AS IT REALLY CAN BE They say that “War Is Hell,” but after you see “The Big House” on the talking screen, you will agree with me that prison life is hell. “The Big House” does one wonderful thing—it does not show prison

life to be a bed of roses and influenced by the silly and foolish attempts of chicken hearted reformers to make it a picnic grounds. In this picture you see criminals being criminals in prison. Here you see prison authoriities failing to remedy over-crowed conditions. Here you see graft and unsatisfactory’ food. Here you see the ring leader of the

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Chester Morris

convicts living up to his reputation of being the original tough guy. Here you fee a warden ready to give ’em hell or human treatment just as the men deserve it. And this same warden knows that the foolish politicians running the prison some day will have to face the responsibility of the lack of decent work in the prison as well as three men occuping the same cell. So you see that here is prison warfare pictured as war and not as fiction. It sure is relief to see one director who has the nerve to give us realism in prison life. And there Is a lot of human comedy in this story of prison life. Strange as it may seem, it is Wallace Beery, cast as Butch, the original tough guy, who put rat poison in his wife’s soup and bumped off three guys for SSOO each, who furnishes most of the comedy as well as the biggest dramatic scenes. It is Chester Morris, as Morgan, a forger, who is miles away from being mother’s darling, who fights it out with Butch, his best prison pal, during the riot led by Butch. Talk about your battle scenes in the recent war dramas. You sure have a whale of a battle when the convicts try to get control of the prison. They don’t, not even when they hurl the dead guards out of the prison in front of the eyes of the warden. Morgan becomes the hero of the hour and finally gets his freedom. He deserves it. The picture then goes to Hollywood with Morgan and Anne, played by Leila Hyams. for an ending with them getting ready to clinch in an “ever afterwards happy” idea. Rather soft soap is the ending, but our hero, I guess, deserved it. Lewis Stone is the sensible warden. Robert Montgomery is cast as i Kent, the rather better sort of a prison inhabitants who lets ®e yellow come to the surface while in prison. He is killed in the riot and I had no sympathy with this stool pigeon. The cast is right. No soft soap acting in this picture except the last few seconds. Here is a man’s story with hair on the chest. It is brutal and it carries a terrific lesson, if I can overburden this type of good entertainment with such a term. Here is real dramatic entertainment. See it and get a thrill. Now at Loew’s Palace. a a a CHARLIE DAVIS IS BACK AND MAKING WHOOPEE With Charlie Davis back to help the Indiana celebrate its triennial triumph (it is my opinion that the show is a triumph this week), and to inspire the boys in his orchestra, you can bet your best shirt that they are going to put out some real music and entertainment. And that is just what they are doing in “Twenty Minutes of Whoopee.” Especially did I enjoy their imitation | of a pipe organ and steam calliope; i and Ed Resener leading the others in singing a Jewish version of “The

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Stein Song”; and Charlie’s two bad boys, Harry and Phil, behaving like little children. And it was good to see Charlie’s big grin (it spreads over too much of his face to be called a smile), and to hear him play the trumpet. This is all separate from the regular stage presentation, “Dude Ranch,” in which Charlie Davis

has been traveling on the Publix circuit. In this Bums and Kissen almost stopped the show at the performance I attended, with their paraphrasing and combination of songs. But the show seemed bound to be stopped, and Jazz Lips Richardson did it. He truly knows and understands the art of eccentric dancing. His interpretation of the

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Buddy Rogers

well-known dice game in full action is a knockout. Others on this bill include the Darling twins in songs and dance, and the Rangers, a group of singers. The movie this week is “Safety in Numbers,” starirng Buddy Rogers. Although not what I would call great it is cute (that’s what the girls will call it) and very pleasing entertainment. You hear Buddy sing, and play the drums and trombone. How he plays the latter is nobody’s business. In this picture Buddy is surrounded by three talented young women, Josephine Dunn, Kathryn Crawford and Carol Lombard. It is their business, cast as Follies girls and hired by Buddy’s uncle, to show the young soon-to-be millionaire the wild and woolly ways of the city, without getting him mixed up with any of it. Os course all three girls ilke him, but he falls in love with one and she with him. This rather messes things, but you can rest assurdely that everything is o. k. before the finish. One scene that particularly interested me is when Buddy introduces a song and as the girls dance to the music we are given a glimpse of the black shadows of dancing girls with a fast moving background of tall buildings and traffic. Here is anew version in bringing a song home to you, and making you feel its rhythm and very soul. A lot of fun and comedy is packed in this all talkie and with Buddy Rogers surrounded by girls of the Follies type it should pull them in. For one, I liked it. Dessa Byrd at the organ and Newsreel complete the bill. Now showing at the Indiana. (By Connell Turpen). a a a BELLE BENNETT AS A MOTHER OF SEVEN CHILDREN Asa mother of seven children, Belle Bennett has her hands full in “Courage.” Some mothers can not even love one child, but this mother loved seven, though only one of them returned that love in full payment. Unqualified as a business woman, she is unable to cope with money

matters, letting it slip too easily out of her fingers. But she is bound and determined not to lose any of her children to her dead husband’s sister, who tries to take them from her purely for the sake of revenge. In the dramatics scenes Miss Bennett does some fine acting, and Leon Jan ey, as her youngest, who loves her dearly, plays

Belle Bennett

| his part with great understanding. If you have the idea that this is j a show’ where ycu wipe your eyes | every few minutes, change it right now. “Courage” is full of comedy, and clean humor. The cleverness of the playwright or director brings in a character, who is never seen, but you learn and know all about her through the conversation of those in the cast. This old lady w’hom everyone hated, and was hated in return by her, is won over with love by lfttle Leon, { and when she does, she wills to him ! her entire fortune. Others in the cast include Marion | Nixon, Rex Bell, Richard Tucker, and Blanche Frederici. “Courage” is j a picture that has its moments and 'is theres ore what I would call a | fair movie. Short subjects and Fox Movietone I News complete the bill. | Now at the Apollo. (By Connell j Turpen.) Other theaters today offer: “Rough Romance” with George O’Brien in the pleading role at the i Lyric: burlesqug at the Colonial, and "The Divorcee” at the Ohio.

SPORTS TEAMS OF D’NAI B’RITH TO SEEACTION Terre Haute Picnic to Be Scene of Meetings at Golf, Baseball. Athletic teams of Indianapolis lodge of B’nai B’rith are preparing for their rivalry contests with the Terre Haute lodge squads at a July picnic of both groups in Terre Haute. An eight-man golf team, captained by Dick Munter, will oppose the Terre Haute squad, while the B’nai B’rith baseball squad probably will be a top-heavy favorite over the Terre Haute squad. Many former stars are on the local squad, including Mike Sagalowsky, Abe Goldsmith, Harry Escol, Herschel Rudy, Mickey Escol, Jerry Hammerman and Sam Marcus. The team is managed by Harry Escol and Norman Isaacs. Officers Installed New officers of the Indianapolis Jewish organization wee installed at a meeting at the Kirshbaum center last Thursday night. Sidnay J. Sternberger succeeded Samuel J. Mantel as president for the ensuing six-month term. Other officers installed were: First vice-president H. Joseph Hyman; second vice-president, Charles J. Karabell; financial secretary, Leo Lefkovics; recording secretary, Lester Budd; treasurer, Rufus Isaacs; monitor, Samuel J. Mantel; assistant monitor, Richard Munter, and trustees, Henry Blatt, Max Katz, Norman Isaacs and Nathan Toplin. Feibclman Presides Officers were installed by Isadore Feibleman, past president of B’nai B’rith, District 2. The principal speaker of the evening was Louis J. Borinstein, also a past district president, who presented gifts to members of the confirmation classes of Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation and the Temple Beth-El.

EAGLES’ PARLEY SLATED TONIGHT Plans Will Be Made for July Booster Meeting. An entertainment program and refreshments are scheduled for tonight’s meeting of Indianapolis Eagles. The call to order will be at 7:30 p. m., instead of 8, and this will be in effect for all meetings until Sept. 1. Only members will attend tonight, but plans will be made for another entertainment in July, to which Eagles may invite friends. This will be a booster session for the eight-day period, beginning Aug. 24, when the aerie will take over Broad Ripple park. The national convention of the order will be held in San Francisco in August. Joseph F. Beatty, past president, will be the Indianapolis delegate, and others who will attend from here will include Otto Delust, national organization department representative for Indiana, and Wilbur H. Miller, local secretary, and state outside guard.

MRS. SCOTT 0. E. S. HEAD Other Officers Elected by Milton Order of Masonic Body. Bu Times Special MILTON, Ind., June 30.—Officers serving the Eastern Star here are headed by Mrs. Nora Scott, worthy matron. Others holding official positions include Lloyd Perkins, worthy patron; Mrs. Goldie Murray, associate matron; Delbert Pitman, associate patron; Mrs. Nora Brown, secretary, and Mrs. Ruby Huddleston, treasurer. HIBERNIAN SESSION OFF Meeting Postponed Because of July 4 Conflict. On account of the Fourth meeting of the Ladies’ auxiliary, Ancient Order of Hibernians, division No. 2, will not meet Friday, it was announced today. Members wishing to pay assessments are directed (j send mongy to Mrs. Margaret Sullivan, 243 North Tacoma avenue. The organization will hold its monthly card party in Parlor D at the Denison July.. 18. C. M. T. C. FORCES IN PISTOL, RIFLE WORK Travel Pay Checks Also Handed Out at Ft. Harrison. Pistol and automatic rifle practice and disbursement of travel pay featured today’s citizens’ military training camp activities at Ft. Benjamin Harrison. Earl W. Van Horn of Martinsburg, W. Va. who traveled 450 miles to attend the camp, will receive $48.50 from the government. Edward Hobbs, son of Colonel Horace P. Hobbs, camp commandant, receives no pay, as he lives at the fort. j A regimental parade with the ! C. M. T. C. band giving a concert | will be heid at 5 p. m. tonight. The j public is invited to watch the ! parade.

‘GOT A STILL?’ ‘SURE,’ IS PROMPT ANSWER Polite Police Get Co-operation in Raid; Seize Booze. “Have you a still?" was the polite query of Sergeant John Eisenhut and squad as they visited the home of Antonie Crea, 1825 South State avenue. Sunday afternoon. “Sure, upstairs,” was Crea’s frank reply, police say. A seventy-five gallon still, in operation, sixty-two gallons of liquor, twenty-five barrels of mash, of fifty gallons each, and a number of empty jugs were found, police declare. Crea will face federal liquor charges.

Moose Team to Play

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When delegates from 1,700 Loyal Order of Moose lodges finish their business at the annual convention in Mooseheart, 111., this week they will be entertained with an exhibition of athletics by children of the Mooseheart home. This 1930 baseball team, which plays every Saturday afternoon before bleachers crowded with 1,400 children, will be on the program.

Three-County Meeting Is Scheduled by Red Men

City Lodge Will Confer Warrior’s Degree at Morgantown. Improved Order of Red Men members of Marion, Hendricks and Morgan counties will gather at Morgantown Saturday night for a tricounty session. The Elective Chiefs’ organization of these counties is arranging the meeting, which is expected to attract approximately 500 persons. Ben Branson, Indianapolis, is president of the organization. Winamac tribe, 279, of Indianapolis will confer the warrior degree. In preparation for this, the first degree of the order conferred on fifteen candidates at Morgantown Saturday night. Committees who assisted in the week’s picnic of the Elective Chiefs’ organization, held at Broad Ripple park recently, will be guests at a luncheon in connection with the tri-county session. Branson was aided by the following committee members during the Broad Ripple picnic. Thomas Jenk.ns, Louis Scherer, Ben Breedlove and Albert Frick, all of Indianapolis, and Frank Clift, Mooresville. State officers will attend the Morgantown meeting.

ORGANIZE RITE FOR SUMMER PROGRAM

District, County and Local Chairmen Are Named in 52 Counties. Fifty-two counties of the Indianapolis jurisdiction of Scottish Rite are being organized to carry out the summer program of the Rite. The district, county and local chairmen were announced today, following a booster meeting at the Anderson Scottish Rite Club Saturday night. Dr. Gaylard M. Leslie, Ft. Wayne, was guest of honor and addressed the gathering in behalf of the supreme council. Muncie Man Chairman J. Cooper Props, Muncie, is chairman of the state Rite committee for the summer, and Martin L. Koons, Newcastle and David C. Fyke, Indianapolis, are assisting. The jurisdiction has been organized into nine districts, each with a chairman, who will supervise work of county and local chairmen. The Marion county organization has a special committee headed by Clarence R. Reene, chairman, and Carl Lenz, vice-chairman. Levey Named Head Entertainment for the Marion county meetings will be under direction of Marshall T. Levey, recently appointed entertainment chairman by John F. Engelke, thrice potent master, and Granville Richey, R. Boltare Eggleston and George F. Schreiber, other committee members. Fall degrees for first section candidates will be given starting Oct. 10, and continuing at weekly sessions for ten weeks. This will be followed. by the annual convocation and reunion. City Workers Attend Session Among the 1,000 veteran employes of the Crane Company, plumbing manufacturers, who are in Chicago today for the celebration of the seventy-fifth anniversary of the founding of the plumbing supply concern, are nine members of the Indianapolis plant. They are headed by Robert A. MncGill, manager who has been with the company since 1896.

AMUSEMENTS NEW FORD TUDOR GIVEN AWAY Tonight at 9:00 Courtesy SmithMoore Company Healthfully Cool—Not Cold! GEORGE O’BRIEN In all-talldn* drains of anowlandi “Rough Romance” with Antonis Morena R. K. O, VAUDEVILLE Mildred Melrose and Company ‘•DIXIE VALENTINES” CHARLIE WILSON Indianapolis's Own—Fun Boy BECK * REGAN PAUL GORDON Coming, “SWING HIGH”

ODD FELLOWS PLANSESSSON Conferring of Degrees to Start July 4. First of a series of degrees will be conferred by Puritan lodge 678, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Friday as a fitting celebration for July 4. The degrees of Friendship will be conferred July 11; the degree of Brotherly Love July 18, and the degree of Truth, July 25. H. G. Schenk, general entertainment chairman, announced the lodge will hold its annual picnic at a grove three and one-half miles northwest of the Speedway, July 27. The committee is arranging for more than 3,000 guests. Services will be held during the morning and contests and other events that go to make an oldfashioned picnic will be on the afternoon program. The public is invited. Committee also announced no concessions will be permitted.

LODGE HEADS NAMED Anderson Group Leaders to Take Posts Friday. Bu Times Special ANDERSON, Ind.. June 30.—Oscar Carpenter has been elected councillor of Anderson council, 73, Junior Order of United American Mechanics. Other officers elected are: Maron Rosensteel, vice-councillor; Frank Boze, treasurer; Roy Phillips, financial secretary; Ernest Clemons, recording secretary, re-elected; Albert Boyer, conductor; A. A. Vane, inside sentinel; Junior Carpenter, outside sentinel; John Barrett, chaplain; Curtis Rariden, assistant secretary; James Davison and George Chambers, state council representatives; Elmer Cooney, alternate representative, and E. Clemons, re-elected drill master. Officers will be installed Friday night. James Davison will serve as installing officer. A district meeting will be held in connection with the service.

MOTION FICTURES NOW SHOWING Y The biggest dramatic smash of the year! 3,000 convicts riot! Romance vies with drama! MISS featuring CHESTER’%IORRIS WALLACE BEERY ROBERT MONTGOMERY LEWIS STONE LEILA HYAMS SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS THIS IS PATRIOTIC WEEK 2* CENTS TILL 1 P. M. Maria n Nixon NEXT THCBS. FOX MOVIETONE FOLLIES with El Blende!, Marjorie White

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ODD FELLOWS LODGE READY FORJARLEY 10,000 Members Expected to Convene in City Sept. 15. Indiana Odd Fellows are busy this summer arranging entertainment for the order's sovereign grand lodge session here Sept. 15 to 20. G. P. Bornwasser, Indianapolis, grand secretary for Indiana, who is general convention chairman, has announced a program for the fiveday convention. It is expected more than 10.000 members, representing branches of the order in various parts of the world, will attend the convention. Major Parade Slated One major parade for the Patriarch's Militant division of the order is planned on the program. Sessions will be held in the auditorium of the Grand Lodge hall, Pennsylvania and Washington streets. Social and competitive events are to be limited this year, as this was the desire expressed by the last sovereign grand lodge in Houston, Tex. Marion county with its nearly 12,000 Odd Fellow and Rebekah lodge members will have a large representation on convention entertainment committees, which are to be selected at a meeting this week. Degree Work Arranged Degree work, exemplified in elaborate ceremonial style, is being arranged by the women’s and military branches of the order. Members of the convention executive committee headed by Bornwasser, are: W. W. Zimmerman, Rochester, grand master of Indiana; H. H. Rockwood, Indianapolis, deputy grand master; H. A. Winterrowd, Indianapolis, past grand master; Cyrus Herron, Muncie, grand patriarch; R. 3. Xolthoff, Indianapolis, grand junior warden; Frank McIlwain, Rushville, past grand patriarch; Elmo Gustin, Elwood, department commander; Mary I. Mater, Rockville, Rebekah assembly president, and Valetta Kimmel, Kendallville, past president of the Rebekah assembly.

OFFICERS INSTALLED Mrs. Lorcna Miller Heads Muncie Eagles Aerie Auxiliary. Bu Times Special MUNCIE, Ind., June 23.—Women’s auxiliary of Muncie aerie, Fraternal Order of Eagles, has installed the following new officers: Mrs. Lorena Miller, president; Mrs. Edna Alexander, vice-president; Mrs. Eva Manlove, chaplain; Mrs. Ruby Duke, secretary; Mrs. Ethel Johnson, treasurer; Mrs. Esther Stipp, conductress; Mrs. Bertha Mayor, outside guard; Mrs. Lucy Love, inside guard, and Mrs. Hazel Denney, trustee. I. 0. 0. F. PICNIC IS SET, Lodges of County to Meet at Muncie July 20, Bu Times Special MUNCIE, Ind., June 30.—1. O. O. F. lodges of this county are planning an annual picnic to be held July 20. First plans for the outing were made at a county meeting at Yorktown Friday night. Cyrus Herron, Muncie, district deputy, presided at the Yorktown meeting at which Yorktown lodge entertained visiting members. Initiatory work was conferred on a class. Auxiliary to Meet The women’s auxiliary, Indianapolis Eagles’ Aerie, will have a special program and refreshments at its semi-monthly meeting Tuesday night.

MOTION PICTURES Look* Kiddies! TONIGHT’S your night. Every boy and girl under 12 admitted FREE to the Indiana as Charlie’s guest, if accompanied by one or both parents. IKOtlllAjt* PLiftLIY THCATftI SiTTTiWfc-Tkvl I crmnKia.li I / YMMVk 1 I EVERYBODY’S 1 HAPPY atn ' 1 I umhj ROGER/ I SAHTV IH NUMMR/ 1 Watch three world-wise lollies I baautle* tearh'•'Buddy” the art ■ _ 0 f loye! Paramount Pictured I CRITICS RAVING! Tgff \ I “So good that you owe I I it to Yourself to see it.” | > TED NICHOLAS INDIANAPOLIS NEWS ..WITH I BYRD I AT THE IOIITH I POLE. I Paramount's Super-Film J C’mon, Children || I In„ lot Children anywhere, I Ilf* any time, thank* to | lUu ADMIRAL BYRD I j /w*/ 'WvJ If'They had the tarn efm IHII V I aln . . Why ahouldil BHII § I the pay alone* /fc,SHEAREIL>r£“M| I Pint Howling Comedy I(_L_ lACBEL ft HARDY )■