Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 15, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 May 1933 — Page 8
PAGE 8
DETROIT HOST NEXT WEEK TO M. W. A. PARLEY Several Local Members to Leave This Week for Annual Conclave. Several local members of the Modern Woodmen of America will leave this week to attend the twen-ty-second national head camp meeting in Detroit opening Tuesday. The h ead camp will be composed of officers, committees and special delegates elected from each state. * Special delegates from Indianapolis will be Allen G. Williams of Marion camp, No. 3558. Other local officers who will attend include: John D. Volz, national director; George Hopkins, state deputy; J. Raymond Trout, district deputy; Charles E. Remy, head camp committeeman; William D. Headrick, state, lecturer, and F. G. Volz, national inspector. Headquarters for the convention will be in the Book-Cadillac hotel in Detroit. Opening session will be held at 10 Tuesday morning. A. R. Talbot, Lincoln, Neb., head consul, will preside. The head camp has a total of 256 delegates and eleven officers. It is the governing body of the order. New by-laws will be prescribed at the convention by the head camp, to govern its operations throughout the next four years. New officers, to be elected, also will serve for the four-year period. The National Camp Clerks’ Association of the order wiil convene Thursday, June 8, at the BookCadillac, for a two-day session. R. H. George, Lincoln, Neb., president, will preside. CITY MAN IS NAMED GIBAULT HOME CHIEF Elected as Director at Annual State Convention at Bloomington William Schnorr of Indianapolis council, No. 437, Knights of Columbus, was named a director of the Father Gibault Home, at the annual state convention of the Knights of Columbus, at Bloomington, last week. Schnorr and Harry Calland were delegates from Indianapolis council to the state meeting. Both are past grand knights of the council. Schnorr is also a former president of the Home Association, retiring from that position a' few weeks ago. John P. O'Donnell, Bloomington, was re-elected state deputy. It is his fourth successive term. REHEARSAL IS CALLED FOR PRATHER CRAFT Prepare for Conferring Master Mason Degree June 16. John S. Buck, junior warden of Calvin W. Prather lodge, No. 717, Free and Accepted Masons, has called a rehearsal of the Prather craft for 7:30 Wednesday night, in the Prather Masonic temple. College avenue and Forty-Second street. The rehearsal will b? for preparation of conferring the master mason degree on Friday, June 16. when the lodge will be opened at 4:30 with a dinner at 6:30, and continuation of the degree work after the dinner. Speakers for the degree have not been selected. June stated meeting of Prather lodge will be held Friday night at 7:30 in the temple. DELEGATES TO MEET Sixteenth District I. O. O. F. Session Set tor June 8. By Times Special MARTINSVILLE. Ind.. May 29. Delegates from Odd Fellow lodges in the Sixteenth district, composed of Marion, Morgan and Johnson counties, will meet here Thursday night, June 8. Martinsville lodge. No. 274, wiil act as host to all delegates. F E. Cline, Bargersville, district deputy grand master, will preside. MASTERS TO CONVENE Marion County Masonic Group to Meet June 10 at Bridgeport. The Marion county Actual Masters and Wardens’ Association. Free and Accepted Masons, will hold a meeting June 10 with Bridgeport lodge. No. 162, F. and A. M., at Bridgeport. Officers of the association include: George Van Cleave, president; John L. Reagan, first vicepresident; Harry Epply, second vicepresident. and Walter O. Boemler, secretary-treasurer.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
Automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: Lawrence Sawin, 1448 North Euclid avenue. Ford roadster, 25-901, from in front of 1448 North Euclid avenue Thomas Johnson, 501 West Twentysixth street. Moon coach from in front of 501 West Twenty-sixth street. Will Harris, Park. View apartments. No. 502. Studebaker roadster. 32-216 Tennessee. from Twenty-eighth and Meridian streets. John Ellis 1867 Orleans street. Ford truck, from Virginia avenue and Washington street.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered by police belong to: J. Ttalph Pike. 715 East Fifty-third street. Ford sedan. found at College avenue and Fifty-third street. J Scott. R R. 12. Box 52-C, Ford Toadster. found in front of 1050 West Porte-second street. Helen Campbell. 219'.- West Thirteenth street. Ford coupe, found at Fifteenth Street and Capitol a\ nue. Clarence Bel!. 3021 Wood street. Chevrolet sedan, found at Chester avenue and Twenty-sixth street. Emerson-Scheunnc Tank Company. 2073 Martmdale avenue. C'-evrolct coupe, found at 2509 Guilford avenue. Rilev Cab Company. No 166, found at Gala and Twenty-first streets. Harr- T. Martin, 1004 Union street. Brick toian, found at Franklin, Ind. William E. Graves. Greenwoood. Ind.. Chevrolet coach, found at Noblesvllle. Ind and two men arrested. Chevrolet sedan. no license plates, semi number 1-K37982. stripped of tires and battery, found in rear of 1041 East ** Or alia m - Paige sedan. 25-285, motor No. ■709-305 automobile stripped of a tire and bntter\' found .n rear of 1041 East Michigan street. morial Services Set /?!/ Timr* Special PERU. Ind., May 29—Peru lodge, No. 52, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, will hold a memorial service, Sunday, June 11, In the Methodist church here. Odd Fellow members throughout the state have been invited to attend the service. Rex Trent of this city, noble grand, will preside.
LINTON RED MEN TO HOLD ANNUAL MEMORIAL RITE
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Arch 11. Hobbs Qua paw tribe, Improved Order of Red Men, at Linton, will hold the annual memorial service Sunday in the wigwam. E. C. Seabrook, New Albany, great sachem; Arch H. Hobbs,
Stuart Walker Turns Out Real Thriller This Time
Reunion in Vienna’ Gives John Barrymore a Fine Comedy Role —Famous Tenor Is Splendid in Musical Film, BY WALTER D. HICKMAN STUART WALKER, while on the west coast the last year or two, has been learning to transfer his legitimate style of directing to the movie screen. . The great strides that this director has made is splendidly reflected in “The Eagle and the Hawk.” I sincerely believe that no picture is any greater than its director. Walker knows probably as much if not more than any other director how to reflect the mental attitudes of characters. This is what makes “The Eagle and the Hawk” one of the better air stories of the World war. We are able to see the effect, mentally and morally, that this job
of shooting down enemy planes and their human cargo upon Jerry Young, played so intelligently and so “mentally” by Fredric March. March is the eagle, and his gunner, known as the “Hawk,” is cruelly
played by Cary Grant. Jack Oakie is a flyer this time and he gets many a laugh although he has a tragic ending. I was interested in the way Grant registered nearly fiendish satisfaction when his gun killed an enemy flyer or gunner. He even shoots down helpless men trying to get to safety in a
Jack Oakie
parachute. This makes March and Grant nearly fighting enemies. The picture becomes powerful drama when Grant sees March cracking under the spell of murder in the air and decoration after decoration on the ground for “murder.” Will not tell you the climax of the story, sufficient to say that March, as Young, kills himself with his own revolver, but Grant, as Jerry Crocker, sees to it that the world never knows. Walker has photographed some splendid air war scenes and his method gives you a close-up of the main characters all the time. Here is a picture that is a picture. Forgot to tell you that Sir Guy Standing is in the cast. He is right as usual. Now at the Circle. tt u a “REUNION” IS A MIGHTY GAY MOVIE ROMP The right verdict for “Reunion in Vienna,” whether on the stage with the official blessing of the New York Theatre Guild or on the screen as a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer movie, is that it is gorgeous fun, rowdy, often getting very near the gutter, but al- : ways sparkling like a Tiffany dia- i mond. Here is a sophisticated yarn about j
a grand duke who returns secretly to attend a reunion of royalty, but Rudolf (the grand duke, as played by John Barrymore) plans to make it a sex reunion with hi s former favorite, Elena, as played by Diana Wynyard. But Elena has - married a modern doctor who knows all about people. So
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Miss Wynyard
he insists that his wife go alone to the reunion. You have to be your own judge as to just what happened. Barrymore must have loved the role because he wrings the part dry. You even laugh at him when he is strutting about clad only in a shirt. You get a shock when he brazenly asks Frau Lucher (the cigar-smoking character played by May Robson) if she still wears her red undies. He discovers that she does. Rowdy, boisterous, smart and at times mighty close to the gutter, "Reunion in Vienna" is a mighty, gay- romp and gorgeous nonsense most of the time. Miss Wynyard proves that she is an artist in a high comedy role. Frank Morgan is splendid as Anton, the doctor. Henry Travers will give you many a laugh as Father Krug, who just lives on spicy scandal. I am quite sure that Director Sidney Franklin could not have obtained a better cast in Hollywood. The Lunts played it on the stage, you remember. Now at the Palace. B B B COME OVER AND MEET KIEPURA You must come over and meet Kiepura, a European tenor, who is the singing star of a foreign-made picture called ‘‘Be Mine Tonight.” In a second, you will know why I had such a good time seeing this one. Besides some modern songs like "The Things I Do. I Do for You" an 4 "Tell Me Tonight," there
E. C. Seabrook Indianapolis, great chief of records, and Houston J. Patterson, Indianapolis* great junior sagamore, will be special guests and speakers. Members of the tw r o councils of
is an entire act from “La Boheme,” a great scene
from “Rigoletto” and a duet from “La Traviata.” That is certainly a strong enough musical menu for any movie these days. Let me tell you now that the recording is splendid and the voice of Kiepura is golden and so magnificent when I saw the picture I wanted to applaud after some of his numbers.
The story is of the efforts of the grand opera Tenor to get away from his public as well as his manager. He retreats from Italy and seeks adventure in Switzerland. There, of course, he meets a girl, but not until he had changed Koretsky, a bad egg but a lover of romance. This change of places by the tenor and his secretary puts the tenor in a mighty tight place with the law, but only one person could own such a voice, and that, of course, is Kiepura. I hope that the success of this picture will give us many more like them. Here is a musical treat placed in a background of the great beauty of Switzerland. Here is a movie that is easy to rave over. Now at the Ohio. o an BETTE DAVIS IS NOW A STAR If you like the new trend in smart sophisticated comedies about married and unmarried life, then I think you will like “Ex-Lady.” This picture has charm. The lines are smart and catching and the action moves swiftly enough. As to the soundness of the logic employed in the plot I would not want to attest, but it builds itself up convincingly. To my mind, this is Bette Davis’ best picture. She has the full reins and she seems to have a good idea of what she wants to do in the part. She is cast as the young and ardent artist who is in love with a young and ardent advertising man, but whom she does not want to marry, much to his dissatisfaction. Her arguments against marriage are the dullness that arises with constant association and the confusion resulting from trying to please each other rather than one’s own self. First the two try being unmarried and find that it doesn’t give them everything they want. Then they try marriage and find that they go stale. That gives them a pretty trying problem and the events that lead up to its final solution form an intricate plot. Bette Davis is more sincere and genuine than before and seems to feel a definite responsibility in putting across her lines and characterization. This she does very well, to my way of thinking. By the way, she wears some stunning gowns. Gene Raymond makes a good team mate for Miss Davis. He is not over-masculine and not too juvenile. His voice, carriage and expression form a strong characterization. Frank McHugh is right there with the comedy relief, in the role of a man-of-the-world who wishes he had lived in the romantic days of knighthood, or would even be satisfied with going back to the days of the hobble skirt, Monroe Owsley makes a neat villain and Claire Dodd, beautiful background. In her first starring picture, Miss i Davis shows that she really has the ! right idea even though she is not ! yet a great actress. She is sincere i and energetic, and that means a : whole lot. Ed Resener and his orchestra play ! an interesting medley in the overI ture called “Friml Favorites.” This orchestra, I think, has shown remarkable flexibility and 'versatility in switching from popular to classical and semi-classical music in its weekly programs. Now at the Indiana. (By the Observer.) st o a The Lyric today is offering on the stage a variety bill headed by Benny Ross. The screen offers Wheeler and Woolsey in “Diplomaniacs.” Will be reviewed Tuesday in this . department. The final presentation of "The | First Mrs. Fraser” will be given at the Playhouse tonight. It is a Civic 1 Theater triumph.
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Houston J. Patterson the Degree of Pocahontas of Linton have been invited. They will participate in the service. William Sheffler. past great sachem, win be in charge.
JR. MOOSE TO GIVE MINSTREL Oak Hill Troupe Will Perform With Lodge as Sponsor. Junior lodge, No. 25, Loyal Order of Moose, is sponsoring a minstrel show to be presented by the Oak Hill minstrels, Wednesday night at 8 in the Moose hall, 135 North Dela-
ware street. The juniors, under the supervision of John Newbauer, are organizing a boys’ drum corps. Equipment for the corps is being donated by the senior lodge. Indiana p o 1 is lodge, No. 17, is sponsor of the junior group. B. V. Canfield is governor. Edward Burns is dictator of the junior group, and chair-
man of the committee making plans for the minstrel show. John Klaiber, athletic director of the juniors, is organizing a baseball team among the juniors. TICKET SALE ON FOR GROTTO BATTLE July Fourth Spectacle to Be Given by Lodge. Members of the Sahara Grotto are making preparations for the “Battle of the Argonne” to be staged July 4 at the Butler bowl. Several hundred members of the Grotto will take part in the battle which will portray wiping out of a machine gun nest by artillery. The program will open at 8 and will last two and one-half hours. A band concert, drills, vaudeville and fireworks will precede the battle. All members of the Grotto have joined in a ticket campaign which started several weeks ago. Prizes will be awarded to members for sale of tickets. Delbert O. Wilmeth, monarch: Luther H. Manley, chief justice, and Walter Beauchamp, master of ceremonies of the local Grotto, are chairmen of the committees in charge of arrangements, and ticket campaign. PREPARE MEMORIAL RITE Knights of Columbus to Place Flags on Graves of All Catholic Soldiers. Indianapolis council. No. 437, Knighs of Columbus, will observe Memorial day with a program at Holy Cross cemetery. Flags will be placed on the graves of all Catholic soldiers. Members of the committee include : William Lannon, Leroy Kavanaugh, Maurice Fitzgerald, Russell Woods and Dr. Michael McGinty. TWO MEETINGS PLANNED Masonic Ledges to Convene During Coming Week. Two free and Accepted Mason lodges in the city will hold meetings this week in the Masonic temple, North and Illinois streets. Ancient Landmarks lodge, No. 319, will hold a craft practice tonight at in the temple. The social room wil be open to all members. Center Lodge. No. 23, will meet Wednesday night at 7:30 in the temple, for a social evening, and cards. Members and their friends are invited. SIO.OOO Loss in Boonville Fire By United Press BOONVILLE, Ind., May 29. | Damage estimated at SIO,OOO was ! caused Sunday night by a fire that i swept through offices and stores in the Thornburgh building.
Kiepura
a Quart (including all ingredients) Make Iced Tea this NEW SALADA Way 1. Put Five teaspoonfuls of 5. Add Juice of hlf--lemon Seladd Tea in teapot 6. Add one-third cup of sugar Add one quart Bolling 7. Place In refrigerator and (bubbling boiling) water thoroughly chill 3. Let steep for five minutes g. Add small euba of Ice to 4. Strain into pitcher each glass just before serving mm? zomTS* s lf "Fresh from the Gardens”
TKE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
SHRINE PLANS CONVENTION AT ATLANTIC CITY Four Delegates From City Group Will Represent Murat Temple. Four delegates of the Murat temple, local body of the Ancient Order, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, will attend the fifty-ninth imperial council session. July 9 to 14, inclusive, at Atlantic City, N. J. Twenty-five thousand Shriners from all parts of the United States, Canada, Mexico, Panama Canal Zone and Hawaii are expected to | attend the session. Members and families, friends and other guests of ; the Shriners are expected to swell the attendance to more than 50,000. Official delegates from Indianapolis are Edgar Hart. John J. Schoenholtz. E. H. Hardin and Carson B. Harris. Several others are expected to make the trip. Parades Are Planned First of two boardwalk parades will be held at 9 Tuesday morning, July 11. Imperial officers, representatives, potentates and bands and uniformed bodies will form an escort to Earl E. Mills, imperial potentate, and the imperial divan, conducting them to the convention hall for the opening session, which will be open to the public. Second parade during the session will be held Wednesday night. July 12, when the Shriners will appear as human floats, with tiny lights arranged to their swords, fezzes and boot toes. An attempt will be made by them during the parade, to outdo Mardi Gras and Mummers’ parades. Roosevelt Will Speak Arabic patrols, afoot and mounted, chanters, drum corps, legions of honor and oriental bands will be included in the procession. ' President Franklin D. Roosevelt, a member of Cyprus temple, Albany, N. Y., will speak during the convention. John Boyd Thatcher, mayor of Albany, and potentate of that temple, will lead the reception committee. Cyprus patrol will be Roosevelt’s personal escort. Eight hundred delegates will attend the regular sessions, four each from the various bodies of the order. Indianapolis delegates were elected last January. 000 FELLOWS WILL INITIATE ‘June Tenth Day’ to Be Celebrated by Four Local Lodges. “June Tenth day” will be celebrated by four Independent Order of Odd Fellow lodges in Indianapolis, Saturday afternoon and night, June 10. Ceremonies will be held in the Washington high school auditorium. Lodges which compose the “big four” for the celebration are: Harris ledge, No. 644; Puritan lodge, No. 678; Samaritan lodge. No. 658, and Northwestern lodge, No. 807. Officers for exemplification of the four Odd Fellow degrees will be selected from the various officers of each lodge. Initiatory and first degree will be held in the afternoon, and ritualistic work for the second and third degrees will be held at night. All Odd Fellow members throughout the state have been invited to attend. ANDERSON TRIBE WILL FETE CHIEFS Red Men and Pocahontas Heads to Attend Meeting. By Times Special ANDERSON, Ind . May 29.—Chief Anderson Tribe. No. 2, Improved Order of Red Men, wiil entertain great chiefs of the Red Men and Degree of Pocahontas, Thursday night in their wigwam. All great chiefs throughout the state have accepted invitations to attend. A banquet, in honor of the chiefs, will be given at 6 Thursday, by members of Chief Anderson Tribe, Chief Anderson Degree of Pocahontas, and the Haymakers. Dr. R. R. Robinson, chairman of the committee making arrangements | for the entertainment, has arranged | a program of music. Officers of the | local tribe will preside. Several cf j the great chiefs will make addresses. CARD PARTY PLANNED W. R. C. to Commemorate Golden Anniversary This Week. Major Robert Anderson, Women’s Relief Corps. No. 44. will hold a card party Wednesday at 2, in Ft. Friendly, 512 North Illinois street, in commemoration of the golden anniversary of the Women’s Relief Corps of the department of Indiana. Committee in charge includes Mrs. Grace Hoffmeyer, Mrs, Clarabella Boltorff, Mrs. Evelyn Kosar- ! each, Mrs. Nelle Pfeffer, Mrs. Jennie j Mullikan and Mrs. Mary Callahan.
Burns
RADIO STARS ON GROTTO PROGRAM
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Left to Right—Alfred Granneman. Virgil Anderson and Lilburn Grayson.
Al, Andy and Doc, local radio stars, will be featured in an enter-tainment-dance program, sponsored by the Sahara Blue Devil drill team, champions of United States and Canada, tonight at 9 in the Riverside skating rink. Alfred Granneman. as Al, and Virgil Anderson, as Andy, are
V. F. W. Auxiliary Will Hold Memorial Ceremony
Cigarets Are Given to ExSoidiers in Local Hospitals. Lavelle-Gossett auxiliary, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will hold its annual memorial service at 8 on Wednesday in the hall, King avenue and West Walnut street. Miss Mary Kremer and Mrs. Margrette Oxley, hospital committee for the ladies’ auxiliary of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, recently gave cigarets to all patients of the U. S. Veterans’ hospital, eleven veterans at city hospital, one at Sunnyside and one at the Robert W. Long hospital, in connection w r itii tae Veterans of Foreign Wars’ national hospital day. Degree staff of Lavelle-Gossett auxiliary recently instituted anew auxiliary at Fairmount, Ind. Preslie Huntington, department president, was the instituting officer. Ladies of the Seventh district, which includes Marion county, last week entertained Mrs. Nellie K. Dawson, national judge advocate. Mrs. Nellie Carey, district president, presided. Members from Lavelle - Gossett auxiliary attended a meeting at Terre Haute last week, when Lawton Byrum auxiliary of that city entertained Mrs. Consuelo DeCoe, national president. Capt. Frank S. Clark, department commander, and Alice Walker, department junior vice-president, welcomed Mrs. DeCoe to Indiana. WORLD LEADER TO VISIT ODDFELLOWS Grand Sire of Sovereign Lodge Here Saturday. William F. Jackson, grandsire of the sovereign grand lodge, Independent Order of Odd Fellow's, highest officer in the \>rld in Odd Fellow'ship, will visit Indianapolis Saturday afternoon. He will confer with officers of all branches of the order in Indiana. The conference will be held in the Odd Fellow building, Pennsylvania and Washington streets. “The Object and Purposes of Odd Fellow'ship,” will be the topic of Jackson in an address Saturday night at 8, on the thirteenth floor of the Odd Fellow building. Jackson is judge of the supreme court of Kansas.
And the proud old Farmer’s smiling still gmile that won’t come off. Just like Quaker? I impossible, Madam! I Quaker Oats is richer, better, because it’s v made from an exclusive process this process includes 1 The use of choicest oats. 2-Better flavor due to roasting through 10 different ovens. 3- Further enrichment by the use of modern ultra violet rays. U. S. Patent No. 1,680,818. At about V 2 the price of a year ago
members of the Blue Devil team. Lilburn Grayson, as Doc, is a member of the Sahara Grotto band. Anderson is general chairman of the committee making arrangements. Kenneth Amick is chairman of the ticket committee. Music will be furnished by Harry Dickinson's orchestra.
OBSERVE FLAG DAY Elks Lodge Will Hold Celebration Friday Night. Indianapolis lodge. No. 13, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, will celebrate flag day Friday night at 8 at the Antlers. A ritualistic program, written by members of the grand lodge, will be presented. The program is for members only. John Lauck Jr., organist for the local lodge, will play several patriotic selections. W. J. Fahey, exalted ruler cf Indianapolis lodge, will give an oration to the flag. Each officer will talk. DISTRICT RALLY WILL BE HELD Eleventh District Red Men to Meet Saturday at Martinsville. By Times Special MARTINSVILLE. Ind., May 29. Eleventh district Red Men’s organization of Indiana will meet with Seminole Tribe, No. 125, of this city, Saturday night. All members and former members of the tribe have been invited. The Junior Order degree team of Waukesha Tribe of Spencer will entertain with a fancy drill. E. C. Seabrook, New Albany, great sachem, will be the principal speaker. Gus Fraul, president of the district, will preside. Other great chiefs who will speak include: Arch H. Hobbs, Indianapolis, great chief of records; Houston J. Patterson, Indianapolis, great junior sagamore; Irvin Pryor, Worthington, great prophet, and Russell H. Evans, Spencer, past great sachem. LODGE DANCE SLATED Bcn-Hur Court Plans Entertainment on Wednesday Night. Arries Court No. 5, Ben-Hur Life Association, will hold a dance for members and their friends, Wednesday night, following a business session in the hall, 322 East New York street. The Ben-Hur drill team will hold a rehearsal at 9, preceding the dance. Music will be furnished by the local court’s orchestra.
-MAY 29, 1933
STATE DRUIDS WILL CONVENE IN CITY SUNDAY 73d Annual Grand Grove Session to Be Held. Grand Grove of Indiana. United Ancient Order of Druids, will convene for the seventy-third annual session Sunday in Druids hall, 29 South Delaware street. Opening session will start at 9 Sunday by Burk May Sr., noble grand arch of the state. Seventyfive delegates, representing various groves throughout the state are expected. Present grand officers include: May, Indianapolis, noble grand arch; Chester Harris. Richmond, deputy grand arch; Charles G. N. Geider. Indianapolis, grand secretary; Joe Cunico, Blanford, grand treasurer; George Ostermeyer, Indianapolis, grand marshal, Virgil Grimes. Lafayette. grand herald; Karl Kilgus. Richmond, grand guard, and William F. Bonesteel Jr., Indianapolis, past noble arch. A memorial service, jointly with groves and circles of this d.ty, will be held in the hall at 7 30 Sunday night. Grand circle, ladies’ auxiliary to the order, will hold its twentyninth annual session in the hall on Thursday, June 8. Mrs Carrie Pobst, Indianapolis, grand arch diyidess, will preside. EAGLES WILL CONDUCT •FAMILY NIGHT' FETE Program Will Be Presented for Members and Their Relatives. Family night will be observed tonight by Indianapolis Eagles aerie at the lodge home. 43 West Vermont street, with a program open to members and their families. Dancing acts, wrestling exhibitions and music will comprise the program. Several numbers will be presented by the aerie quartet, composed of J. C. Sortwell, R. W. Allred, Carlos Jones and Harry Saunders. New officers, headed by William M. Grady, president, will be installed next Monday night. 0. E. S. GROUP WILL GIVE PLAY THURSDAY ‘Wayfarer’ Will be Presented by Past Matrons and Patrons. Members of the Past Matrons and Patrons Association of Marion county, Order of Eastern Star, headed by Mrs. Rea Koehler, past matron of Queen Esther chapter, will present the “Wayfarer” Thursday night in the Masonic temple at Acton. The playlet will be repeated Friday night before members of Queen Esther chapter, at a meeting in the Masonic temple, North and Illinois streets. Mrs. Rose Malcolm, worthy grand matron, Indiana grand chapter, O. E. S., will be honor guest Saturday night at Greenwood, when she wiil inspect the conferring of degrees there. Druids to Hold Benefit Party Indianapolis Circle, No. 6. United Ancient Order of Druids, will hold a benefit euchre and bunco party in Druids hall. 29 South Delaware street, tonight at 8:15. Margaret Foster and Lillian Fraul will be in charge.
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