Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 81, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 August 1933 — Page 7

ATJG. 14, 1933

STATE EAGLES DRAW HONORS AT CONVENTION

Indiana Aeries Represented in Numerous Fields of Activity. Liberal shares of honors was accorded Indiana members of the Fraternal Order of Eagles during the national convention which closed at Cleveland. 0., last week. J. Pierce Cummings, twice president of Indianapolis aerie, was reelected a national trustee. He was re-elected secretary of the trustees board, and also chosen again as insurance department secretary. Representative Louis Ludlow, local aerie member, was one of the ♦speakers on the program. Among women’s drill teams, first place was won by the team of Kokomo aerie, and Anderson auxiliary was fifth, while the men’s team of Peru air.p won third place in competition amog male teams. Grover V. Camden was the delegate of Indianapolis aerie, while the Indiana state aerie was represented by Raymond Journey of Portland, past state president. Pension Pens Displayed Other city Eagles attending were Otto Pe Deluse. past national president of tne order and chairman of the state old-age pension commission; Jacob L Smith, local aerie treasurer, and John J. Pfarr. inside guard. Among judges of the men’s drill team competition was Charles F. Stewart of Kokomo, state president. Os particular interest at the convention was a display of pens used by Governors of twenty-three states in signing old-age pension bills sponsored by the Eagles. Among the •pens was one used by Governor Paul V McNutt in affixing his signature to Indiana's pension bill passed by the 1933 legislature. Roosevelt Sends Greeting Ludlow brought a letter of greeting from President Roosevelt, who is a life member of the Buffalo <N. Y ) Eagles aerie. In his address Ludlow pointed out that much of the NRA program is based on the Eagles plan for the stabilization of employment, which was announced at the 1930 Indiana state convention of the order held in Anderson. It was decided at the convention. Deluse said, to continue the order s campaign for old age pensions and to give full support to the NRA program. VACANT HOME LIST UNDER 25 PER CENT Business Conditions Force Persons to Save in Cheaper Dwellings. Fewer than 25 per cent of dwellings were vacant in all except three of the eleven areas of greatest economic drain on Jan. 1. The areas with the greatest percentage of vacant dwellings lie outside of this area. This is due to the fact that the lowest rents in the city are obtained in the areas of greatest economic drain. Under pressure of the present poor business conditions families have been forced to go into houses which otherwise would not have been occupied. These facts were revealed by the Indianapolis community plan committee of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce. This committee is making a study of city economic and social conditions.

EVANSVILLE LEGION POST PICKS CANDIDATE L. L. Roberts Boosted by Group for Department Commander. Tunkhouser post. No. 8. and Burdett post. No. 187. American Legion of Evansville, who will be hosts at the annual department convention in Evansville. Aug. 26 to 29. have indorsed Louis L. Roberts. Evansville. for department commander. Roberts has been a continuous member of Funkhouser post since its organization in 1920. and successfully has aided hundreds of veterans throughout the southern part of the state in their claims for compensation and disability allowances. He was graduated from Wabash college in 1912, and was a captain of held artillery during the war. He has been the executive officer of the One hundred thirty-ninth field artillery. Indiana national guard since reorganization of that regiment following the war. J. F. LINDER ELECTED BY OAKLANDON POST Legionnaires Name Officers at Session Monday Night. John F. Linder was elected commander of Service post. No. 128, American Legion, at a meeting last Monday night at Oaklandon. He succeeded Harvey E Childress. Other officers elected were: Frank Hohler. first vice-commander; Leigh F.scher. second vice-commander; Fred McConaha. adjutant; Austin J. Beaver, finance officer; Paul Walton. historians: Jesse S Combs, chaplain, and Arza A. Humbles, sergeant-at-arms. Linder and Mohler were named delegates to the annual state convention of the American Legion Aug 26 to 29 at Evansville. Childress and Hobart M. Weaver were named alternates. DEPUTY WILL ADDRESS SOUTH BEND I. 0. 0. F. Ohio Representative Speaker for Celebration Saturday. By Timet Special ~ r ’5 I SOUTH BEND. Ind.. Aug. 14. ' Odd Fellow day in this city will be celebrated Saturday. George M. Neffner. grand representative of Ohio and special deputy grand sire, win deliver a lecture at 8 p. m. in the Odd Fellow temple. Arrangements are being made by South Bend lodge No. 29 and Robert Blum lodge No. 278. co-sponsors of the meeting, to make it the largest ever held in northern Indiana by the order. All Odd Fellows and their families have been invited. It will be the first time that a direct representative of the grand sire ever has spoken in the north- j era section of the state.

INDIANA EAGLES AERIES SHARE HONORS AT SESSION

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George Nordlin

HAVANA RIOTS ARE SEEN IN NEWS REEL Air Party and Plane Crash Are Other Features. Dramatic and exciting scenes In Havana, as troops take possession of the streets, dispersing rioters and carrying out President Machado’s orders by establishing martial law in the capital, are to be seen in the current issue of The Indianapolis Times Universal News Reel. Charging through the streets while rioters run frantically to escape, the soldiers are seen in one of the many clashes that have marked the present revolution. Other important events include exclusive pictures of a unique air party staged in a giant airplane high over New York City by Amelia Earhart, noted aviatrix, in honor of Captain and Mrs. Mollison, intrepid British trans-atlantic fliers, and exclusive views of the odd accident that damaged Captain Charles T. P. Ulm’s airplane at Portmarnock, Ireland, he was preparing for his take-off to New York on world flight. City theaters showing The TimesUniversal film are the Zaring, Howard, Alamo, Garfield, Roosevelt, Rivoli, Tacoma, and Indiana theater (for colored), 410 Indiana avenue.

DEGREE TEAM WILL BE PARTY SPONSORS Dance, Card Party Will Be Held on Thursday. Degree team of Marion council. Security Benefit Association, is sponsoring a covered dish supper, public mock initiation, dance, and card party to be held Thursday night. Aug. 31, in the hall, Hamilton avenue and East Washingotn street. % Arrangements committee includes Everett Taylor, degree captain; Mrs. Rose Green. Mrs. Pearl Hull and Joe Gulke. Marion council also is planning a picnic to be held jointly late this month with Muncie and Crawfordsville councils. Committee making arrangements includes Mrs. Jennie Taylor. Miss Josephine Suesse. Mrs. Mary Zink and Mrs. Mattie Sellers. Announcement has been made by J. J. Mescall, president, that nomination and election of officers for the coming year will be held Thursday night. Sept. 7, in the hall. Pep Meeting for Lodge King David lodge. No. 897. Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Beech Grove, will hold a pep meeting Wednesday night at 8. George P. Bomwasser, grand secretary of the grand lodge of Indiana, I. O. O. F., will speak.

Contract Bridge

By W. E. M'KENNEY Seeretarv American Bridie Lenot SOME contract players appear to think that when they are not vulnerable the smart thing to do is to bid any suit they hold in order to interfere with the bidding of the opponents. However, this generally reacts in an unfavorable manner. When the opponents, by their bidding. show that they hold strong hands, it often pays to conceal your suit, especially if the rest of your hand is very weak. Otherwise, the bidding of this may be the only thing which will enable your opponents to arrive at the correct contract. This was brought out forcibly recently in the following hand piaved in a tournament. South, the dealer, started the contracting with one club. West overcalled with one spade, and North showed the strength of his hand with a bid of one no trump. East should not bid diamonds—against a no trump contract he has a very fine suit to open. However, several East players made the mistake of showing the diamonds, and here is what happened. After the bid of two diamonds. South would bid two hearts. West would pass, and now from North's hand it looks as though his partner held four hearts and six clubs. If South held two diamonds and a singleton spade, a slam contract could be defeated. East's bid of two diamonds gave North a chance to make a very fine cue bid. so he overcalled the two heart hid with three diamonds—this

Drill team of Peru Eagles aerie, winner of third place in national competition. Indiana aeries of the Fraternal Order of Eagles shared in honors at the national convention which closed last week in Cleveland, O. Auxiliary drill team of Kokomo aerie won first place and the Anderson auxiliary’ came fifth, while among the men's teams, third place was won by the drill team of Peru aerie. J. Pierce Cummings of Indianapolis was re-elected national trustee. George Nordlin of St. Paul, Minn., was elected national president.

NEGRO ELKS TO HOLD ENCLAVE Convention Here Will Open Sunday and Continue Through Week. Indiana Association, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, a Negro organization, is making final arrangements for the annual grand lodge convention of the order which will open here Sunday and continue through the week. Plans for the convention were laid at a meeting of the state organization at Indianapolis headquarters, 738 Indiana avenue, last week. Election of officers for the state body also was held. Officers elected included: John Hinton, East Chicago, president; E. L. Johnson, Indianapolis, first vicepresident; Frazier Bethea, Muncie, second vice-president; Daniel Jones, Indianapolis, third vice-president; L. C. Weddington, East Chicago, secretary; John Campbell. Indianapolis, treasurer; Martin King, Indianapolis, esquire; Lawrence Evans, Indianapolis, inner guard: and William Thomas. Indianapolis, tyler. Claude White, Ira Smith, and Harry Jackson, all of Indianapolis, were appointed trustees. Indianapolis lodge. No. 104, under chairmanship of W. W. Hyde, will be host to J. Finley Wilson, Washington, grand exalted ruler, and other delegates and their families who will attend. Meeting to Be at Temple Mystic Tie Lodge. No. 398, Free and Accepted Masons, will hold the monthly stated meeting tonight at 7:30 in the Masonic temple, North and Illinois streets.

Lodges, Rebekah Order to Gather for Picnic Sunday

Frolic Will Be Held in Fox Woods North of City. Wichita Tribe. No. 139, Improved Order of Red Men; Meta Council, No. 103. Degree of Pocahontas; Puritan lodge, No. 678. Independent Order of Odd Fellows and Progress Rebekah lodge No. 395 will hold a joint picnic Sunday at Fox's woods, four miles northwest of Indianapolis. All members of the four lodges, their families, and friends have been invited to bring basket lunches and attend. Arrangements are in charge of Thomas Fiester. Motorists have been directed to drive on state roads 34 or 52 and follow markers, which will be placed along the roads at convenient places. For those not having automobiles, there will be transportation. These persons have been asked to meet at Tibbs avenue and West Tenth street at 11 Sunday morning, where autos will take them to the grounds. Mountain plants often are dwarf, scrubby specimens, but in the Himalayas giant plants with bright- ' colored blossoms are found at altitudes as high as 18,000 feet.

AK-J-10 VJ-10-8-6-3 ♦ A-J-8-4 *lO 4A * Q ‘ 8 ' n^Vm)* 6 - 2 7-4-3 NORTH vs _ 2 V 7-4 jl ™ ♦ K-Q- ---♦ 7-6-2 iu (j) 10-9-*9-4 5 H 5 Dealer 4.J-8-6-SOUTH 3 49-5 VA-K-Q-9 ♦ 3 not only showed control of the diamond suit, but also definitely stated that the hand had good support in hearts and was making a slam try. East passed, and now South showed his real length in clubs by a bid of four clubs. North went to five hearts to show that there was no danger in that contract. With this information South safely could go to six hearts, as North's bidding had showed him the ace of diamonds and the king of spades. While North and South might have reached their small slam contract regardless. East's diamond bid made it very simple. The play for the hand is not difficult—South established his club suit by entering his own hand twice with the ace and king ol hearts. * (Copyright, lS$ by KIA Service. IncA

: THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

___ JIgSpHK

J, Pierce Cummings

PYTHIAN BAND WILL RETURN FROM TOUR Rest to Be Taken Before Start of Final Series. The Pythian Home band of Lafayette will return to the home Wednesday from the fourth extended tour of the state, to rest before starting the fifth and final tour Sept. 28. The band, composed of children of the home, left last Monday on a tour of northern Indiana. Included in its stops, where concerts were given were South Bend, where the musicians took part in the Dramatic Order of the Knights of Khorassan annual convention parade Wednesday, and the annual Knights of Pythias picnic Sunday at Michigan City. Eleven cities are to be visited today and Tuesday by the band before the trip home is started Wednesday morning. The children travel in the home bus. Concerts will be given by the band today at Hebron. Rensselaer, Brook and Morocco, where an overnight stop will be made. Visits will be made Tuesday to Kentland, Goodland, Remington. Monon, Chalmers, Brookston and Delphi, where the band will spend the night.

SHRINE POTENTATE

UK

John M. Sebrell, Norfolk (Va.) attorney, was inducted into the office of imperial potentate of the United States, Canada and Mexico bodies of the Ancient Arabic Order. Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, at the recent grand session held in Atlantic City. N. J. EIGHT HONORED AT I. U. City Students Listed for High Grades in Last Year. By Time t Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Aug. 14. Eight Indianapolis high school graduates or students now living in Indianapolis are included *on the honor list of eighty-two Indiana university, students making all "A's’ the second semester of the last school year. These students are: William P. Foreman. Shortridge high school; Herbert G. Ludlow, George Washington high school: Simon B. Mendelsberg and Meyer Rosenberg. New Utrecht (N. Y.) high school, now living in Indianapolis; Norman E. Parnell, George Washington high school: William V. GellMan, Horace Mann high school, Gary, now living in Indianapolis; Richard E. Thompson, Shortridge high school, and William R. Breneman. Mammal Training high school, now living in Bloomington. Norman Parnell, sophomore student. led the list with twenty-two hours of "A." BOASTS TINIEST PONY Kansas Child Has Shetland Pony Only Two Feet High. By United Prett AXTELL. Kan.. Aug. 14.—Gene Dorrance owes a pony that is a pony in every detail. The baby Shetland, born recently, is only two feet high, two and one-half feet long and weighs thirty pounds. It is believed to be the smallest pony in the southwest.

BEN-HUR HEAD INSPECTS FIELD FORCE IN CITY

Sounds Plea for Growth of Order in Talk at Initiation. “Let's make the Indianapolis court the largest in the United States,’’ was the appeal of John C. Snyder. Crawfordsville, national president of the Ben-Hur Life Association, in an address before members of Arrius Court. No. 5, here Wednesday night. Occasion of Snyder’s visit was to inspect the new field force system recently inaugurated here, through which he expects to bring the local court of the order to the top. The field force began work here several months ago. with only four representatives, working under direction of W. A. McGath and Burt E. Kimmel. scribe of the local court. First month of the system worked effectively, bringing in more than twenty-five new members, and now’ a larger force is bieng acquired. Eight Are Initiated Snyder’s appeal was made at an initiatory meeting of the local group held in the hall, 322 East New York street. Eight candidates w-ere initiated into the order. Fifteen more are ready to take the ritualistic work next month. Enlarging of the local body also was discussed at a picnic held Sunday, July 30. at Garfield park, by P. O. Bowers, state manager of the order. He also delivered an address at the initiatory meeting. The picnic, according to Kimmel, was the most successful ever held in the city, more than 250 members and their families attending. 400 Teams to Compete Entertainment, including dancing, readings and exhibition drill by the Marion Council, Security Benefit Association drill team, will be featured at this week’s meeting, Wednesday night, during the court’s socigl hour following a business meeting, Kimmel announces. The drill team of Arrius court, which is making preparations for attending Fraternal day at the Century of Progress. Sept. 1. will hold a practice drill, prior to start of the games. The team’s visit to Chicago will last three days, leaving here Thursday afternoon. Aug. 21. That night an exhibition drill will be given before all Chicago courts of the order. In the fraternal day event, the team will compete against more than 400 teams from throughout the United States and Canada, in a contest to be held in the Hall of Science.

FESTIVAL IS PLANNED BY BOY SCOUT TROOP Parents Sponsor for Event Saturday Afternoon. Parent council of Boy Scout troop, No, 48. is sponsoring a “jitney festival'’ to be held Saturday afternoon at 5 at Linwood Christian church. East Michigan and Linwood streets. Music will be provided by the Knights of Pythias band, under direction of George Williams. Other entertainment will include a fortune teller and a fish pond in charge of Mrs. Maude Blickenstaff and Mrs. Ethel Smith. Sandwich stands will be operated by Mrs. Mack Wilson, Mrs. Rhea Walker, Mrs. Roy Pavey, Mrs. Russell Carroll and Mrs. James Souders. Soft drinks will be sold by Harry E. Byrkett, Mack Wilson, E. B. Worley and Fred Yager. Mrs. Elmer A. Turner, Opal Fox. Mae Toles and Katherine Fox will sell home-made cakes. Ice cream will be sold by Carl and Arthur Fox, Mary Whitinger and Katherine Bailey, while candy and crartcerjack will be sold by Mrs. M. M. Darmstandler and Lillian Davis. All food sales will be for 5 cents each. Proceeds will be used to purchase equipment for the troop. Arrangements for the festival are under direction of a committee composed of Mrs. Harry Byrkett. chairman; C. E. Scholl and Max M. Darmstandler, scoutmaster of Troop 48.

WOODMEN LODGE TO ENTERTAIN FAMILIES Event at Napoleon, Ind., to Be Saturday. By Timet Special NAPOLEON, Ind., Aug. 14.—Napoleon camp. No. 7174, Modern Woodmen of America, will hold a free entertainment for members and their families throughout the state, Saturday aftemon and night Aug. 26, at the school ground commons here. Captain F. A. Chance, deputy of Napoleon camp, has announced that meals will be served cafeteria style from 6 to 9 that night, and that a whole beef will be cooked. Entertainment will include fancy drills by the ladies’ team of Kokomo. moving pictures, music, dancing, and various programs to be offered by camps near by. Now a Full Week In French Lick Q Costs you only .... 4# Room rltb both and mooli Writ# for booklet FRENCH LICK SPRINGS HOTEL CO. French Lick, Indiana New low rate effective until September 15th AMERICAS GREATEST HEALTH RESORT *• HOME OF PLUTO - Other charge* reduced— Golf now SI.OO Horseback now SI.OO Sulphur Bath. Salt Rub. Shower and Maaeage—now $2.00 No extra charges for Swim min*. Dancing, Tennia. 9-hola miniature indoor and outdoor rolf. Pin* Poo* or for drinking the natural spring watara.

Grotto Officers to Draft Program of Fall Events

Monarch Calls Session for Tonight at Order’s Home. Delbert O. Wilmeth, monarch of Saraha Grotto, has called a meeting of all Grotto officers and past monarchs tonight at 7:30 at the Grotto home. Thirteenth street and Park avenue, to formulate plans for entertainment this fall. One feature of this year's entertainment will be an old-time Mardi Gras carnival and fish fry, to be held Sept, l on the lawn of the Grotto home, under auspices of the ladies' auxiliary and uniformed bodies of the Grotto. Sahara Pirate band of sixty pieces will play the last of a series of eight weekly concerts that night, under direction of Brewer T. Clay. Many other musical selections will be presented by various organizations of the local Grotto. A dance floor is being built on the lawn of the home. Several booths are being constructed. Arrangements for the affair are under chairmanship of Mrs. Ray Dille, who has invited the public to attend. Grotto also has announced a special golf tournament to start Sunday noon, when local Grotto golfers match clubs with players of Kerman Grotto of Terre Haute at Coffin course. Kenneth Amic is in charge of making arrangements for the affair, and has announced that forty local golfers will take the field to defend the Sahara golf title against the Terre Haute group. The entire membership of the Grotto has been invited to attend the match, and a large gallery is expected to trail the players around the course. Sixth of the series of weekly band concerts will be held Friday night at 8 at the Grotto home lawn.

SCHOOL ALLOTMENT COMPILATION MADE Share in Income Tax Being Computed by State. Officials of the state department of finance were busy today figuring the allotment to schools for each local school unit from state income tax revenues. The compilation is expected to be completed within the next three or four days, Governor Paul V. McNutt said. He estimated that it will amount to about S2OO a teacher, to be distributed Jan. 1, 1934. The state is pledged to a S6OO annual teacher payment, but only can pay as revenues through the sales and income tax increase. McNutt explained. Each township trustee and school official will be notified now’ of the proposed allotment, so that they can proceed with budget-making, he said. The Governor pledged that every cent collected through the income and sales tax will be distributed for school use on Jan. 1. He urged prompt pdtyment of the tax by every one on Oct. 1, the next quarterly collection time.

TTTSnDK AfW BY BRUCE CAJTQN THE LORD OF LIFE." by Neil Bell, is a slightly labored but ingenious tale of how human nature acts in the face of a world catastrophe. An eccentric inventor finds a way to annihilate the atom. His experiment gets away from him and almost annihilates the earth as well It causes a sort of combination of earthquake, hurricane and volcanic eruption which destroys every one on the globe— with the exception of the occupants of a British submarine, which, being below the sea at the time, misse dthe full force of the upheaval. These people land, realize what has happened, and set to work to build anew society. The catch is that there is just one woman in the crowd, and if the earth is to be repeopled it is strictly up to her. Being a conscientious lass, she accepts the nomination, and in the next decade or so she takes as husbands, successively, practically all of the male survivors. She has children, in plenty—but they're all boys. Finally the one male survivor who hasn't married this polyandrous lady steals the colony's motorboat and sails off on a voyage of discovery. He finds another survivor—a girl who was up in the stratosphere in a balloon when the applecart turned over—and he and she marry and have several daughters. They thereupon go back to the colony, steal the boy children, and go blithely off to start the race anew, leaving the colonists to extinction. It might fill in an idle summer afternoon for you. Published by Little, Brown & Cos., it sells for $2. ECONOMICAL CRUISES A day...a week;;.orlonger To H*o Chicago World's Fair ;;;te Dwlvtft... Buffalo (Niagara Faßs) 7 BUFFALO Wl and INf Return CmruyiiOnlyloot Mas r : otbw porta. (Railroad ¥ CHICAGO - DULUTH via Mackinac Island Day hiriidtai Mock O O Cruise Pj Great Lakes Transit Corporation SOetormrm, S A Juniata. SS. Tiooeeta saSfrwjuently between Buffalo, Clevtknd. troit, Mackmac Inland, Sauk St* Maria, ill Houghton, Duluth. Chicago, Milwaukee. LAwoospfeflas Carried Between AO Poes*. For full information, apply any Tourist or Railroad Agent

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Delbert O. Wilmeth

REVISE BYLAWS FOR WOODMEN New Rules Affecting Head Camp Effective on Sept. 1. New bylaws were adopted recently by the head camp of the Modem Woodmen of America. The laws will become effective Sept. 1, according to John D. Volz, Indianapolis, national director. One of the most important changes in the bylaws is that local lodge secretaries or camp clerks will be appointed instead of being elected , as other lodge officers. Executive council of the head J camp will make the appointments, according to the new laws, and the term of office will be for an indefinite period, lasting as long as satisfactory service is rendered. At a meeting in flock Island. Illtoday the executive council appointed 11,359 such officers to serve that number of lodges in fortyseven states and Canada Appointments made to Indianapolis camps included: Allen G. Wil- j liams, Marion camp No. 3558; E. D. Smith, Maple camp No. 5563; Henry Halbing. Riverside camp No. 6463: Edgar Riley. Park camp No. 6604; William F. McMackin, Ironwood camp No. 6984; Charles W. Parr. Broad Ripple camp No. 8614, and Benjamin Schlanzer, Capital City camp No. 8743. I. o.' oT~F~ WILL PICNIC Rebekahs to Participate in Sunday Event at Lafayette. Odd Fellows and Rebekahs of Tippecanoe county will hold their annual picnic Sunday at the K. of P. home in Lafayette. Members of both lodges throughout the state and their families have been invited to attend. Lawrence A. Handley. Richmond, grand master of the grand lodge of Indiana. I. O. O. F., will speak. Games and other entertainment also will be had.

Butler University ' Is FULLY accredit--0 ed, being a member ’ of the North Central Fall semester Association of colbegins Sep- leges and secondary tember 18th schools, a member of and 19th Tu- the American Assoition, SIOO per Vniversily ’ . , W omen, the Amc-ri-semester plus can Association of lees, ma\ be Teachers Training paid in pay- Colleges and the Asments. sociation of American Colleges. For information, writ* Butler University, Indianapolis, IndL 65 and ABM No let-down happy in his work and p enjoying good health ; Once a year Chief Connally I 1 lakes a course of S S S. BEING Assistant Chief of the Atlanta Police Department is no chill’s play. Chief C. P. Connally vouches for that. He must keep his ' '*Jfc mind alert and bis body physically fit. &*+■**?'£ Several years ngo Chief Connally’* system got m : ' in a run-down condition. It was then that he ?• decided to take 5.5.5. In six weeks time he wrote: “My appetite and digestion are greatly improved, so much so that I can eat pork and the '■ : like without any discomfort, and to my surprise 4 my skin and complexion has cleared and become slmost like a child's. P 5 >. has so improved my Jj circulation and the condition of my blood that it has made me feel like a young man again Sow. once a year. Chief Connally takes a course of 5.5.5. Tonic to keep his red-blood-cells * // Try it Yourself ?.?.?. nuv be the very means of bringing better health and more happiness to '• Jffl! you. At all drug stores in two convenient sizes. .1 The larger size is more economical. £ThSS S. Ca. builds sturdv-Y health Jtm w

1,0.0, F. LODUI ANNIVERSARY TO BE CELEBRATED Fiftieth Year Will Be Marked by Prospect Street Order. Fiftieth anniversary and homecoming of Fidelity Rebekah lodge, No. 227. Independent Order of Odd Fellows, will be celebrated by members at 8 tonight in the hall. 1609 Prospect street. A program has been arranged for the party, and members of all Rebekah lodges in the city, and present and past member of the Rebekah Assembly of Indiana, have been invited. Arrangements are under general chairmanship of Mrs. Alma Bush, noble grand of the lodge. She has appointed several committees. History to Be Outlined A history committee, which also will serve as reception committee, has been assigned the task of presenting a complete outline of the history of the lodge, since its chartering. Members of that committee include Mrs. Carrie Glass, chairman; Mrs. Tillie Stadlander, Mrs. Dora Ducher. Mrs. Ella Buchanan, Mrs. Ida Eskey and Mrs. Bertha Wilson. Honor for Pioneers The night’s program, a part of which will be the reading of the original charter and names of charter members, has been arranged by the program committee, comixtsed of Dr. Ellen Matt wig, chairman; Mrs. Mary Prosch and Mrs. Opal Ross. Social committee for the party is composed of Mrs. Emma Hensen, Mrs. Sallie Pendleton, Mrs Lou Huffman. Mrs. Louise Sells, and Mrs. Marie Terrell. The party will be in ho7-* of all pioneer members of the lodge. Tiny mirrors 1-32 inch long and 1-64 inch wide are used in apparatus in one electrical engineering laboratory. Progress the Soft Water Laundry EVANS’ IP® ifcswa'HS FOR All PURPOSES