Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 18, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 June 1931 — Page 8
PAGE 8
RED MEN TRIBE AT RUSHVILLE TO GONFERDEGREE Great Sachem Evans Will Be Great Council Delegate to Ceremony. Redmen will hold several important meetings throughout the state tills week. Tuesday night, Tanpah tribe, No. 102, of RushviUe, will entertain Chief Anderson degree team of Anderson and will confer the chief’s degree on a large class of candidates. Arrangements for a large crowd are being made by Charles Levi, deputy great sachem of the district. Great council will be represented by Great Sachem Russell Evans and Great Chief of Records Arch Hobbs of Indianapolis. Upstate Ledge to Entertain Otsego tribe of Hartford City will entertain Thursday night at a tricounty meeting of Blackford, Delaware and Jay counties. A musical program will be given and addresses are to be made by great cniefs attending. The open meeting, to which all Red Men’s families are invited, will be in charge of deputy Great Sachem Ed Lawson of Dunkirk, who will be assisted by Fred Green, chairman of the tri-county organization. Two big meetings are scheduled for Saturday night. Elective chiefs’ organization of District 11, which includes Marion county, will hold a meeting at Castleton when degree work will be given by Erie tribe No. 198 of Clermont. District 11 is composed of Marion, Hendricks and Morgan counties. City Tribe in Rite Saturday night, a district meeting will be held at Erazil. All tribes in the counties adjoining' Clay county are Invited to help 1 Deputy Great Sachem Roy Budd make this one of the biggest meetings of the year. Degree team of Comanche tribe No. 128, Indianapolis, will confer j the adoption degree on a class of candidates. This work will be in charge of Captain Ben Ereedlove,! deputy great sachem of District 11. ' Past Great Sachem George I. Kisner and Great Prophet Eli Lee of Terre Haute, as well as other great chiefs, will attend. PYTHIAN SISTERS TO OBSERVE FOUNDING Guests to Be Honored at Ceremony of Banner Temple No. 37. Fortieth aniversary of Banner temple No. 37, Pythian sisters, will be observed Tuesday night at Castle hall, 119 East Ohio street. One charter member still is active In the service, Mrs. Minnie H. Johnson, president of the Indiana Orphans Board. Guests of honor at the celebration will be Mrs. Nell C. McCurry of Goodland, grand chief of Indiana; Mrs. Ida Neal of Aurora, grand senior chief of Indiana; and Mrs. Laura b. Morris of Frankfort, state organizer of Sunshine council. Anew council, “Semper Fidelis will be instituted in honor of the occasion for girls from 12 to 18. VETERAN TO BE FETED Oldest Freemason Will Be Honored By Mishawaka Lodge. Josiah Stahl, 99, of Vanßuren, Ark., the oldest Freemason in the world, will be honored by Misha- j waka lodge No. 130, F and A. M. when the lodge observes its eightieth anniversary this week. Mr. Stahl is writing a story of. ) early Masonic life in Indiana. He was made master mason in 1853 in the Mishawaka lodge. BEN-HUR TO HOLD FETE Gupst Night Will Be Observed with Dancing, Cards. Guest night will be observed by Ben-Hur lodge Wednesday at 8 p. m. in the lodge hall, 322 East New York street. All members are asked to bring friends. The program will consist of dancing and cards.
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Daughters of America Meet
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Left to Right—Elva McVey, past national representative; Anna Malcomb, national representative; Pearl Tailor, state councilor; Velma Malcomb, stete credential; Clara Doty, state legislative, and Della Esse, state legislative, honor guests at Fifth district meeting, Daughters of America.
CLARA IS NOW THE SUFFERING HEROINE New Bow Movie, ‘Kick In,’ Is a Different Sort of Vehicle Than This Star Has Had for Many Months. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN CLARA BOW in “Kick In” is the long-suffering companion of a crook ! who tried to reform ar.d remain on the level. It seems that the di- : rector has deliberately attempted to give Clara a sympathetic role so that; i you can see her suffer for love. Regis Toomey is cast as the boy friend of Clara’s who tries to go’j straight, but who is hounded by the detectives and tempted by rr.erft.bers of his former gang. Credit for seme fine dramatic work must go to Tocmey as the young convict.
Here is simple and honest acting. The fact is that anybody could have played the Clara Bow role. It is not a typical Bow part, but she manages to put a tear or two in your eye. The best scenes that Miss Bow have are those devoted to Toomey carrying the dead body of his gangster pal from the attic down into the cellar and dumping it into a barrel. These scenes have been well acted and splendidly directed. And they
are not too morbid. They were not on the stage and were not the screen. The movie version of “Kick In” comes under the head of interesting melodramatic entertainment wit hout Clara Eow doing any sensational acting. “Kick In” may seem a little out of date and a little tame in comparison to some of our
Clara Bow
noisy gangster movies. But it will hold your interest and that is something. On the stage, Brooke Johns is introducing Benny Davis in “Broadway Stars of the Future.” Now at the Indiana. THIS ONE WILL NOT EE A SENSATION When “The Cock Eyed World” turned out to be a box office delight to all exhibitors, the directors sought another similar story. This picture was a rather rough baby with some pretty plain talk.
And now the producers thought up “Women of All Nations,” and pinned three “cock eyed” names to it —Victor McLaglen as Sergeant Flagg; Edmund Lowe as Sergeant Quirt and El Brendel as Olsen. Then they added a bunch of female beauties such as Greta Nissen, Fifi Dorsay and Marjorie White. The combination might
Uli:. ? i. rs I Wk. •
Edmund Lowe
have worked, but the story doesn’t amount to anything. It just drifts through scenes that smack of “The Cock Eyed World.” Victor and Edmund fight words all of the time, especially when they try to get the same woman. And to me “Women of All Nations” should bring to a close this Flagg and Quirt series. I understand it is the last. They are going to be policemen in the new series. And El Brendel has never been a comedy favorite of mine and his
work in this picture does not alter my opinion. Here is a less than a fair movie. Be your own judge as usual. Now at the Apollo. U tt tt NOVARRO SHOULD DROP THIS TYPE OF ROLE Ramon Novarro again wears a foreign uniform in “Daybreak.” It has a foreign background, and one of the main scenes is a famous lovers’ nook case and garden in Vienna. Novarro is cast as Willi
Kasda, a young officer in the Austrian army. He is a rather wild and dashing sort who is supposed to marry a wealthy dame. He probably would have unless he had not met Laura, played by Helen Chandler in a pretty fashion. Jean Hersholt is cast as Herr Schnabel, a money lender and a not too pleasant character. Os course Willi vio-
Ramon Novarrt
lates the code of the army and gets in Dutch with his superior officers. Things get so bad at one time that if something didn’t happen our hero would have had to fire a shot into his head to meet a debt of honor. Here is a regulation Ramon Novarro movie which is made out of the same bolt of cloth that his other movies have been made. It is my opinion if they don’t get Ramon out of this sort of atmosphere that he is going to slide just like John Gilbert. Maybe I am wrong. But the box office will tell the story. Now at the Palace. tt a a OAKIE HAS ONLY A FAIR COMEDY “Dude Ranch” is really burlesque upon the idea of a bunch of ham actors hiring themselves out as real bad men of the west in order to attract wealthy visitors to a western resort. Jack Oakie is one of the “hams” who impersonates a terrible bad gunman of the west. Oakies really couldn’t hurt a flea and what he didn’t know about horses was a crime. The comedy centers around the efforts of Oakie to live up to his bad reputation before the daughter of one of the rich men at the resort. If you like Oakie then you will find no fault with “Dude Ranch,” which as a story is a world beater. But Oakie does hand out a lot of Oakie laughs, especially when he attempts to ride a horse. And finally Oakie proves to his sweetie that he is not a coward and a ham actor, but a real big hero who rescues his sweetie from the clutches of the villain. It is plain meiodrama and nothing else. But the picture does give Mitzi Green a good comedy chance and she makes the best of it. . Now at the Circle. Other theaters today offer: “Trader Horn,” at the Terminal; “That’s Gratitude,” at English’s l double bill at the Ohio, and burlesque at the MutuaL
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Members of Pleasant Hour council, Daughters of America, were hosts at the annual district meeting of the fifth district Thursday, held in Redmen’s hail, Clifton and Twenty-ninth streets. Six councils, Capital City, Liberty Bell, Brightwood, Barbara Friechie, Irvington and Beech Grove were represented by delegates who took part in the program. New district officers elected are: Mrs. Mary 4m<ss, associate councilor; Mrs. Winona Dugan, vice-councilor; Mrs. Mary Porter, associate vice-councilor; Mrs. Ceciie Spickelaire, recroding secretary; Mrs. Louise Legler. treasurer; Mrs. Mary Clark, inside sentinel; Mrs. Helen Witmer outside sentinel; Mrs. Mary Heathcote. conductor; Mrs. Orhpa Paskins, warden, and Mrs. Stella Logan, pianist.
K, OF B. COUNCIL TO NAMEHEADS Lodge No, 437 Will Conduct Election Tonight. Indianapolis Council No. 437, K. of C., will hold the annual election of officers tonight in the hall, 1305 North Delaware. The nominating committee’s report of May 25 selected the following for the regular ticket: George Hoffman, grand knight: Ray Keogh, deputy grand knight: John Clancy, chancellor: Clarence Beideiman. warden; Leroy Kavapaugh. treasurer: Fred Strack, secretary: Peter Hickey, inside guard: James Dorsey and George Putts, outside guards: George Duffy, advocate, and Claude Hadden, trustee. It is expected that another group of candidates will be presented on the coucil floor. This is the tenth year that Fred Strack, the present' secretary, has been nominated for that office. The regular nominating committee are Thomas Jones, Bert Deery, William J. Clark, Chester Ehrich, William Wechsler, Ray McManus, and Maurice Fitzgerald. Election time always brings a large turnout and more than 500 members are expected to attend. ELKS OF INDIANA TO HOLD STATE MEETING More than 2,000 to Participate in Rites at Annual Convention. Elks of Indiana will convene June 3 and 4 in South Bend for their annual state meeting. A golf tournament Wednesday will open the convention, and elections will be held the same day. Thursday morning a parade will be formed with more than 2,000 Elks participating. Grand Exalted Ruler Lawrence H. Rupp of Allentown, Pa. will be guest speaker Thursday. F. A. Wiecking of, Biuffton, state president, will be in charge of meetings. A concluding banquet will be held followed by a ball. Haymakers to Convene Indiana State Haymakers’ Association will hold its thirty-ninth annual state convocation June 6 at the Denison, 139 North Pennsylvania street.
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K, OF P. VICTORY TEAM WILL BE LOSERSMSUESTS High Officials Will Attend Martinsville Lodge ‘Feed.’ Losing team of Anniversary lodge No. 89, Martinsville, Knights of Pythias in the membership attendance contest will feed the victors Tuesday night in a celebration of the contest conclusion. Grand Chancellor C. V. Dunbar and Grand Keeper of Records and Seal Carl R. Mitchell will be honor guests. The Martinsville lodge is Mitchell’s heme ledge. The meeting will be in charge of D. C. Goss, Chancellor Commander. Dearborn lodge No. 49 has been redecorating and rebuilding and will hold a rededicaticn service Thursday, June 4 under Chancellor Commander Leroy Bulthaup. H. B. Herrick, keeper of records and seal of Dearborn lodge has had the distinction of having been in office longer than any one in the state. He has been K. R. S. for forty-seven consecutive years. Delegation from Capitol City lodge No. 97 of Indianapolis will visit the Zionsville meeting Thursday and will confer the rank of Knight with special Pluto work. Grand Chancellor Dunbar will also attend. Dramatic Order of Knights of Khorassan drill team which is practicing diligently for the national competitive drill at the national convention in Cincinnati, August 10, will meet for practice Friday, June 5. The Dokeys are cut fer the championship and are working in anticipation. GOLDEN RULE WILL GIVE DEGREE WORK Supreme Instructor to Perform Rite for Lodge No. 3. Golden Rule lodge No. 3, United Order of American Workers, will give the degree work to a class of candidates Wednesday night in M. W. A. hall, 1025 Prospect street. Hyatt G. Johnson, supreme instructor, will confer the degrees assisted by members of the supreme lodge. A social hour of music by the Golden Rule orchestra and luncheon will follow. 8. A, R, CHOOSES CITY Newcastle Encampment to Be June 8-11. Newcastle will be the camping ground for the fifty-second department encapment of the Indiana Grand Army of the Reoublic June 8 too 11. Members of the Womens’ Relief Corps, Ladies of the Grand Army, Daughters of Union Veterans, Sons of Union Veterans, and Sons of Veterans auxiliary are expected to attend. Department headquarters in the state house will be closed during the encampment and will be established in the Bundy hotel, Newcastle. Department officers and council of administration will meet in the new headquarters June 9 for special business. Special cars will leave Indianapolis via electric lines June 8 at 10 a. m. Other regular cars leave at 8, 10, 12:30, 5 and 6 p. m. CLUB TO PLAY CARDS B. P. O. E. Auxiliary to Use Proceeds for Orphan Outing Fund. Members of the Servus Club, the B. P. O. E. ladies’ auxiliary, will give a card party Friday, June 5 in the Antlers hotel ballroom. Proceeds will go toward the fund for the annual city-wide orphans' outing which will be held in August.
AMUSEMENTS
,sfS!GG ESTf L V y^T-f —\ s snow m /* ) m JglN TOWM. I 8 t \ L 1 Comfortably COOL Htrei •g*| Cos toe Stage j§Jap|s9fc ~ HARRY iLANGDONf® 7^ mSj Favorite Movla Comic : js£ IN PERSQ N Wv 0 1 = FABER & WALES SS Mack and Stanton ■ y Tommie Evans ; *—. Other Big Acts R&O -y'^^sCX g VAUDEVILLES^: SS 08 tbs Screen-—Unforgettable Urama 1 ELISSA LANDI SS to her first etarring triumph H “Always Good bye” with LEvTIS STO'-X Till 1.000 Seats H FREE i 555 * 2dC k Every or-, j Auto ( as P. M. Night o DC | j Parkin. | iliiliiililiiillliilliiililililllillliit 1 ’
MU* : PRODUCTIONS ..?i
To the Ladies! , lONITE—Best Seats Ladies’ Bargain Nite Uv/L “THAT’S GRATITUDE” Frank Craven —John Golden I#3l Comedy Success Featuring Dick Ei!iott, Waiter Davis Just Fun! No Dirt! No gangsters! Sun—“STRICTLY DISHONORABLE”
Jans 8,9, 10th Keystone Ave. Showgrounds B. P. O. Elks Present ROBBINS The Old Reliable 3-Ring CIRCUS Lets Than Pre-War Price* Children Adult* 25c 50c Performance*. Sand S P- M.
Masonic Grand Lodge Officers Are Elected
Ira H. Church, F, G. Laird Put in Office on Wednesday. Newly elected officers of the Grand Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons of Indiana who took office Wednesday are Grand Mastei Ira H. Church of Elkhart, and Deputy Grand Master Frank G laird of Indianapolis. Other officers are Harry Yeo, Muncie, senior grand warden; Rudolph H. Horst, South Bend, junior grand warden; Frank E, Gavin, Indianapolis, grand treasurer, and William H. Swintz, Indianapolis, grand secretary. The last two named were re-elected. Appointments have been made in the official line of the grand lodge by Grand Master Church, as follows: The Eev. Arthur Doescher. Elkhart, Brand chaplain: Ivory C. Tolls. Lebanon. Brand lecturer: Leroy C. McCullum. Elkhart. erand marshall: Thomas J. Wilson. Corydon. senior Brand deacon: Earley Somers. Ft. Wayne, junior Brand deacon: Jacob Eubin. Indianapolis. Brand steward and trier, and A. W. Eur.khouser. Evansville. member of the Masonic home board for three years.
ELKS TO STAGE OBPHANSMW Annual Circus Carinvai to Be Held June 8,9, 10. Eoys and girls of the city will join in having a gala time June 8, 9 and 10 when the Elks annual circus carnical will be staged, it was announced by W. J. Fahey, chairman of the Elks circus committee. Robbins Circus, a part of the United Circus Corporation, will cooperate in making a good time for crippled children, crphans, and school traffic patrol boys. Monday the show will perform at the Riley hospital. All orphans will be treated Tuesday at the show grounds at English and Keystone avenue. Traffic boys of the city and county schools wil be entertained Wednesday. * Robbins’ is the only three-ring circus to be seen in Indianapolis for some time. After each program a moving picture set will be taken starring the famous movie dog, Rex. Members of the Elks committee assisting Fahey are C. C. Kohee, George Binger, W. L. Taylor and T. J. Sexton.
I ALL {CAT! MCffJfjWdjk M • fEATf !2K@ipK “Best Stage Show of the Season!” That’s what Corbin Patrick of The Indiani apolis Star says and joyous week-end crowds more than agree! 1- DAVIS in Person America’s favorite song writer and entertainer presenting his “BROADWAY STARS OF THE FUTURE” 2 BROOKE JOHNS Specialty with the boys in the pit featuring LOREN GRIFFITH and HAZEL SPENICER, “Sunshine Girl of 1931” 3—CLARA BOW in “KICK IN” Paramount hit with REGIS TQOMEY WYNNE GIBSON Smashing, crashing, drama of 1831 love and its price! INDIANA
NOTE!—This is anew picture—first time ever shown in Indianapolis m I ALTO I BALCONY. ... 25c SlTte M. I ORCHESTRA .. 40c n"“ Actual Shows Scenes * Everything ON ACCOUNT OF "THE DELICATE SUBJECT AND SCENES A Smashing New Underworld Story About e-GIRLS FOR SALE—’ That Will Arouse The Country A Thrilling Story of the “Traffic in Souls” “I^tOHEU” A Thrilling Story of Traffic in Souls That’ll Hold You Breathless
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Frank G. Laird
Real Estate—lnsurance Safety Deposit — Rentals MEYER-KISER Safety Deposit Cos. 128 E. WASHINGTON ST.
MOTION PICTURES
Ira, H. Church
JUNE 1, 19S1
THREE GROTTOS IN CITY TO GO TO CONVENTION Delegates of Local Lodges in Supreme Council at St. Petersburg. Three Indianapolis men will represent the local lodges at the national convention of the supreme council of the Sahara Grotto opening today in St. Petersburg, Fla. The official delegates are Carl Schey, Monarch: C. Wilbur Foster, Chief justice, and V. O. Wilmeth. master of ceremonies. Other delegates will probablv attend unofficially. Several novel features have been planned by the Seiama Grotto convention committee. A three-day fish fry on the beach will be open day and night. Trips will be taken by chartered boats along the famous Gulf of Mexico beaches and keys with lecturers to explain the various coast line sights, a larger boat will take a group deep sea fishing in the gulf. Governor Doyle E. Caxleton will open the convention sessions on Tuesday. A parade will be staged in the afternoon and an illuminated float procession will follow at night. Thirty-seven silver cups will be awarded in various contests. An unusual feature this year will be a five-day trip after the convention to Havana, Cuba, leaving Thursday night. Two ships have been chartered, and a special program arranged for the stay in the Cuban capital.
MOTION PICTURES
OF LOVE AND LAUGHS ff These Fen-.oas Stars of • “THE COCK-EYED WORLD’’ and “WHAT PRICE GLORY” VICTOR McLAGLEN EDMUND LOWE C THe 4CTO (Junto PARKING for Patron* | “THE NIBLICK” ■ .J
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CRUELEST WOMAN Itt \ AFRICA! f y wrlfli Fir*t Time J JflM. a* Reduced SS ~ S SSu BS 2ietro-CcT.dyvjn-Ua.yer Picture - ■■ Also ■ CHARLIE CHASE TALKOMEPY Starting Saturday JOAN CRAWFORD
Paramount’* Mirthfeat with J Jack Oakie—Mitzl Green \ J Stuart Erwin—Gene PaUette J | FRI.—RICHARD DIX " CiliUH
Cota'p’- et * Feature* l |3 K “IRON IM" iKT iSSr 1 I “TfIDM" cSSS/fr i B U CBIX^i^DI
