Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 216, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 January 1932 — Page 7

JAN. 18, 1932.

V. F. W. PROGRAM GOES ON RADIO OVER NBC CHAIN Nation-Wide Invitation to Be Carried Out on Broadcast. Classes of recruits assembled in 2,500 Veterans of Foreign Wars posts throughout the United States will take the oath of obligation as given by Darold D. Dc Coe, com-mander-in-chief, in a special broadcast over the National Broadcasting Company network from 10:30 to 11:30 Friday night. This Initiation will be a part of a program in which addresses will be made by Wright Patman, congressman from Texas; James E. Van Zandt, vice-commander -in - chief; Rear Admiral Robert E. Coontz, and Mrs. Dora E. Raffensperger, national V. F. W. auxiliary president. Guests and speakers will be introduced from the National Press Club, in Washington, D. C. Rear Admiral Coontz will give a brief synopsis of the history of the organization and an outline of the eligibility list. He will explain the purpose of the national radio hour sponsored by the V. F. W. The organization’s program will be discussed by Van Zandt, who is to speak on legislative objectives. War-time songs will be interspersed throughout the program. Indianapolis post members are making plans for special meetings in all posts Friday night. LODGE TO OPEN NEW HEADQUARTERS HERE Business Session, Entertainment Feature. First Meeting. Golden Rule lodge No. 3, United Order of American Workers, will hold the first meeting in its new quarters, at 116 'i East Maryland street, tonight at 8:15. Installation of officers, degree work and a social hour of dancing, followed by the monthly lunch will constitute the program for the opening night in the new hall. Musical entertainment and dancing will be given for the benevolent fund at the meeting next Monday night. INDIANAPOLIS TEAM TO CONFER DEGREE Martinsville Lodge to Observe Twenty-fourth Birthday. Z> !/ Times Special MARTINSVILLE, Ind., Jan. 18.— Commanche degree team of Indianapolis, state champions, will confer the adoption degree at a Morgan county meeting of the Improved Order of Red Men in this city, Feb. 9. "Pale Faces” will be initiated during the program, to be witnessed by officers from all parts of the state. The meeting will be a celebration of the twenty-fourth anniversary of the dedication of the lodge home of Seminole tribe, No. 125, I. O. R. M. MOORESVILLE MASONIC LODGE CHIEFIS YOUNG George Ray Ulrey Worshipful Master at Age of 25. lip Time* Special MOORESVILLE, Ind.. Jan. 18. George Ray Ulrey, new head of Mooresvllle lodge, No. 78, F. & A. M., probably is the youngest worshipful master in the state this year. He is 25. Officers of the local lodge are: Ulrpy, F. Ellis, senior warden: M. E. Carlisle, Junior warden; John A. Kendall, senior deacon; Noel Church, junior deacon: C. G. Cook, treasurer: Oscar G. Couch, secretary; Wendell Moore. Tyler, and Dr. P. E. Carson. Paul J. Duncan and Harry F. Williams, trustees.

ORIENTAL SHRINE WILL CO' DUCT CEREMONIAL Hanqu i lo Precede Initiation at Lincoln Friday, Jan. 29. Ladies’ Oriental Shrine ceremonial at the Lincoln Friday, Jan. 29, will be preceded by a banquet for which arrangements are being made by a committee headed by Mrs. G. D. Yeager. Mrs. Mary E. Hubbard, high priestess, will preside during induction of twenty candidates. LODGE GIVES PLAY nochester Encampment Presents Skit at Meeting. By Times Special ROCHESTER. Ind., Jan. 18.— Annual Odd Feilow encampment meeting tonight in this city will feature a skit, "The Divorce Trial of Mr. Rufus Samuel Ezekiel Rosewater, plaintiff, and Mrs. Eliza Amanda Arabella Rosewater, dedenfendant.” LEGION DANCE PLANNED Legion Post to Hold Party Jan. 27, West of Indianapolis. Dance for members and friends of Wayne post, No. 64, American Legion, and auxiliary will be held Wednseday night. Jan. 27, at the post hall, High School and Rockville roads. Business meeting and social hour are scheduled for Wednesday night at 8. OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY Odd Fellows to Stage Dinner Meeting in Monticello. By Time* Special MONTICELLO, Ind., Jan. 18.— Anniversary and county meeting of Odd Fellows will be held at the local Odd Fellow lodge tonight. A banquet will precede the program and business meeting. COLDS, f Use This Co/np/e/e\ /Aspirin Prescript ion\ i The first dose of Laxa-Pirin 1 M brings real relief. It's the way 1 doctors give aspirin for colds, I I coaplcte with everything needed, f a phenaretin, caffeine, laxatives, t % etc. Quick, sure relief. 25c. M dEuxa/BUum* PleftSftnt* -No Quinine

Scottish Rite Members Will Give Program in Cathedral

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Charles Benedict

Drama, Short Sketches Arranged on Bill Friday Night. Entertainment in Scottish Rite cathedral at 8:15 Friday night will feature a short drama by the Consistory players, a sketch by Roltare Eggleston, and a short play. An organ prelude by Frederic A. Barker, director of music at Technical high school, will open the program. "The Game of Chess,” to be given by the Consistory players, consists of one act in two scenes. A prominent member df the cast is Charles P. Benedict, past grand master of Indiana. Other players are: , Harry L. Orlopp, Harry A. Phil, Games C. Glpe. James R. Robinson, Oswald A. Tislow, Fred W. Jeahne, William C. Ella. Henry C. Blume, W. P. Lodbell and Earl P. Mutch. "A Pointer on How to Write a Play," by Roltare Eggleston, will be a high point in the program. Fred Newell Morris, bass soloist and director, will head the skit entitled “Behind the Scenes With the Scottish Rite Choir.” Eddie V. Alexander, W. S. Alexander. J. Kenneth Vance. August Jacob, J. H. Jefferson. Perry M. Rush. Fred M. Loomis. Jesse C. Barker, Raymond D. Jackson, Harry S. Lane. Roscoe Leavitt, with Clarence H. Carson, organist and Paul R. Matthews, pianist. Musical numbers will be given by the Crescent ensemble with Georgia Baumann, violinist; Virginia Leyenberger, cellist, and Beulah Oliver, pianist. The program and a dance to be given in the ballroom is limited to members and their friends. Rite entertainment committee, which includes David C. Pyke, ex-officio; Homer L. Cook, chairman; Roltare Eggleston, Roy Hice, George F. Schreiber, Oliver L. Fevrier, Garland M. Stewart and Horace Mitchell. is in charge of the program. The entertainment committee is planning a costume ball Feb. 19. BEGINS CAMPAIGN t Legion Post Starts Drive for 100 Members. Walter Q. Gresham post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will begin a drive for 100 new members, John McGrath, post commander, announced today. Final arrangements for the drive will be made by a committee which includes McGrath, George Reese, quartemaster, and Arthur G. Gresham, at post headquarters, 918 Laurel street, Tuesday night. The committee will visit all service men in the Fountain Square district. New members of the post will be guests at an old-fashioned “army bean supper,” in post headquarters Feb. 9. LODGE HAS NEW HEADS Millersville O. E. S. to Hold First Meeting of Year Wednesday. Miilersville chapter, Order of Eastern Star, will hold its firsr stated meeting Wednesday following installation of the new officers. Officers are: Mrs. Charlotte Callon. worthv matron; Henry Harm, worthv Datron: Mrs. Amelia Riggs, associate matron: Lee Hunter, associate natron; Mrs. Ethel Roberts, secretary; Mrs Etta Pollard, treasurer: Mrs. Mvrtle Umbanhowar, conductress: Mrs. lna Mae Roberts, associate conductress: Trs. Edith Skaats. chaplain; Mrs. Elva Bradley, marshal; Mrs. Naoma Have, pianist: Miss Martha Robinson. Adar: Mrs. Virginia Moore. Ruth: Mrs. Gertrude Stroupe. Esther: Mrs. Goldie Hite. Martha: Mrs. Maude McCormac. Electa: Mrs. Frances Farwell, warder, and Russell Stahl, sr.tinel. Degree to Be Conferred Fellow Craft degree will be conferred by officers of Indianapolis lodge, No. 669, F. & A. M., at 7 tonight in the Masonic temple, 1522 West Morris street.

Visits Lodge

Herbert A, Graham Inspection of degree work in all Indiana Masonic chapters and councils is being conducted by Herbert A. Graham of Elkhart,. He is grand lecturer of the Indiana grand chapter, Royal Arch Masbns, and grand council and chapter inspector.

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Roltare Eggleston

DRESSLER IS MOST HUMAN IN ‘EMMA’

Jean Hersholt Again Makes Name for Himself as Character Actor of Appealing Charm and Understanding. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN f It seems to me the best way that I can tell you of Marie Dressier in “Emma” is that you will get crying and then when you start to laugh you will just shake your tears into the lap of the person next to you. Anyway that is exactly what happened to me when I saw this most human of women on the screen today play her most human role—that of a woman who loves children. The tremendous attribute or quality of this picture is this quiet charm of Emma, an elderly servant in a home where everything was common-

place but humanly happy. Those were the days when the Smith family were poor because father was working on an invention. The picture starts with a sad note

because Mrs. Smith is dying just as she is bring a son, Ronnie, into the world. And it is Emma that gives the baby a resounding smack on his little so and so and the youngster howls. And t Emma knows that j Ronnie will live and grow up, but his | mother passes on. jEmma, in fact, becomes the motherI ing instinct of the entire family.

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Marie Dressier

Watch the way the director has trained his camera on this deathbed scene of Mrs. Smith and the birth of Ronnie. It is a stroke of genius. Thus scene really starts one off as a companion to Emma as she mothers the youngsters as 'well as old man Smith. The children grow up and Mr. Smith becomes a millionaire through his Invention. All of the children become snobs with the exception of Ronnie, Riches had just made butterflies of all the children except Ronnie and the love of Ronnie and Emma is one of the beautiful things of this story. One of the most human comedy scenes I have seen (it is in the Union depot when Emma is going on her first vacation) precedes the marriage of Emma to Mr. Smith and its subsequent tragedy to Emma. Mr. Smith suddenly dies on the honeymoon and the children (not Ronnie) frame up a charge of murder. You have never seen a court room scene like the one in “Emma.” And watch the work of Purnell Pratt as Emma’s lawyer. And watch the way Emma wins her own acquittal. And poor Ronnie. He did so want to help Emma. But see the Richard Cromwell is Ronnie. He is human and splendid. Jean Hersholt is Mr. Smith. Another triumph in sympathetic character work. To my way of thinking, “Emma” is the best and the most human characterization she has ever given us. Will classify it as one of the ten best performances I have ever seen. Now at the Palace. CONCERNING A * PICTURE AND A STAR I expected a great deal out of Barbara Stanwyck and Adolphe Menjou in ’“Forbidden,” and I was terribly disappointed in all three. The picture has its moments, but there are not enough of those moments. The story is very conflicting in moods and purposes. You first see Miss Stanwyck as a very prim librarian in a small town. She decides to draw all of her sav-

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ings from the bank, 1 and gets on a boat! for Havana for Qiej single purpose of raising whoopee. Ad she does. The gentleman is Adolphe Menjou.j Just why she hadi to pick on him, but she did. Os course our heroine didn’t know that her man was married while she lived in sin with him. And! when she finds it out she kicks him

out, but still loving him. So she goes to a maternity hospital and a fatherless cute baby girl is born. Being very motherly she refuses to see her child, but protects the name of the father who had to be an important man, this time a district j attorney, A certain newspaper 1 man has a hunch the district at- J torney is a fourflusher and a few 1 other things, and he starts out to i prove it. Also must state that he is also wild to marry Miss Stanwyck, but she will have none of him. Cur heroine is the suffering sort. She , suffers so much that she allows the character played by Menjou to represent to his wife that he has adopted the child while she was in Europe. Oh, dear. Well, Menjou still carries on his affair with oui* suffering heroine, and when the newspaper man (Ralph Bellamy) gets to hot on the proof, our sweet little heroine marries the reporter. And to show her gratitude to the reporter, she ups and shoots the old boy dead after he socked his wife right in the jaw. Dear, dear, dear me, what these movie ladies and gentlemeif .of the press on the screen will do.

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Df course, there is a crazy bedroom scene. The act put on by Menjou. And our heroine is still suffering as the camera flickers its last. Oh, hum. Enough said. Be your own judge as usual. Now at the Indiana. * tt ft BENNETT TAKES THE HONORS THIS TIME When you see "This Reckless Age” at the Circle this week, am sure you, are going to agree with me that it is two old-timers on the stage who run away with the acting honors. Am speaking of Richard Bennett and Frances Starr as husband and wife and the parents of two modern children. The youngsters are

Buddy Rogers

splendidly. Or thinks he does. Son arrives with his girl friend (and the right sort). He breaks up the calm of his father’s house when it is discovered that he is going to chuck college and get married. This gives Bennett a chance to do some sympathetic acting as he turns against his son. Then the picture becomes melodramatic and a little out of gear because the playwright, to get dramatic action, makes Bennett the goat of a crooked oil promoter. But —honesty will out and the children as well as ma clear dad of the stain. And all is happy again. Give you a tip. Don’t miss “Mickey Mouse.” Both are now at the Circle. HOLLYWOOD NOW ANSWERS THE STAGE It seems to me that when certain wise-cracking playwrights turned out several Broadway stage hits in which all kinds of brickbats were tossed at Hollwood, directors, actors and the like, that Hollywood just became mad all over. And the answer to that is “Manhattan Parade,” with Charles Butterworth. Winnie Lightner, Smith

and Dale, the two surviving members of the Avon Comedy Four. This movie is Hollyw’ood’s idea of how 7 stage plays are put on in New York. An insane man who poses as a great Russian stage director is the medium through which Hollywood pokes fun at Broadway. Smith and Dale are the two brothers who give up **girl re-

vues for tired business men to do arty stuff on the stage. The real hit of the movie is the comedy work of Charles Butterworth, head of a research department in Winnie Lightner’s costume shop. Miss Lightner annoys me less this time than ever. She makes an effort to really act this time and not play horse. You may like it you may not. That’s up to you. I am hot and also cold concerning ‘‘Manhattan Parade.” ‘ Now at the Apollo. St Indian ipolis theaters today offer: Olsen and Johnson at the Lyric and ‘‘Ladies of Creation” at Keith’s, Neghborhood theaters tonight offer: "Over the Hill, at the Daisy; “Ambassador Bill,” at the Tacoma; “Fanny Foley? Herself.” at the Irving; "Monkey Business.” at the Tuxedo; “The Champ,” at the Belmont; "Touchdown,” at the Talbott and Emerson: “Miracle Woman,” at the Stratford; "Possessed,” at the Princess; "The Common Law,” at the Hamii; n; "The Deadline,” at the Orpheum; "Frankenstein,” at the Fountain Square; “A Dangerous Affair,” at <he Granada, and "The Dreyfus Affair,” at the Mecca,

Adolphe Manjou

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .

Homer L. Cook

Frances Dee, Peg'gy Shannon and an older one, Charles Ruggles. You get a lot of that fine home stuff as Bennet and Miss Starr wait anxiously for their son and their daughter to return from college for the Christmas vacation. Daughter arrives in an ancient sliver with a lot of noisy boy and girl friends, one of them impersonating a Chinese

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Buttcrworth

RED MEN WILL INITIATE MANY STATEGLASSES Lodge Officials Predict Increased Interest in Indiana. A general revival of interest in Red Men’s affairs is predicted by officials, who are planning a series of district meetings throughout Indiana. Classes now being organized will be initiated in March by selected teams of districts to meet in Franklin, Lafayette, Muncie, Ft. Wayne, South Bend, Harmony, Connersville, Aurora, Brownstown, Spencer and Washington. Special arrangements are being made for representation by every tribe in the state. W. Irvin Pryor, great sachem, will be in charge of the meetings. He is being assisted by Arch Hobbs, great chief of records. All tribes in Grand and Madison counties have been invited to attend a county meeting at Rigdon Tuesday night at the home of Oneida tribe, No. 41.7. Plan Ministrel Show Visiting teams from Indianapolis, Middletown and Anderson will confer the three degrees at a meeting in the lodge home of Red Men tribe, No. 110, in Alexandria, Jan. 30. Degree work will be followed by a luncheon. John Pence of Alexandria will supervise ceremonials of the Haymaker’s degree, a degree not regularly conferred in Red Men’s initiatory work. N Oscar L. Stanley, deputy great Sachem, Is in charge of the meeting. .. A benefit minstrel and radio show sponsored by Erie tribe, No. 198, of Clermont, will be given at Clermont Tuesday night. Degree team of Erie tribe will present the degree work at Winamac tribe meeting in its hall, Clifton and Twenty-ninth streets, in Indianapolis on - Feb. 3. A program has been arranged by the Elective Chiefs’ Association. Six Tribes to Meet Officers of the Clermont tribe are Frank Griener,' C. Moore, Edgar Wright and Arthur Kennedy. The Erie degree staff conferred the adoption degree at Red Cloud tribe, No. 18, Wednesday. All members of the five tribes affiliated with Indianapolis Red Men’s Wigwam have been requested to meet with Hiawatha tribe, No. 75, Tuesday night. Presentation of the chief’s degree will be discussed. New officers of Indianapolis Red Men’s wigwam degree team ar® headed by Homer Scrouf. president. Other officers are: William Seigle, secretary, and Leo Hollander, degree captain. Ben-Hur to Meet Wednesday Members of Ben Hur will hold a business meeting at 8 Wednesday night in Woodmen hall, 322 East New York street. Friends of the order are invited to an hour of dancing to follow the meeting.

PYTHIAN OFFICIALS TO ‘TRADE’ POSTS

Home Superintendent and Grand Lodge Trustee to Be Shifted. Superintendent William B. Gray of the Indiana Pythian home in Lafayette will leave the post he has occupied since the home was opened Dec. 1, 1927. His resignation, effective March 1, has been accepted by directors. Gray has been appointed to the position of grand lodge trustee made vacant by the resignation of w‘. W. Crooker of Jeffersonville. Crooker has been elected superintendent of the Pythian home. Breakdown of Mrs. Gray's health was given as the reason for Gray’s resignation. He will continue to live in Lafayette. Crooker has been grand lodge trustee of Indiana Knights of Pythias for more than a decade. He has served three terms as past chancellor commander of Hope lodge of Jeffersonville and four term as district deputy. He is a member of the board of directors. Mrs. Crooker, new matron of the home, is active in church affairs in Jeffersonville. Directors of the home are Levi Hooker of Evansville; Carl L. Mitchell of Indianapolis, secretary; Dr. C. V. Dunbar of Indianapolis; W. W. Crooker, Jeffersonville; Charles A. Phelps, Newcastle, and Phil E. Swain of Huntington.

Lodge Officer

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Mrs. Ida Neal Installation of officers of both Aurora temple No. 409 and Aurora Sunshine Girls No. 5. Thursday night at Aurora, will be conducted by Mrs. Ida Neal, grand chief of the Pythian Sisters of Indiana. Robert Rand will be the installing officer for Harmony lodge No. 69, Knights of Pythias, holding its ceremonies in conjunction with the two Pythian orders.

INDIANA EAGLES TO JOIN IN INITIATION

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Newcastle Eagles* initiatory staff: Front row (left to right) Earl Tout, Charles Brooks and Harry L. Valentine. Back row (left to right) —L. L. Niles, James Gruler, James O. Crim and Bert Fleming.

Newcastle Officers Will Exemplify Ritual at Local Aerie. Hundreds of members of the Fraternal Order of Eagles from a score of Indiana cities will meet in Indianapolis Sunday afternoon for a Seventh district initiation, at the home of the local aerie, 43 West Vermont street. The ritual will be exemplified by the officers’ staff of Rose City aerie, of Newcastle, with Harry L. Valentine, past president; L. L. Niles, president; James Gruler, vice-presi-dent; Earl Tout, chaplain; James O. Crim, secretary; Bert Fleming, conductor, and Charles Brooks, inside guard. Visitors will include Ernest E. Cloe, of Noblesville, state secretary. The meeting to open at 2 o’clock will include a program of entertainment, followed by refreshments. MOOSE TO HOLD FIRST INITIATION More Than 60 Seek Admittance; Drive Is On. First initiation of the year will be conducted by members of Indianapolis lodge, No. 17, Loyal Order of Moose, in Moose temple, 135 North Delaware street, Tuesday night. More than sixty applications have been made. A campaign for members !in honor of J. Albeit Cassedy, past supreme dictator, and chairman of the Moosehaven board since its foundation, will close April 1. A class of candidates will be initiated by Women of the Moose, on Jan. 28, Agnes White, senior regent, announces. Chairmen of all committees will meet at 135 North Delaware street, Thursday, when plans for the year will be discussed.

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William B. Gray

COLLECT CLOTHING Legion Post Starts Drive to Aid Destitute. A drive for clothing to be distributed by the Red Cross and American Legion and auxiliary from the relief station, 138 East New York street, will begin today. Old clothing and shoes placed by milk bottles will be collected by drivers of the Polk Milk Company. Children’s clothing is badly needed, Ralph B. Gregg, commander of Memorial post No. 3, American Legion, said. Memorial post is sponsoring the drive. MYSTIC TIE LODGE TO CONFER DEGREE Officers of Chapter Installed -Re cently at Masonic Temple. Entered Apprentice degree will be conferred at a meeting of Mystic Tie lodge No. 398, F, & A. M„ at 6:30 tonight in the Masonic temple, North and Illinois streets. Officers, recently installed, are: John L. H. Fuller, worshipful master: Murray H. Morris, senior warden; Norman Baxter, junior warden: Frank B. Flanner. treasurer: Fred I. Willis, secretary: Charles Breeee. senior deacon: E. H. Kemper McComb. junior deacon: Ira C. Dawes, senior steward; Crawford H. Barker, junior steward, and Charles L. Hanford, tyler. CHAPTER HAS NEW HEAD Edward A. Unversaw Is High Priest of Arch Masons’ Body. Edward A. Unversaw is new high priest of West Side chapter, No. 138 Royal Arch Masons. Other officers are: Carl F. Gierke, king; William Marker, scribe; Donald B. Reid, treasurer; Dale Hadley, secretary; Edward King, captain of the host; Jesse E. Gray, principal sojourner; Roscoa I. Barker, Royal Arch captain jnd William C. Thomas, tyler,

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Ernest E. Cloe

BOWLING MEET PLANNED KERE Tournament Entry Lists Close Feb. 1. Entries for tfte Knights of Columbus national bowling tournament in Indianapolis the week of Feb. 27 will close Feb. 1, it was announced today. Nearly 100 teams from Indiana councils outside this city will be represented, Meinard Mathews, secretary, said. Large entry lists from Syracuse, N. Y., Kansas City and Memphis have been reported. More than 450 K. of C’s. from Chicago are expected. New members of the home association are John Minta. Harry Calland and John A. Dorgan. They will serve for three years. Mortgage indebtedness on the K. of C. clubhouse is decreased by SIB,OOO as a result of the refinancing campaign carried on last spring. Results of the campaign are incorporated in the annual report of the home association, made by William Schnorr, president. "Officers,” Schnorr said, “are confident that in three years we shall clear ourselves of the mortgage debt.”

ELKS TO PORTLAND Central Association Will Convene Sunday. By Times Special PORTLAND, Ind., Jan. 18.—Annual meeting of the Indiana Central Elks’ Association will open in Portland Sunday morning with registration at 10:30. President W. H. Gardner will preside at a business meeting to follow a dinner at 12:30. Addresses will be made by Fred Weicking of Bluffton, Frank Coughlin of South Bend, William C. Groeble of Shelbyville and other Elk leaders of the state. A class of candidates will be inducted by the district degree team, PRATHER CRAFT CLUB TO INSTALL OFFICERS Hubert L. Wann New’ President of Masonic Organization. Installation of newly-elected officers of Prather Craft Club will be held at the regular monthly business meeting, Feb. 2, -in Prather Masonic temple, College avenue and Forty-second street. Hubert L. Wann is the new president. Other officers are: Joslph Sainter, vice-president; O. B. Little, | secretary, and Adolph Schernekau, treasurer. , Monthly dinner-dance Saturday night was held under the direction of Fred J. Menninger, chairman of the entertainment committee. CIRCLE WILL INSTALL Capitol City Lodge to Initiate Class Friday Night. New officers will be installed at the meeting of Capitol City circle, No. 176, Protected Home Circle, at 8 Friday night in Woodmen hall, 322 East New York street. Capitol City degree staff will confer the initiatory ceremony on a large class of candidates. PLAN” DISTRICT MEETING Odd Fellows to Gather at Home in Irvington Next Week. Marion county district meeting of subordinate Odd Fellow lodges will be held Jan. 26 at the home of Irvington lodge, No. 508, 5420 East Washington street. Guy Foltz and Ernest Barrett, district deputies, are in charge of arrangements. (Smstipated} Tike W—NATURE’S REMEDY— tmigfet. Your eliminitire orgamwill be functioning properly by morning end your constipation will end with a bowel action aa free and •say as nitnre at her best—wo pain, ae griping; Try it. Only 25c. The All-Vegetable Laxative Make the test tonight _

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STATE OFFICER WILL INSPECT DEGREE WORK Royal Arch Masonic Bodies: Make Their Plans for New Year. Preparations for inspection of degree work in all Royal Arch Masonic chapters and completion of plans for the year by new officers constitute the present program of local R. A. M. chapters. Herbert A. Graham of Elkhart, grand lecturer of the Indiana grand chapter of Royal Arch Masons, will inspect degree work to be given by Veritas chapter No. 168. R. A. M.. in its chapter room in the Masonic temple. Roosevelt avenue and Adams street. Inspection will be preceded by a supper at 6:30. Indianapolis chapter No. 5. R. A. M., and Indianapolis council No. 2, Royal and Select Masters, are to be inspected Saturday, Feb. 27. Stage Degree Work Council inspection at 4 p. m. will precede a supper at 6:30 and chapter degree work inspection by Graham. Inspection of degree work given by Irvington chapter, No. 158, R. A. M., Saturday night in Masonic .temple, Johnson and East Washington streets, followed a supper. John B. Given, new president of the Marion county Royal Arch Chapter Association, will preside at the first meeting after installation. The meeting Feb. 6 will be held in the Masonic temple, North and Illinois streets. Other officers, recently installed, are: William E. Lyst, vice president; Karll V. Ammerman, secretarytreasurer, and Clayton C. Marsh, publicity director. Past and most excellent degrees will be conferred at the first called meeting under new officers of Indianapolis chapter, No. 5, Royal Arch Masons, in Masonic temple, North and Illinois streets, Friday, Feb. 5, at 7:30 p. m. Officers Listed Clayton Marsh will preside during meetings of Indianapolis chapter as high priest. Ross Hanly is king. Other officers are: Alva O. Chamness. scribe: E. Paul Boerner. captain of the host: Christopher C. Ritter, principal sojourner; Harrv G, Werkhoff. secretary; George H. Mueller, treasurer: Horace H. Monger. Roval Aren captain; William A. Waller, master of the third veil: Clarence E. Lvster. master of the second veil: Frederick E. Manker. master of the first veil: Jacob Rubin, guard; Edgar O. Burgan. Masonic relief board representative; Ora T. Owens. Masonic temple association representative: Edward F. Monn. chairman finance committee and Owen and Manly. Stated meeting 7:30 Tuesday. Feb. 2, of Keystone chapter No. 6. R. A. C., will be the first stated meeting to be conducted by John B. Given, high priest, and the following officers: Gold Beal, king: George W Pavne. scribe: Ezra H. Stuart, captain of the host: Arthur Group, principal sojourner; Rov Freeman, secretary: Luther J. Shtrlev, treasurer; Robert Brvson. Jr.. Roval Arch captain: Arthur Weber, master of the t.-ilrd veil; Everett Lawson, master of the serond veil: John D. Jarvis, master of the first veil: Fred Lorenz, guard: John M. Feasv. Masonic relief board representative; Othneil Hitch. Masonic temple association, representative: Given. Beal and Pavne, finance committee. Woodmen Recruit Candidates Class of candidates for initiation in March is being recruited by Broad Ripple Jfcdge, No. 8614, Modern Woodmen of America.

How Do Chorus Girls Manage?

The theater knows no “sick lis t.” Chorus girls just can’t be "absent.” Regardless of the "time of month” they must be in line, on time, on their toes, and smiling. How do they do it? Nature doesn’t spare them. They are always smiling and active because they have learned to stop all

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