Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 129, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 October 1933 — Page 6
PAGE 6
K. OF P. HEAD SETS SCHEDULE FOR JUEETINGS Grand Chancellor Arranges District Sessions for 3-Week Period. Fifteen district meetings to extend over a period of three weeks, beginning Oct. 16, have been arranged by Harry C. Sullivan, Vevay, who last week was elected grand chancellor of the Indiana Grand Lddge, Knights of Pythias. Mr. Sullivan; Raymond R. Tash, Salem, newly elected grand vicechancellor, and Carl P. Mitchell, Indianapolis, grand keeper of records and seal, will attend the meetings, and will start a membership campaign at each The schedule is as follows: Oct. 16, Districts 6 and 11, at Burlington; Oct. 17, Districts 2 and 3, at Plymouth; Oct. 18, First district, at Angola; Oct. 19, Districts 7 and 8, at Ossian; Oct. 20. Fourth district, at East Chicago; Oct. 23, Districts 19 and 22. at Bedford; Oct. 24, Districts 21 and 27, at Jasonville. Oct. 25 Schedule Oct. 25, Twenty-fifth district, at Huntington; Oct. 26, Districts 16 and 18. at Batesville; Oct. 27, Districts 23 and 24, at Jeffersonville; Oct. 30, Districts 9 and 26, at Albany; Oct. 31. Districts 18 and 20, at Martinsville; Nov. 1, Districts 5 and 12, at Lafayette; No. 2, Districts 13 and 14, at Russiaville, and Nov. 3, Districts 13 and 14, at Russiaville, and Nov. 3, Districts 10 and 17, at Straughn. Following his election last week Mr. Sullivan appointed the following district deputies: Riley Smith, Albion. First district; R. Van Gilder, Plymouth, Second district; William G. Matthews, La Porte, Third district; L. E. Gardner, Hammond, Fourth district; Dr. C. E. Linton, Medaryville, Fifth districe; R. M. Shaffer, Logansport, Sixth district. William Ball, Marion, Seventh district; E. D. Gray, Ft. Wayne, Eighth district; Fred C. Rowley, Muncie, Ninth district; A. O. Schoelch, Newcastle, Tenth district; Owen Curry, Thorntown, Eleventh district; Roy Miller. Lafayette, Twelfth district; Bert Skeeters, Montezuma, Thirteenth district; P. W. Tapp, Ladoga, Fourteenth district. District Deputies Named Robert Fendley, Greenwood, Fifteenth district; J. P. Harry, Hagerstown, Seventeenth district; Merle Allen, Patriot, Eighteenth district; T. R. Carter, Seymour, Nineteenth district; Allen Moore, Martinsville, Twentieth district! Ives Poindexter, Sandborn, Twenty-first district; Roy Stoner, Sellersurg. Twenty-third district; W. H. Winter, Cory don, Twenty-fourth district. L. M. Medcalf, Dale, Twenty-fifth district; Ora E. Jones, Redkey, Twenty-sixth district, and Joe McBride. West Terre Haute, Twentyseventh district. Deputies for the Sixteenth and Twenty-second districts have not yet been appointed. Appointments to special committees made by Mr. Sullivan at last week’s session are as follows: Special Committeemen Finance committee: Charles W. Hartpence, Indianapolis; James L. Richard, Vevay, and James F. Heber. Ft. Wayne. Judiciary committee; Chester M. DeWitt, Newcastle; Floyd O. Jellison, and Othniel Hitch, Lafayette. State of the order committee: Dr. E. D. Shadday, Montpelier; El wood Williams, Washington, and N. V. McClelland, Goodland. Huntington Man Appointed Credentials committee: Nie Voigt, Huntington; William G. Huckleberry, Logansport, and Ernest C. Ferguson. Attica. Mileage and per diem committee: A. J. Berry, Jeffersonville; C. D. Samuels, Greensburg; James S. Wright, Vevay, and O. O. Williams, Salem. Uniform Rank Committee Uniform Rank committee: Paul J. Knapp. Evansville; W. T. Kesterson, Lafayette, and W. C. McCrory, Indianapolis. Princes of Syracuse: Charles O. Brown, Logansport; Harry Leroy, Hammond, and W. W. Dickerson, Terre Haute. Dramatic Order of the Knights of Khorassan: George P. Kibbe, Indianapolis; Howard E. Johnson, Michigan City, and Frank S. McCarty, Liberty. Harry South, member of Capitol City Lodge, No. 97, Indianapolis, was appointed secretary of the bureau of relief. M. D. Stoker Martinsville, and H. H. King, Frankton, were named special deputies. COUNTY ASSOCIATION TO PRESENT PLAYLET Past Patrons to Appear Before Bridgeport O. E. S. “Heroes of the Bible,” a Biblical playlet, will be presented by members of the Past Matrons and Patrons Association of Marion county at 8 tonight before Bridgeport chapter. O. E. S.. under direction of Mrs. Aileen Money. A pitch-in supper will be served at 6:30. Walter P. Motsinger will sing. Mrs. Mona Thomas, second vicepresident of the association, and another group of the organization will present an obligation ceremony Tuesday night at West Newton chapter and again Saturday night at New Palestine. "The Wayfarer,” under direction of Mrs. Rea Koehler, first vicepresident, will be presented Wednesday night before Cumberland chapter and agam Saturday night before Oaklandon chapter. CLASS TO BE INDUCTED Degree Team to Confer Rank on K. of P. October Group. The degree team of Lodge No. 56, Knights of Pythias, will confer the rank of Esquire on the October class of candidates Thursday night in Castls Hall. 119 E. Ohio street. All Pythians wishing to witness the ceremony have been extended an invitation by Elmer Wilmington, M. W. The lodge will be convened promptly at 8 by James S. Cross, Chancellor Commander. Masons to Hold Social Night Centre lodge. No. 23, Free and Accepted Masons, will hold a social evening at 7:30 Wednesday in the social rooms of the Masonic temple, North and Illinois streets.
RED MEN, POCAHONTAS COUNCIL WILL CONVENE HERE NEXT WEEK
E. S. Seabrook
ISSI •
Arch H. Hobbs
Ho-Down Hop Modern Woodmen Prepare for Dance Series “YT'IRST couple dance, and first •T couple swing.” That will be the call of “Doc” Flannagan at the opening of the fall and winter dance season of Fortville camp No. 7137, Modern Woodmen of America, at a “ho-down” dance to be held Wednesday night in the Woodmen hall at Fortville. The entertainment committee of the camp, under the chairmanship of J. Frank Klepfer, county organizer, has arranged a series of the old-time dances to be held bi-monthly in the hall. The dances will begin at 8 on the designated nights, and will continue until the wee hours of the morning, with entertainment sandwiched in by a group of string musicians who will provide the rhythm for the “swing ’em on the corner dances.”
Who s Who in Eastern Star
I m
This is the third of i scries of eighteen articles on Who's Who in the Order of Eastern Star, to be published each Monday on The Times Lodge Page. Mrs. Hazel Thompson Coats, Veedersburg, above, is associate grand matron of the Indiana Grand chapter, O. E. S. She has been active in club affairs, and musical and dramatic circles of the state a number of years. Mrs. Coats is a member of Valetta chapter of the Eastern Star at Veedersburg. and during her membership there has served one year as Adah, four years as Martha, and as worthy matron in 1926. 1927 and 1928. She became connected with the grand chapter in 1927, when she served that body as teller. During 1928 she served as a district deputy. She was appointed grand Ruth in 1930, and the following year was elected associate grand conductress, advancing to her present position in April of this year. Mrs. Coats is a member of the State Federated Clubs and the D. A. R.. and is serving her third term as state librarian of the latter. She also is head of the Coats School of Lyceum Arts at Crawfordsville and Veedersburg. She is a teacher of dramatic art and voice. BEN-HUR TO CONFER INITIATORYJEGREES Arrius Court No. 5 Maps Rite for Wednesday. Initiatory degree will be conferred on fifteen new members of Arrius Court, No. 5, Ben-Hur Life Association, at the weekly meeting of the court Wednesday night at 8 in the hall. 322 East New York street. The degree will be conferred by the degree team of the court under the direction of Captain Louie H. Mills. J. W. Patterson, chief of the court, will preside. Junior members of the court will meet the same night for their bimonthly meeting in the junior hall, opposite the senior hall, and also will ttold an initiator; meeting.
jMEMpOpfo '■
Worthington P. Wachter Worthington P. Wachter, Hagerstown, Md., great incohonee of the Improved Order of Red Men, will be guest of honor at the annual state conventions of the Great Council of Indianapolis, I. O. R. M„ Council of Indiana, Degree of Pocahontas, to be held here next week. E. S. Seabrook, New Albany, great sachem of Indiana, will preside over the men’s sessions, O. W. Coxen, Elw'ood, will become the new great sachem, at the annual election of officers, closing event of the convention. Mrs. Lucy Cuskaden, St. Paul, Ind., great Pocahontas, will preside at the ladies’ meetings. Arch H. Hobbs, Indianapolis, great chief of records, is assisting in making arrangements for the two conventions.
1.0.0. F. WILL HOLDCONGLAVE State Order to Celebrate Encampment Week at Auditorium. Grand lodge and encampment week will be celebrated this week here by the Indiana grand lodge, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and the grand encampment of Indiana, Patriarchs Militant, I. O. O. F. The grand lodge will holds its ninety-seventh annual convention Wednesday and Thursday in the grand lodge auditorium, thirteenth floor, Odd Fellow building, Pennsylvania and Washington streets. The eighty-sixth annual communication of the grand encampment will be held Friday in the auditorium. Headquarters for the conventioners while here will be at the English. Sessions of the grand lodge will be held at 9 and 1:30 both days, with the election of new officers scheduled for the afternoon session of the last day. L. A. Handley, Richmond, grand master, will preside over the sessions. He will be succeeded at the election by George W. Freeman, Kokomo, present deputy grand master. Election of officers for the grand encampment will be held in the afternoon of their one-day session, and Frank E. Smith, Rochester, present grand senior warden, will succeed W. G. McGinnis, South Bend, as grand master. Mr. McGinnis will preside over the sessions.
DEGREE TEAMS WILLJREHEARSE Prepare for Convocation of R. A. M. Chapter. Final dress rehearsal before conferring of the most excellent master degree Saturday at the fourth annual convocation of the Marion County Royal Arch Chapter Association in Raper commandery asylum of the Masonic temple, Nortl/ and Illinois streets, will be held at 7:30 Friday in the asylum. The convocation is being sponsored by Broad Ripple chapter, No. 146, R. A. M. The obligation ceremony will be given by officers of Eureka chapter, No. 101, of Louisville, Ky. Each of Marion county’s eight chapters of the Royal Arch Masons will take part in the program, which will be opened by Guido M. Schloot, high priest of Broad Ripple chapter. Candidates from throughout the state will take the degree. Grand lodge officers of both Indiana and Kentucky will witness the work, which will be directed by John C. Hobson of Oriental chapter No. 147, dramatic director.
Don’t Neglect Kidney and Bladder Irregularities OEED promptly bladder irregularities, disturbed sleep and nagging backache. They may warn of some disordered kidney or bladder function. Don't experiment. Try Doan’s Pills. Successful for 50 years. Used the world over. Get Doan's today. At ail druggists. Down's PILLS
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .
0 4k ! t r
O. W. Coxen
Mrs. Lucy Cuskaden
Titles Galore Princeton Mason Is Man of Many Offices. SPEAKING of men of many titles, Robert A. Woods, Princeton, probably has more titles than any other man in the Masonic order in the state. Included in Mr. Woods’ list of titles are grand secretary of the Grand Lodge of Indiana, Royal Arch Masons; grand recorder of the grand council of Indiana, R6yal and Select Masters; grand secretary of the Council of Deliberation, Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite and general grand deputy master of the general grand council, U. S. A., Royal and Select Masters. The latter title will be dropped at the annual session of the council ,to be held today and tomorrow in Washington, when Mr. Woods automatically will become the Puissant grand master. The new title will be an honor to Indiana in the fact that it is the first time that an Indiana man has gained the high office, which is won only through serving the council twelve years as an officer. COUNCIL SESSION SET Security Benefit Group to Hold Monthly Meeting Tomorrow. Monthly meeting of the Booster Club of Marion council, No. 738, Security Benefit Association, will be held tomorrow night at the home of Mrs. Doris Mathews, Ravenswood. Marion council will hold a public card party Wednesday night at 8:15 in the hall, 116 East Maryland street.
"We rent All most # PEOPLE WANT '^nwu/£_ A CERTIFIED INTERVIEW WITH ALBERT M. ZUCH, MANAGER, U-DRIVE-IT CO., AKRON, OHIO “OUR CUSTOMERS can have their choice “BUT MOST Os THEM pick Plymouth. “Everyone LIKES hydraulic brakes. So of all three leading low-priced cars.” Some even wait if there isn’t one in.” do we. Brake bands last twice as long.’* zuch’s branch of the Ohio Upriced leaders. eliminate all vibration. —— steel . .. the safest body made. STANDARD MODELS priced from $445 to $5lO. De “Hydraulic BRAKES are one of thernain reasons why women want Plymouth. A Imp jd l|j|j Luxe Models from $495 to $595. All prices F. O. B. They like its smartness, too—and many say it’s the cosiest-handling car.” Factory, Detroit, and subject to change without notice. L—^———————— ■■■■■-■ ——MBjjaaMWfeagg WBSBSI Ji B I *¥* |J #[* 1 WITH PATENTED FLOATING POWER aIIfL f | llri Isi I * AMTY * 5Tm BODT • hydraulic ••ares
RED MEN WILL START ANNUAL STATESESSION Pre-Convention Address to Be Made by Order’s Great Incohonee. Annual state sessions of the Improved Order of Red Men, and its auxiliary, the Degree of Pocahontas, will be held here Oct. 17 and 18, respectively. Sessions of the Great Council of Indiana, Red Men, will be held in the grand lodge auditorium of the Odd Fellows, thirteenth floor of the Odd Fellow building, Pennsylvania and Washington streets. Preceding the opening of the convention, a special meeting will be held at Connersville, Monday night, Oct. 16, at which time Worthington P. Wachter, Hagerstown, Md., great incohonee, will deliver an address. Mr. Wachter will arrive in Connersville during the morning, and will inspect a proposed site for the erection of a. home for the aged of the order. He will be entertained at a noon luncheon by the Chamber of Commerce of the city. Incohonee to Be Guest Official opening of the convention will be at 9 Tuesday morning, and the great incohonee will be guest of honor thoughout the day. E. A. Seabrook, New Albany, great sachem, will preside during the morning and afternoon sessions. Matters of legislation will be the outstanding feature of the morning program. Election of new officers will be held at 2 in the afternoon and O. W. Coxen, Elwood, will be advanced to the position of great sachem. A reception will be given Tuesday night at 8 in Eagles’ hall, 48 West Vermont street. Reception for Delegates A dinner at which Mr. Wachter will be the principal epeaker will be followed by a ball. Delegates to both the Red Men and Pocahontas sessions will attend the reception and ball. Business sessions of the ladies convention will be held Wednesday, Oct. 18, in the Odd Fellows grand lodge auditorium, with Mrs. Lucy E. Cuskaden, St. Paul, Ind., great pocahontas, presiding. Election of officers will be held at the afternoon session, which will begin at 2, and Mrs. Lizzie Brownlee, Terre Haute, will succeed Mrs. Cuskaden. Gertrude Schminke, Indianapolis, is one of nine candidates for the position of great Minnehaha, second highest office in the state group. Headquarters in English Headquarters for both groups here will be at the English, and registration will be held from 2 to 5, on the day preceding the convention. It will be the first time that the conventioners have ever stayed at the English, the old Denison having been official headquarters for the last twenty-five years. WOODMEN TO CONFER CLASS WITH DEGREES Banquet Will Follow Ceremonies for Ten Candidates. Dramatic degree will be conferred on a class of ten candidates at 8 Tuesday by Marion camp, No. 3558, Modern Woodmen of America, in the hall, 322 East New York street. The adoption will be under the direction of David M. Killion, consul of the camp, and Captain Harry E. Argus, chief forecaster. A banquet will follow the degree work. Committee on arrangements for the affair includes William P. Hornberger, Dr. Golden P. Silver, and Joseph Hilman.
O. E; S. Chapter to Hold ‘Fruit for Home’ Event
isßp*T * j* Jkwm-h imp %
Mary Catherine Siler and Joseph Kersting
Queen Esther Group Will Present Program at Annual Affair. Annual "Fruit for the Home,” program of Queen Esther chapter, No. 3, Order of Eastern Star, will be presented Friday, Oct. 13, in the Masonic temple, North and Illinois streets. The program is carried out each year in the form of high-class entertainment, and proceeds from the affair are turned over to the Masonic home at Franklin. Admission is one can of fruit. Mrs. Lon Tracy, chairman of the fruit for the home committee, has announced that several feature entertainers have been attained for the night. One of the features of the program will be an adagio dance to be given by Alary Catherine Siler and Joseph Kersting, pupils of Ruth Ann Kersting, who also will perform. The program will begin at 8 with the showing of moving pictures, and will be followed by the introduction of Mrs. Estelle McCampbell, worthy matron of Queen Esther chapter, and Elmer Gay, superintendent of the Masonic home. Vocal selections will be rendered by the Larks Trio, composed cf Juliet Shaw, Lola Crocket and Anna Bell, accompanied by Dorothea Davis. Billy Shirley, local boy singer, recently returned from Hollywood, Cal., will sing several numbers. Dance numbers by Miss Kersting and her pupils will precede the “Evolution of Dress,” to be presented by members of Queen Esther chapter, under direction of Mrs. Frank Kinzie. Piano selections by Fred Siering will close the program. CARD PARTY ARRANGED Past Presidents of Streight Circle to Be Entertained. Mrs. Jessie Rodgers will entertain the Past Presidents’ Association of the A. D. Streight Circle No. 16, Ladies of the G. A. R., with a card party Tuesday at 2 at her home, 1240 West New York Street. Mrs. Emma Cole will give a benefit card party for the A. D. Streight Circle, Ladies of the G. A. R. the following day at the same hour at her home at 1214 West New York street. Members of other G. A. R. circles are invited to both entertainments at which all games will be played.
GROnO PARTY IS SCHEDULED Prophets to Hold Theater Series for Eight Weeks on Wednesdays. First of a series of eight theater parties to be held at the Garrick theater, Thirtieth and Illinois streets, by the Sahara Grotto, will be held Wednesday night. Activities will begin at 6:30 with a parade through the business district of that section, headed by the Sahara Drum and Bugle Corps, under the direction of Captain John Sproule. The parade is being sponsored by merchants and business men of the vicinity, and is for the purpose of welcoming Grotto members and then- families to the district. The parade, which will include the entire theater going party, will close at the theater, where a special moving picture will be shown under direction of Prophets William J. Bradley and Dean Schwartz. Special novelty numbers by the Odd Size Quartet, composed of Harry Saunders, Roy Allred, J. C. Sortwell and Carlos Jones and by Al, Andy and Doc, Grotto radio performers, will be included in the vaudeville show. The parties will be held each Wednesday night for the next eight weeks. The entire Grotto membership and their families are invited. Luther H. Manley, chief justice of the Grotto, and H. Verle Wilson, secretary, co-chairmen of the committee on arrangements for the series, have promised a variance of entertainment for each night. FAMOUS TRAIN COMING Group of Caledonian Club to View British Royal Scot. The Scotch Club of the Caledonian Club, composed of Scotch ladies and descendants, will inspect the British Royal Scot train to be exhibited by the Big Four railroad here Thursday night. The inspection will be made through an invitation extended by the railroad company. The club members will meet in the south part of the Union station at 7:30 Thursday night, and will be escorted through the train.
OCT. 9, 1933
B'NAI B'RITH TD BREN TONIGHT AT KIRSHBAUM Samuel Frommer Will Be Speaker of Evening at Meeting. The Indianapolis B’nai B’rith. the state's largest individual Jewish organization. will open its 1933-34 season at 8:15 tonight at Kirshbaum Center. Twenty-third and North Meridian streets. Samuel Frommer, Indianapolis advertising man. who just has returned from a visit to Germany, will address the organiaztion. telling of his observances there. Richard K. Munter, B'nai B'rith president, will preside at tonight's session. The B'nai B’rith is in its ninetieth year and boasts of almost 75.000 members in the United States. Other officers are: Norman E. Isaacs, first vice-president; Walter Lichtenstein, second vice-president; Charles J. Karabell, recording secretary; George A. Solomons, financial secretary; Rufus Isaacs, treasurer; S. J. Sternberger. monitor; Richard Efroymson, assistant monitor; Max Katz, Phil Kraft, Harry Borman and Henry Blatt, trustees. Minister Ex-Officio Member Munter today announced the list of lodge committees for the season. He will serve as ex-officio on all committees. The complete list follows: Advisory committee: Isidod Feibleman, chairman: Louis J. Borinstein, Abe Goldstein, Eph Levin, Saul Munter, Samuel Mantel, S. J. Sternberger and Charles J. Karabell, all former presidents; membership committee, Norman E. Isaacs, chairman; Walter Lichtenstein. vice-chairman; Joseph Bassler, Samuel Messing, Philip Kraft, Marcus Borinstein, Richard Efroymson, Arthur Rose, Leo Lefkovits, Max Katz, Morris Strauss, Saul Munter, Mr. Levin, Mi'. Karabell, Mr. Sternberger and Mr. Mantel. Educational committee, Mr. Lichtenstein, chairman; Edward Cohn, Marcus Borinstein, Mr. Levin and Mr. Kraft; A. Z. A. committee, Charles Kaufman, chairman; Allan Bloom, Mr. N. E. Isaacs, Mr. Cohn, Mr. Goldstein, and Mr. Karabell; featured entertainment committee, Saul Munter, chairman; Allison Falender, Mr. Feibleman, Mr. Mantel and Mr. Sternberger. Committees Are Named Entertainment committee, Richard Efroymson and Joe Bassler, cochairmen; Morris Tavel and Messrs. Lichtenstein, Borman, Strauss and N. E. Isaacs; wider scope committee, Mr. Saul Munter, chairman; Leo Kaminsky, Rufus Isaacs, Meyer Efroymson, Leo Traugott and Mr. Messing. Finance committee, Mr. Levin, chairman; Manuel Freeman, Mr. Solomons. Mr. Mantel, Mr. Saul Munter, Mr. Rufus Isaacs, Mr. Meyer Efroymson; anti-defamation committee, Mr. Feibleman, chairman; Albert Goldstein, L. J. Borinstein, Joseph Bloch, Douis Wolf, H. Joseph Hyman, Leo Kaminsky, Leonard Solomons, Eli Schloss, Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht, G. A. Efroymson, M. S. Block, Meyer Efroymson and Morris Strauss; Americanization committee, Mr. Kaminsky, chairman; Mr. Blatt, Mr. Bloom, Mr. Hyman, and Senator Jacob Weiss. Hillel Foundation committee, Mr. Bloom, chairman; Lester Budd, Louis Becovits, Bloomington; Harry Zuckerman and Mr. Mantel. Masons to Confer Degree Prospect Lodge No. 714, Free and Accepted Masons, State avenue and Prospect street, will renew their fall activities Wednesday at 7 by conferring the entered apprentice degree. Clarence Kidwell is master of the lodge.
